Monday, January 25, 2010

January 25, 2010: The emergency in Haiti cries out for our help

 By Michael Regenstreif

 Haiti, the poorest country in the Western Hemisphere, was struck, January 12, with a devastating earthquake. Measuring 7.0 on the Richter scale, the epicentre was close to the capital city of Port-au-Prince. Much of the city, from the slums where so much of the population lived, to the parliament building and the Presidential Palace, were in left in rubble.

As I write, on January 15, current estimates are that 50,000 people were killed in the quake, a number that may well be higher by the time you read these words. Hundreds of thousands more people, perhaps millions, have been left homeless. Even René Préval, the president of the Caribbean island nation, was left homeless by the destruction.

In Canada, we have a large Haitian community that has been affected directly by the natural disaster in their homeland. Governor General Michaëlle Jean, a Haitian-Canadian, usually the very model of coolness under pressure, was overcome with emotion when she talked with the media after the tragedy. A Jewish Community Campus employee, whom I see in my office almost every day, told me she was having a very hard time and feared for her sister whom she’d been unable to contact since the earthquake.

“I keep calling and calling,” she told me, “but I can’t get through.”

Catastrophes like the earthquake in Haiti have a way of hitting close to home.

Watching the television coverage from Haiti over the past few days, and reading the stories in the daily press and on the internet, it’s hard for anyone not to be affected. And, to our collective credit, many governments and relief organizations mobilized quickly to help the people of Haiti. Many charitable organizations – including Jewish organizations – have quickly mobilized emergency fundraising campaigns.

As noted on page 5 of this issue of the Bulletin, the Jewish Federation of Ottawa has established a Haiti Earthquake Relief Fund so that our community can help funnel much-needed funds to help relieve the suffering of the people in the earthquake zone.

As Federation President Mitchell Bellman notes, the fund “is very much in keeping with the traditional Jewish concept of Tikkun Olam (repair of the world).” The situation in Haiti is a most urgent humanitarian emergency.

You can make a donation to the Federation’s Haiti Earthquake Relief Fund online at jewishottawa.org or by calling 613- 798-4696, ext. 232. The federal government has pledged to match funds donated by Canadians for Haitian earthquake relief. These are funds that are urgently needed by the emergency relief operations underway in Haiti.

As mentioned, many governments and relief organizations mobilized quickly in the wake of the earthquake. Of course, that includes governments and organizations from major Western countries like Canada and the United States – countries with large populations not so far removed from Haiti. Perhaps not so well known is the fact that Israel was among the first countries to respond to the emergency in Haiti.

IsraAID, the Israel Forum for International Humanitarian Aid, immediately sent a search-and-rescue team to Haiti. El Al, the Israeli government airline, sent two planes to Haiti to assist in rescue efforts and the Israel Defense Forces sent an emergency field hospital, manned by 220 Israeli soldiers and officers, including 120 doctors and nurses. Magen David Adom also assembled a team of medical personnel to work on the ground in conjunction with the American Red Cross. And the Israel Police sent a team of experts to help Haitian authorities identify victims. All this mobilization took place in the first hours and days after the earthquake.

Remarkable.

Miep Gies

I’d like to note the passing of Miep Gies, January 11, at age 100. Gies was a Dutch woman who helped hide Otto Frank’s family for more than two years, providing them with food from her own rations. After the Gestapo finally found the Franks, Gies rescued the family’s photographs and the diary kept by Anne, Otto’s young daughter.

Otto was the only family member to survive the Holocaust and Gies was able to return the photos and diary to him. The Diary of a Young Girl by Anne Frank, published in 1952, remains one of the most important books of Holocaust literature.

Yad Vashem recognized Miep Gies as Righteous Among the Nations on March 8, 1972.