28 Jan, 2010

Broken people in Haiti

Haiti’s Children Adrift in World of Chaos

Two young Haitian girls standing arm and armNot long after 14-year-old Daphne Joseph escaped her collapsed house on the day of the earthquake, she boarded a crowded jitney with her uncle and crawled in traffic toward the capital, where her single mother sold beauty products in the Tête Boeuf marketplace. “Mama,” she said she repeated to herself. “Mama, I’m coming.”

Abandoning the slow-moving jitney, Daphne, petite and delicate, got separated from her uncle and jumped onto a motorcycle-for-hire. She arrived alone at a marketplace in ruins and ran, in her dusty purple sandals, toward a pile of debris laced with “broken people” she said.

Growing closer, she saw her mother, lifeless. She froze, she said, eventually watching as her mother’s body was dumped in a wheelbarrow and her only parent vanished into the chaos.

“I wanted to kill myself,” Daphne said in a whisper.

Haiti’s children, 45 percent of the population, are among the most disoriented and vulnerable of the survivors of the earthquake. By the many tens of thousands, they have lost their parents, their homes, their schools and their bearings. They have sustained head injuries and undergone amputations. They have slept on the street, foraged for food and suffered nightmares.

Two weeks after the earthquake, with the smell of death still fouling the air, children can be seen in every devastated corner resiliently kicking soccer balls, flying handmade kites, singing pop songs and ferreting out textbooks from the rubble of their schools. But as Haitian and international groups begin tending to the neediest among them, many children are clearly traumatized and at risk.

Story & photo courtesy of — The New York Times.

James 1:27 (NIV)

Religion that God our Father accepts as pure and faultless is this: to look after orphans and widows in their distress and to keep oneself from being polluted by the world.

While "religious people" in the media spotlight lecture and argue about "why" the earthquakes in Haiti happened, James reminds us that the most important thing that followers of Jesus can be doing is to "look after orphans and widows in their distress."  In a time of great suffering and trial it's nice to have things broken down to the basics, and in today's God Story scripture James does exactly that.  James even goes so far as to say that looking after orphans and widows in their distress is a pure a faultless act of devotion to God!

Jesus was also notorious for breaking things down to the basics; he was a master of getting to the root of things.  At one point in his life Jesus said that "all the law and prophets" hang on the commandment to love your God and love your neighbor (Matthew 22). It doesn't get much simpler than that!

Unfortunately, we live in a world that typically places the self above and beyond all other values, and as Christians we are constantly tempted to reject the words of Jesus to put others and God first in favor of ourselves.  At a time like this, when thousands of orphans are in dire need in Haiti, I can think of no better time than to recommit our allegiance to the greatest commandment. 

  • How can you "look after orphans" in Haiti?
  • How have you been "polluted by the world"?  Take some time to reflect on all of the ways you are being tempted to love yourself more than God and your neighbor.

Ask a friend what the "most important law" in their life is?  Tell a friend about yours.

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The Daily Bide is brought to you by a team of writers from Youth for Christ/USA. The writers all have various years of experience in youth ministry but share a common bond in serving Jesus and discovering what it means to abide deeply everyday and to connect God's Story with those around them. A number of the Daily Bide writers have also written portions of our 3Story® resources. You can check out our resources at the 3Story.org website or connect with our writers at 3story@yfc.net. If you have a question or a story you would like to share, please reference the Daily Bide date in your email.

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