“When God is Silent, the Lwa Disappear, and Haitians Suffer”
All Haitians in the Diaspora live in exile, and life in exile is a life of (re-)memory and alienation that creates both mental trauma and physical distance in respect to their native land.
Haitians outside of Haiti long to visit home, and they’re afraid of being kidnapped, tortured, and even murdered in the streets of Port-au-Prince.
The violence that is now associated with the Capital city of Haiti and other parts in the country has created a generation of Haitian youths who believe the only way to live as humans is to escape and find peace in a more promising country.
The segment in the Haitian population that is more affected by the frequency of gun shots and the fear of physical death is Haitian school children.
Life in Haiti has become more vulnerable and the preservation of human life has become more urgent than the generation past.
What does it mean to be poor and powerless in your country of birth?
What does it mean to live in a life characterized by every day trauma, political crisis, gang violence, and fear?
What does it mean when life has no meaning after you’ve tried all you could do to make it meaningful and productive in your birthplace?
What does it mean to be dispossessed, displaced, and socially-alienated in your homeland?
What does it mean to grow up in a country whose future is unknown, vulnerable, and fearful?