Thank you from the bottom of our hearts for all you are doing: Canada thanks you and Haiti thanks you! :hearts:
http://www.nationalpost.com/news/story.html?id=2559050
Haiti: 'We're All Here to Do the Same Good': Geoff Everts, Canadian Navy
Reproduced with thanks to the National Post and in accordance with the Fair Dealing provision, 29, of the Copyright Act.
February 13, 2010
Photo credit Tyler Anderson
Kathryn Blaze Carlson
One month after the Jan. 12 earthquake that all but destroyed much of Haiti,
the people of Leogane are clearing the streets of rubble, and building wooden
shelters to replace their collapsed homes. Alongside them, members of the Canadian
Forces are working to help rebuild what some locals consider a forsaken city.
The Canadian navy's HMCS Athabaskan is patrolling off the coast of Leogane, and
its sailors head ashore each day to offer labour, protection and support to their army
brethren, non-governmental organizations, and the people of Haiti. The National Post's
Kathryn Blaze Carlson spent a week aboard the ship, witnessing the efforts first hand.
At the end of the tour, she spoke with Lieutenant-Commander Geoff Everts, executive
officer of HMCS Athabaskan, about the mission.
Q Was the situation in Leogane as you expected it to be?
A Most of the reporting had been out of Port-au-Prince, so we didn't know what to expect
as we sailed down to Leogane. We planned the whole way down here. We prepared for
the worst, and thankfully it wasn't the worst. It was somewhat less than that.
Q For most of your sailors, this was their first humanitarian mission ashore. How did you
prepare them for their time ashore in Leogane?
A On the trip down here, I said to the sailors, "This is going to change all of us." I think it
has, and it has changed all of us for the better. I think we all appreciate Canada more now.
... The sailors are all very proud of what they're doing.
Q How would you describe the navy's work in Leogane?
A We identified quick-impact projects where we knew we could get in there and give people
some shelter, food, and water right away.... The idea is that we're not set up to do long-term
sustaining of those projects, but we can work with aid organizations to help get people back
on their feet, beyond the survival stage to a living stage. The [Bonne Nouvelle de Jesus Christ]
orphanage, for example -- we're not going to be there forever. We're going to finish the
clean-up, finish the shelters, build latrines and then we hope the aid organizations will
continue long after we've left.
Q What would you consider among the greatest challenges in disaster relief efforts in Leogane so far?
A At the start, it felt like there was a lack of co-ordination on the whole. There were a lot of
people who were trying to do good, but there was no central co-ordination, no central Haitian
oversight. My first interface was with the Canadian army -- with the commanding officer of the
Van Doo regiment. After our ship arrived here, I flew in by helicopter and met him to talk about
what kind of tasks we could accomplish. He immediately put us onto some projects, because he
had been in town for a few days and had already done a [reconnaissance] of the area. It was
amazing to have that sort of direction.
Q We sometimes hear of professional rivalry among soldiers, sailors and the air force. What
was it like to bring aboard more than 170 soldiers and transport them to Leogane alongside your sailors?
A There is a sort of collegial pride in your team: The navy thinks they're the best service, the
army thinks they're the best service, and I imagine the air force thinks the same. The army
has lots to be proud of, but it was interesting to see them as they were leaving the ship. I
think it gave them a new respect for what we do. At the end of the day, though, we're all
Canadians, we're all here to do the same good.
Q How do you hope to leave Haiti, once HMCS Athabaskan's role in the humanitarian mission is completed?
A I hope we leave Haiti better off than it was before. To help achieve that, we'll do our
best as long as we're here.... I hope that we, the Western world and Haitians themselves,
can work together to get the country back on its feet.
VOICES FROM LEOGANE
- "I hope that by the time we leave, we can give the Haitians the feeling that there's a better
future.... Our presence is known now -- the Canadians are recognizable, and we're building
relationships with the people of Haiti."
Commander Josee Kurtz, Captain of HMCS Halifax
- "We need to educate and inspire our own people, but first we need help from the world
.... [Canada's] navy has come here to make this place safer, to get rid of the rubble and the
psychological reminder of what happened."
Sister Claudette Charles, of a home for the elderly and mentally ill in Leogane
- "We simply could not have done this without the navy. The Canadian Forces
excels at this type of operation -- they offer amazing support on a huge scale,
whether it's communication, security, or infrastructure."
Dr. Tim Kostomo, orthopedic surgeon with the Canadian Medical Assistance