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Coming Up: VHP Art Show

From February 5th—26th, in the Gertrude C. White Gallery of the Greenwich, CT YWCA, the Vassar Haiti Project is hosting an exhibition of colorful, traditional Haitian art open to viewing and purchase by the public.  On February 5th from 6-8pm, the club will kick off the exhibition with a special opening reception, featuring live music performances by Vassar students and refreshments for visitors.  Help us celebrate this exciting opportunity to showcase the products of Haiti’s rich creative community and vibrant culture!

259 East Putnam Avenue, Greenwich, Connecticut

Contact: 845.797.2123 for info on the art, or 203.869.6501 for general info on the YWCA

To learn more, e-mail haitiproject@vassar.edu

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On January 26th, the panel discussion “Understanding the Haiti Crisis,” helped a roomful of Vassar community members to grapple with the implications of the Haitian earthquake, and to think more critically about the disaster.  Vassar professors Brian McAdoo and Lizabeth Paravisini-Gebert, organized the program, bringing in Haitian community member Marc Coq and student panelists Nicole Krenitsky ’11 and Jared Augenstein ’10, both of whom were in the country during the quake.

The program’s overall tone was hopeful yet honest.  A cleverly titled Powerpoint presentation, “Not the Earthquake’s Fault: Understanding the Haitian Earthquake,” explained the deceptiveness of the term “natural disaster,” and discussed why a 7.0 quake killed a staggering 200,000 + individuals in Haiti, but just 63 Californians when an earthquake of the same magnitude hit them a few years earlier.  “Earthquakes don’t kill people,” said McAdoo, “Buildings falling on people kill people.”  Therefore, Haiti’s disaster is a lesson in recognizing natural hazards where they exist and being prepared for them.

Overall, the panel discussion was a call to action, but also an optimistic look at an overwhelming tragedy.  Speakers put forth examples of joy found in such a dire, upsetting situation: the sense of community fostered, and the great spirit and solidarity of survivors.

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* Sunday, January 31st

Soloman Schechter School of Westchester Sale

9 am- 6pm

555 West Hartsdale Ave., Hartsdale, NY

Call 845.797.2123 if you have any questions!

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Our Earthquake Fund

The last couple of weeks have been a whirlwind for project members, as we have scrambled to get information, answer queries, and determine how best to respond to the earthquake. As news has emerged, the direction of our efforts has become clearer. The work of the Vassar Haiti Project has never been more important. All of Haiti has been affected by this crisis. We have received news from our contacts in Gros Morne that thousands of people have already arrived in Gros Morne from Port-au-Prince. There may be cracks in the school and clinic in Chermaitre. While worldwide relief efforts are rightly focused on the capital, it is essential that we continue to provide support and relief to the communities with which we have an established relationship, while we maintain our long-term commitment to providing education, nutrition, medical care and sustainable development to the village of Chermaitre and to supporting Haitian Arts.

The art community in Port-au-Prince has been devastated by the earthquake. One gallery has written us to say that all but one of the artists they work with have lost their homes. The Centre D’Art, the oldest and most important gallery in Port-au-Prince has been destroyed, and has asked for our help in rebuilding.  They seek first to recover any paintings they can from the rubble, and then to rebuild this important art center.  The city’s main art museum, and the Episcopal Church’s Holy Trinity Cathedral, famous for it’s murals of bible stories with black figures, have also been destroyed. Gallery owners are still trying to contact many of their artists. Through political turmoil, natural disasters, and crippling poverty, the Haitian artists have preserved a cultural heritage, and offered pride and hope to the Haitian people through their beautiful visions of their beloved country. Protecting and supporting the art community and culture in Haiti will be vital for its long-term recovery and its rebuilding as a nation.

See the following articles for more information:

Miami Herald

New York Times

LA Times

Vassar Haiti Project will be raising money to support an artist recovery fund already established by one of the galleries we work with. In addition, we will collect funds to support relief efforts in Gros Morne, and possible damage to the school and clinic. If you would like to donate, you can send us a check, buy a painting online, or attend one of our art sales. Because many of our artists and galleries have been affected by the earthquake, we do not yet know if we will be able to get new paintings for the April sale. In the past, we have been overwhelmed by generous patrons who have donated art to our cause and hope that many more will come forward in the weeks ahead.  Our need for art to be able to continue supporting our cause is now greater than ever.

Thank you for keeping the people of Haiti in your thoughts and prayers.

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From the Vassar College Forum for Political Thought:

Concerning the recent catastrophic earthquake in Haiti, we want to start the discussion by talking about our (potentially different) understandings of solidarity and perhaps about if and where we see ourselves in relation to what is happening to Haitians. The following questions might stimulate but will not limit our exchanges:

How are Haiti and Haitians represented in various media?
What efforts are being made (or not) to support people who are suffering in Haiti?
Are there lessons of international solidarity that we can learn from? What about solidarity with Haiti before the earthquake, and after?

We look forward to having you join us in the discussion!

Date: WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 27
Time: 5 PM
Place: FACULTY COMMONS (Main 1st floor, next to the Retreat)

Kismat food and drinks will be served ;-)

Cheers,
Gui, Mie, Maria Jose and Quynh

P.S: In case you are interested, there is also another panel discussion – “Understanding Haiti” – coordinated by Professors Brian McAdoo and Lisa Paravisini at 6pm today in the Villard Room.

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Haiti Events

Upcoming Vassar and area events:

* Tuesday, January 26

Panel discussion of “Understanding Haiti,” 6pm in the Villard Room.

From the Vassar College events announcement:

In the wake of the major earthquake and the severe aftershock in Haiti this month, Vassar professors Brian McAdoo and Lizabeth Paravisini-Gebert have worked with the local area Haitian and Jamaican communities to present this panel discussion, “Understanding Haiti,” about the disaster. McAdoo, a geologist who studies earthquakes and tsunamis, noted that he will focus on “Why a Magnitude 7 earthquake would kill over 200,000 people in Haiti, while, in 1989, an earthquake of the same magnitude hit a similar-sized urban population in San Francisco and killed ‘only’ 63 people.” Following the presentation by Professors Paravisini-Gebert and McAdoo, the program will include a discussion by a representative from the Haitian community, IBM employee Marc Coq, as well as Vassar students Nicole Krenitsky ’11 and Jared Augenstein ’10, who were both in Haiti during the earthquake with the student organization ProHealth.

* Wednesday, January 27

Vassar Forum for Political Thought on Haiti. Time and Location TBA

* Sunday, January 31st

Soloman Schechter School of Westchester Sale

9 am- 6pm

555 West Hartsdale Ave., Hartsdale, NY

* Monday, February 1st-Friday, February 26

Exhibition of Haitian Art at the Gertrude C White Gallery

YWCA of Greenwich, Connecticut

259 East Putnam Avenue, Greenwich, Connecticut

If you know of other events, please add them in the comments.

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Tears for Haiti

About a week ago, a composer, Cynthia Kendall, contacted us to ask if she could use Haitian art from our website to accompany a soulful piano piece she had composed in reaction to the earthquake in Haiti.

She wrote, “I struggled with what images to use of Haiti, and in searching the web stumbled across your wonderful organization with the beautiful art on display from Haitian artisians. It would be wonderful to show Haiti as the Haitian people saw it and presented it through their art.”

This is the beautiful final product:

You can see more of Kendall’s work on her website.

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Art Sale

As we attempt to cope with the devastating news from Haiti, come celebrate the beautiful, inspiring Haitian culture at our upcoming art sale at the Solomon Schechter School on Sunday, January 31st, from 9am to 6pm. The sale will feature 200 original Haitian paintings, unique gifts, silk scarves, jewelry, and iron sculpture .

Solomon Schechter School, Chapel,
555 West Hartsdale Ave.
Hartsdale, NY

Come support our artists, most of whom are based in Port-au-Prince and are suffering in the aftermath of the earthquake. The proceeds from this event will benefit both our education initiative as well as earthquake relief. Vassar Haiti Project members are currently involved in ongoing discussions about how we can best help our artists and galleries that have been gravely affected by the earthquake in Port-au-Prince. We are planning to establish a fund that will help displaced artists, artisans and their families. Art sales and donations alike will feed this fund.
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When the news of the devastating earthquake that hit Haiti on January 12, first reached them Andrew and Lila Meade, founders and directors of the Vassar Haiti Project (VHP), were glued to news reports then they both quickly swung into action. They began to reach out to their Haitian contacts – artists mostly based in the area around the Haitian capitol Port-au-Prince– and the residents of the village of Chermaitre, which, for the past nine years, has been a primary beneficiary of previous VHP’s initiatives and relief efforts.

We have had some news from galleries we work with, but have yet to hear from the artists and artisans with which we work. The local Episcopal priest who helps oversee the Vassar Haiti Project’s work in Chermaitre was actually in Port-au-Prince when the earthquake struck. He was thankfully unharmed, but the Meades have not yet had word from Chermaitre, although indications are that the village is relatively unharmed. We have also heard that while they have felt aftershocks in Cap Haitian, our priest contact there and his family are okay.

The Meades were immediately joined in their plans for aid by a group of international students who are currently on campus during Winter Break. So while the Meades travel to California this weekend for the awarding of Andrew’s doctorate at Fielding Graduate University in Santa Barbara (CA) , the students are planning a series of relief initiatives; these will include monetary donations as well as material goods.

Although fundraising for Haiti is a vital part of Vassar Haiti Project under normal circumstances, we are not a relief organization that is equipped to deal with the immediate emergency needs of this catastrophe. The next few weeks are critical to Haiti’s recovery and we suggest monetary donations to several excellent organizations already with a presence in Haiti. Among those that we would recommend are Partners in Health, founded by renowned doctor and anthropologist Paul Farmer and written about in Tracy Kidder’s Mountains Beyond Mountains ( http://www.pih.org/home.html ).

We are planning to establish a fund that will help displaced artists, artisans and their families. Art sales and donations alike will feed this fund. We will be working with our partners in Haiti to determine a responsible and effective way in which to distribute these funds. You may contact us or visit our website if you would like to contribute.

Vassar Haiti Project members are currently involved in ongoing discussions about how we can best help artists and galleries that are most certainly gravely affected in Port-au-Prince. To see beautiful and inspiring Haitian art, and to assist us in these efforts, please join us at one of our previously scheduled upcoming art sales. On Sunday, January 31, from 9:00am to 6:00pm there will be a Haitian art show and sale in the Solomon Schechter School of Westchester (High School Chapel, 555 West Hartsdale Avenue, Hartsdale). The sale will feature 200 original Haitian paintings, unique gifts, silk scarves, jewelry, and iron sculpture . In addition, from Sunday, January 31, through Friday, February 26, there will be an exhibition at the Gertrude C. White Gallery in the YWCA of Greenwich, Connecticut (259 East Putnam Avenue, Greenwich, Connecticut). On Friday, February 5, from 6:00 to 8:00pm, a reception will feature live performances by Vassar students, the viewing of a short documentary film about the project, plus a display of a wide variety of Haitian handicraft. If you are unable to attend our sale, we urge you to visit our website, where you can buy and purchase art. http://projects.vassar.edu/haiti/art/

We are also anticipating the ongoing needs of Haitians in the aftermath of this crisis, and to that end, will begin collecting needed medical, food, and clothing supplies at Vassar College. Project members are involved in discussions about how and when best to distribute the supplies. Vassar students, led by senior Anh Ngo, will be setting up boxes in dorms and buildings throughout the Vassar campus, for people to place dry goods. Clothing is also needed in addition to the medical supplies and dry food.

“The priority of our drive is to have first-aid and medical supplies,” noted Ngo. “Over-the-counter medicines, pain relievers, bandages, are all needed. In addition, dry food, particularly powdered milk would be helpful.”

“We are seeking clothes for adults and children, summer clothes, suitable for temperatures of 70 degrees plus,” noted fellow senior Mario Arthur-Bentil ’10. “Donations should be freshly laundered and wearable, we know that right now our Haitian friends need everything.”in addition to the medical supplies, dry goods, and clothes, Ngo and Arthur-Bentil also said that they hope that some tents will be donated as so many people have lost their homes. The public is welcome to drop off donations to the boxes in the Campus Center and Main Building, among other campus locations. Arnoff Moving and Storage has generously volunteered to donate packing supplies and assist in the storage and packing of donated goods.

The Vassar Haiti Project students will also begin “tabling” in Vassar’s College Center, on Wednesday, January 20, the first day of classes. Here the community will be able to purchase a Haitian handcraft, which in turn supports the Vassar Haiti Project relief initiative, or could also donate funds towards the relief effort. The students said that they plan to “table” through the end of January.

In this time of crisis, we are incredibly grateful to the extended family that is the members and supporters of VHP. “The tragedy that has struck Haiti is all-encompassing,” noted Lila Meade, “but I’ve been so moved by the out pouring of response we’ve had from people in the immediate community and throughout the Hudson Valley and beyond, the spirit of one caring for another, that it is truly inspiring.”

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Donations and Relief Supplies

∗    You can donate supplies to our boxes placed in Main Building (Entrance, The Retreat, Kiosk), the Library, the Athletics and Fitness Center and each dorm, starting from Friday (Jan 15th).    Supplies needed include:
•    CLOTHING
•    FIRST AID SUPPLIES: Antibiotic creams/ointments, antiseptic wipes, bleach in tablet form, Band-Aids, gauze and tape, first aid kits, gloves.
•    OVER THE COUNTER MEDICATIONS: Pain relievers, tummy aids, antibiotic creams/ointments, liquid bandage.
•    EMERGENCY NEEDS: Flashlights, DRY goods (beans/rice), infant/powder milk, supplemental drinks (i.e. Ensure), gently used of new blankets.
•    HYGIENE: Toothpaste and brushes, nail clippers, wash/face cloths, non-alcohol or baby shampoos, bar soaps such as Ivory.

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