Sometimes I Hate this Place
Sometimes I hate this place.
There.
I said it. It hurts to admit it.
I’ve started writing this several
times, trying to make the words all lovely and spiritual and easy to
digest. But some things just can’t be
prettied-up. Stop reading now if you can’t
handle a little lamenting.
A few nights ago, a friend was
supposed to come for dinner, but he was delayed by traffic while driving from
Port au Prince. Jeremy sent me a text
that said, “go ahead and make dinner. He’s
stuck in a gun fight and might not get here in time.” EXCUSE ME, WHATTTTTT? News reports soon followed with more
information: “On
Wednesday, automatic gunfire was reported throughout the day at Bicentenaire,
Avenue Bolosse and Martissant, and nearby neighborhoods where gangs clashed,
causing transit paralysis and widespread panic…. Late in the night shots were
still heard and tension and fear remained palpable among residents of the
affected areas.” (HaitiLibre.com) I did go ahead and make dinner, but with a
righteous anger rising inside of me. “I
hate this place,” I thought while cooking up the pork chops. I imagined our friend hunkered down in his
car while bullets whizzed by.
(Disclaimer: usually my imagination
is worse than reality) Not only was our
friend in danger, but I couldn’t stop thinking about all the sweet ladies
trying to sell on the street, the innocent kids just wanting to play, the men
trying to work—all of them in the line of fire by gangs armed with automatic
weapons that are funded by corrupt government officials who want to control
this country. The injustice burned
within me.
Several hours later, our friend did
make it to our house in one piece, and ate his pork chop while regaling us with
the story of what he did during the couple hours that he was stuck in Port. It turns out that he pulled off the road and visited with local vendors while waiting for the traffic to clear. He wasn't actually dodging bullets, as my mind imagined, but still the danger was nearby. To him and many others, it
was just another day in Haiti. It’s sadly becoming the norm.
Not only are there frequent reports of gang
violence, there is also currently a nationwide fuel shortage
that is causing life to grind to a halt.
This happens every couple of months when the government can’t pay their
bills, and it just wreaks havoc everywhere. And now they are saying there's a potential of no gas until mid-September. So, Friday, I woke up thinking that it would be the last day I could
take my kids to school for a while. While
we have plenty of diesel for our generator, all of our vehicles use gas—and
there has been zero gasoline for sale in our city for days. Actually, one gas station did open up briefly, but there were reports of nearly 600 cars in line to
buy their ration, 1000 gourdes, or about 4 gallons. If we would have tried to brave that line, we
would have run out of gas while waiting.
And yesterday, in front of the
other gas station nearby, there were reports of young men slashing the tires of
vehicles in anger because they couldn’t get gas for their motos. Their frustration is understandable, even
though their actions are inexcusable. Many
of these guys drive moto taxis for a living and if they can’t find gas to work,
they can’t make money to support their family.
It sucks for everyone. For us,
it’s really just an inconvenience, but for others, it is a major impact to
their family’s ability to work and eat.
We were down to our last ¼ tank of gas
in the Sequoia, and the truck’s gas tank is empty. So, here in Haiti, we don’t have snow days,
but we HAVE had “riot days” and now there may be “no gas in the car” days that
keep the kids home from school. Believe
it or not, the kids are NOT happy about this.
They LOVE their school, their teacher and their friends. They want to go. And believe me when I say that I ALSO WANT
THEM TO GO.
As I drove them to school Friday morning,
I prayed over that last little bit of gas, asking God to make it like the
widow’s flour that never ran out. Just
as I turned off the main road onto the bumpy side street, KA-THUNK. The car came to an abrupt stop. My heart sank and I might have cussed a
little. And of course, as is with the
timing of all my catastrophic vehicle problems, Jeremy was 3 hours away in Fond
Parisien where he is working.
I jumped out to discover that the ball
joint on the front passenger wheel had broken off. Immediately,
I realized how much of a blessing it was that this didn’t happen while driving
on the main road, which could have been extremely dangerous. Or even worse, it could have happened while
coming down our very steep driveway. But
the location where it DID happen is not exactly the place you want to hang out for
long. There have been some robberies and
shootings there after dark over the past few months. We pass through that area every day on the
way to and from school and have personally never had any issues, because we are
traveling in the daylight. But now that
we were sitting ducks and I had five kids in the car, my mama bear primal
instincts kicked in. It was 7:45 a.m.
and it was already nearly 90 degrees. I
was sweatin’ it in more ways than one.


As soon as I walked in the door, I
received a message from a nurse-friend at the American clinic who is helping me
with a pair of premature twins under our care.
Their condition had declined significantly and they needed to be
hospitalized ASAP. But remember: no gas!
car is broken down! the hospital
is 3+ hours away. My hands are tied. I
thought again, “I hate this place.” This
is not the first time that transportation issues have stood between a sick
patient and the help that they need.
This is the daily story for many others nationwide: so many needs, so much suffering, so few
resources, so many obstacles standing in the way.
But again, GOD. He is not blind to suffering and pain. He sees and acts. I had nothing but God had everything.
I went out on a limb and contacted an
organization called HERO, an American-operated ambulance service, and asked for
assistance with transporting these babies to the NICU who had already agreed to
accept them. I thought it was a
long-shot due to the fuel shortage, but within minutes, they replied, “yes, we
can help.” I can’t tell you the wave of
relief that washed over me. Like a
tsunami of thanksgiving. Over the next
few hours, with an extra annoyance of an internet outage that slowed
communication (because truly nothing can just be easy), five separate organizations
came together in beautiful collaboration to get these babies to the place where
they could receive help. I have an extra
measure of gratitude today for Haiti Health Ministries, CAN ambulance service,
HERO, and God’s Littlest Angels NICU.
The dust was clearing from all that
excitement when Jeremy arrived home from working out in Fond Parisien (he had
traveled there with our friend Parker who has a diesel truck, and a delicious
little side note: they brought back with
them some thick cut Farmer John’s bacon, hallelujer praise the Lort). I was so glad to see him, but he didn’t stay
home for long: Immediately he set out with
Parker to find gas. I knew this was a
risky move and it could put him in danger because there are thousands of others
also scrambling to find a scarce resource.
Again, I prayed and fretted while trying to make dinner, not at peace
until he pulled back in the driveway. I didn’t
care if he came back with gas; I just
wanted him back! But about 90 minutes
later, he came home and had found a little bit of gas, praise the Lord. A glimmer of hope that the kids can get to school
next week after all!
We fell in bed that night, both
absolutely exhausted and weary, but still grateful that we truly do have
everything that we need: food and water
and solar power. This is more than many
people around us, and I grieve that for them.
We don’t take this life for granted, and I feel guilty even for
complaining at all. I hated this place a
little less when the city gave power and the air conditioning came on just in
time to go to sleep.
We needed that bit of rest because the
next day would turn out to have more challenges. Remember that little bit of gas Jeremy was
able to buy? Yeah….about that. After he put it in his truck, we noticed a
strong gas smell and discovered that the gas tank is leaking, wasting precious
gas AND rendering our last functional vehicle not safe to drive. We both might have cussed a little more. We used to be good, holy, spiritual
missionary people, but now we’re just ticked off, frustrated and freaking hot
whiners. Oh, and also stuck at
home. In the words of our 10 year old
daughter, “why are cars always so hard?”
These few vehicle issues from this
week join a long list of transportation trauma for me. I wish I was joking, but I’m not. When I journal and try to process some of my
more anxious experiences, I’ve discovered a theme emerging, and a lot of it has
to do with me feeling vulnerable on the roads with my kids in the car. I can practically
hear all international workers living in Haiti raising up a voice of solidarity
as I type: every time we get in the car
to go somewhere, we take a risk. Often
times, not going is not an option, so we go anyway and hope for the best. For me personally, my list of transportation
trauma includes stuff I can’t share in detail: physical and sexual harassment, animal and human abuse, a drive-by shooting, nakedness, dead bodies, near collisions, and a whole bunch of
breakdowns/overheating/flat tires, etc.
My tiny little story joins the many
others in this country, American and Haitian, who have experienced things on
the roads they never imagined. Jeremy has driven longer and further than I have, and the stress of his time on the roads has likely taken years off his life. Friends
have had rocks and glass bottles thrown at them. Others have driven through flaming road blocks. Some have seen human bodies burning on
blazing tires. People have been
robbed and shot while
leaving the bank. Jeremy and some
friends came upon a wreck in which a tap tap carrying about 20 people had gone
over the side of the mountain, killing all but one. So my little breakdown this week really isn't that big of a deal. Still, no one living in Haiti has been immune from
some kind of road trauma. And adding to the mix the gas shortage when traffic can not flow, this brings an extra dose of misery to those people who just want to work and take care of their families.
So when I say I hate this place, I mean
that I hate THE SUFFERING. I hate the pain. I hate the anxiety. I hate the sorrow. I hate the desperation. I hate the fear. I hate the injustice. I hate
that innocent, peaceful Haitian people are left with the raw end of the deal. I hate that the enemy has seemed to be
victorious in this tiny hurting country.
But, clearly I also love this place, weirdly,
wildly, inexplicably. Every time I begin
to think that I just want to get out of here and live in a place where Firestone
and AAA Roadside Assistance exist, I see the little faces that we care for in their homes every week. Going TO them is important to me. I love these people, these
babies, these families that we serve in a crazy, protective, fierce way. And
furthermore, Jesus keeps helping us press on, reminding us of the ultimate goal.
Friends, when I tell you that more
than any of the crap I just told you about and should probably edit out….more
than ANYTHING, I just want someone to know Jesus. I want them to know that there is more to
life than suffering and pain. I want
them to know the hope of an eternity with Him.
I don’t want to be idle in my days here. I don’t want to shy away from the hard places. I want to be in the trenches with our neighbors. I want this struggle to count. I want to use this time wisely. I want to reflect the true, authentic, scandalously
grace-filled Jesus to those around us who have suffered far more than I ever
have. I know that I have ZERO to offer except for the hope of Jesus, who has EVERYTHING to offer. If it’s even for ONE, it’s worth it.
So, whenever one of our vehicles are
up and running again, and it has gas in it, I’m going to get in and I’m going to go. I’m not going to let fear paralyze me. While what we’ve seen and experienced on
the roads will never be far from our minds, more times than we can tell you,
Jesus has been with us. He has always protected.
“It is God with whom we travel, and
while He is the end of our journey, He is also at every stopping place.” Elisabeth Elliot
Thank you for sharing. Yes I understand the occasional hatred of this place we inexplicably love--for the sake of those little faces and the love of our Savior. One day and one moment at a time, zanmi mwen.
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