As we look to long-term relief efforts, construction teams and translators will be an integral part of the process.
Currently we are looking for structural engineers and other highly skilled construction workers. We are also in need of French and Kreyol speaking persons to assist teams in Haiti.
Volunteer with NCM Caribbean: http://www.caribnaz.org/haitirelief/Volunteers_view.php
If you are interested in volunteering for more than 3 months: http://www.missioncorps.org/?page=ministry.html
Dr. Bill Dawson - Haiti Nazarene Mission
January 14th, 2010 on 11:53 pm
The Nazarene Mission in Haiti suffered only loss of several hundred feet of security wall. No other structural damage. No injuries on our campus.
Nazarene Compassionat Ministries is working to assess how we may best bring teams of medical personnel and our overall response. We have over 520 churches spread across the entire country and can serve as distribution sites for other groups needing assistance in distributing relief supplies. We do have some space on our campus to store suppiles as well. If we can be of assistance please do not hesitate to contact me at bdawson @caribnaz.org
The Church of the Nazarene is exploring all avenues to assist in relief including plans to provide medical attention, food, and shelter as well as other material support. Nazarene Compassionate Ministries in the Caribbean is working with several groups who specialize in medicine and disaster response to provide immediate relief.
Currently, we are seeking to provide people with food, water, and shelter. For a complete list of items that you, or your group or church can send, click here. You can find directions on how and where to ship these items here.
Please contact ncm @nazarene.org with inquiries. www.ncm.org/haitiearthquake
The Church of the Nazarene in Haiti had been holding district assemblies for its 11 districts this week. General Superintendent J.K. Warrick flew into Haiti Tuesday afternoon for those assemblies. Communication with personnel in Haiti has been difficult due to phone lines being down, but Warrick was able to get a text message out from the Nazarene Seminary campus in Petion-ville, outside of Port-au-Prince, on Tuesday to say he and other church leaders on campus were safe. (Related: On-site in Haiti, Warrick calls on Nazarenes to pray and act)
What is not known is the full extent of loss of life or property damage beyond the campus walls. Bill Dawson, the region's French Field Strategy coordinator who had also flown in for the meetings, Emailed the Caribbean Communications Office to say the situation "is grave and urgent."
"There are many injured all over the city," Dawson said Tuesday. "Major buildings, three and four stories, are down. ... Neighbors who work for the United Nations report many injured ... people carrying wounded through the streets."
"We have no news yet of our Nazarene families off campus," Dawson said. "The earthquake was centered in the mid portion of the Central District. Dr. Lucien Jean Baptiste is the D.S. (district superintendent) and is on the road for an assembly in the South Central portion of Haiti. We do not know his whereabouts or information on him and the driver yet." (Update: Lucien Jean Baptiste and his driver are reported safe.)
The population in the capital area is approximately two million people, living in dense urban communities, and they continue to experience significant aftershocks. Catastrophic casualties and damage are expected, as Haiti's weak infrastructure is not prepared for this kind of disaster.
"Our prayers and thoughts are with our Haitian family of more than 115,000 Nazarenes who have suffered such loss today," Caribbean Regional Director John Smee said on Tuesday evening.
Please be in prayer for the Haitian people and the Nazarene churches in Haiti. Pray for those injured in the debris and those involved in relief efforts.
Warrick, Dawson, and three staff members visited two churches close to their location. Both churches are secure and show no signs of damage.
There are literally thousands of people milling the streets. Bodies are covered with sheets on the sidewalks. Cars are crushed by falling buildings and walls. The Children's Hospital in Petion-Ville has collapsed completely. Many large buildings have collapsed. The hillside huts are piles of rubble in many places. Traffic jams abound. People are still in shock and openly grieving in the streets. We comforted people at several sites this morning as they anxiously and tearfully wait while citizen rescuers attempt to remove their loved ones from the rubble.
[We] slept on mattresses in the grass [last night] along with 40-50 staff, neighbors and families. There are still tremors off and on all night and this morning. Hundreds of thousands of people in Port-au-Prince area slept outside last night. Communications are still very sporadic.
We will keep you posted on the situation, which is even more grave this morning than we had anticipated. We truly feel your prayers.
The Caribbean Region reports five members of the Tabarre Church of the Nazarene were killed in the earthquake. The Bible college in Petion-ville is relatively intact, but efforts are already underway to ration water, food, and diesel. These essentials are quickly diminishing.
Nazarene church buildings in and around Petion-ville, at least initially, seem to have held up to the main earthquake and following aftershocks. Independent news outlets are reporting that the main Catholic cathedral in downtown Port-au-Prince has been heavily damaged. The Bel-Aire Church of the Nazarene is a few blocks from this Catholic church and the status of Bel-Aire church and its members is still unknown.
Warrick, who earlier was safely moved to Florida, remains with Caribbean Region Office personnel in order to help facilitate response initiatives on behalf of the denomination. NCM-Caribbean reports relief efforts are well underway and local churches in Haiti have been offering immediate care, comfort, shelter, and supplies where able. (story)
National NCM Coordinator for Haiti Walliere Pierre gives a firsthand account of the earthquake and its aftermath. (story)
Two Church of the Nazarene U.S. Navy chaplains have been alerted and are on their way to Haiti. Chaplain Jeff Mason will be aboard the USNS Comfort (the hospital ship) and Chaplain Richard Bonnette will be sailing out of North Carolina. Chaplain Bonnette just returned from a six-month deployment in December and he and his service members are being asked to deploy again for at least two months. Please keep both in your prayers.
Additional news concerning the earthquake and how it's affecting Nazarenes around the world:
A Nampa family of four is among the seven missionary families with Nampa-based Mission Aviation Fellowship in Haiti who survived the country's deadly earthquake, according to a spokeswoman for the organization. For more on the Edgertons, who worked with the Mexico/Central America Region for several years, click here.
Katie Zook, a 2009 Northwest Nazarene graduate, was pulled from the basement of the collapsed Friends of Haiti Organization building in the Port-au-Prince area. She suffered a bruised lung and bruises on her legs. For more on Katie's story, click here or here.
News to share? Email us at submitnews @ncnnews.com.
Persons and churches wishing to make a donation online can do so through Nazarene Compassionate Ministries at ncm.org. Checks can be marked "Caribbean Disaster Response ACM1204" and mailed to Global Treasury Services, PO Box 843116 Kansas City, MO 64184. In Canada, checks should be made payable and sent to the Church of the Nazarene Canada, 20 Regan Road, Unit 9, Brampton, Ontario L7A 1C3.
For more ways to help, go to www.ncm.org/HaitiEarthquake.
Mon Jan 17 07:18:32 +0000 2011 by LTel:added internal contact
email changed.
(show/hide changes)Thu Feb 25 02:27:39 +0000 2010 by LTel:town: Petion-ville -> Petionville
name: Church of the Nazarene (WALK-IN FACILITY, SUPPLY DISTRIBUTION, VOLUNTEER OPS) -> Church of the Nazarene (WALK-IN FACILITY, SUPPLY DISTRIBUTION, REBUILDING UNITS, VOLUNTEER OPS)
(show/hide changes)Thu Feb 25 02:21:12 +0000 2010 by LTel:Added notes, main no., avails, needs
name: Church of the Nazarene (WALK-IN FACILITY, SUPPLY DISTRIBUTION) -> Church of the Nazarene (WALK-IN FACILITY, SUPPLY DISTRIBUTION, VOLUNTEER OPS)
notes: http://www.aerdo.net/blog/?p=516
Dr. Bill Dawson - Haiti Nazarene Mission
January 14th, 2010 on 11:53 pm
The Nazarene Mission in Haiti suffered only loss of several hundred feet of security wall. No other structural damage. No injuries on our campus.
Nazarene Compassionat Ministries is working to assess how we may best bring teams of medical personnel and our overall response. We have over 520 churches spread across the entire country and can serve as distribution sites for other groups needing assistance in distributing relief supplies. We do have some space on our campus to store suppiles as well. If we can be of assistance please do not hesitate to contact me at bdawson @caribnaz.org
Nazarene Compassionate Ministries
The Church of the Nazarene is exploring all avenues to assist in relief including plans to provide medical attention, food, and shelter as well as other material support. Nazarene Compassionate Ministries in the Caribbean is working with several groups who specialize in medicine and disaster response to provide immediate relief.
Currently, we are seeking to provide people with food, water, and shelter. For a complete list of items that you, or your group or church can send, click here. You can find directions on how and where to ship these items here.
Please contact ncm @nazarene.org with inquiries. www.ncm.org/haitiearthquake
http://www.ncnnews.com/nphweb/html/ncn/article.jsp?id=10008830
The Church of the Nazarene in Haiti had been holding district assemblies for its 11 districts this week. General Superintendent J.K. Warrick flew into Haiti Tuesday afternoon for those assemblies. Communication with personnel in Haiti has been difficult due to phone lines being down, but Warrick was able to get a text message out from the Nazarene Seminary campus in Petion-ville, outside of Port-au-Prince, on Tuesday to say he and other church leaders on campus were safe. (Related: On-site in Haiti, Warrick calls on Nazarenes to pray and act)
What is not known is the full extent of loss of life or property damage beyond the campus walls. Bill Dawson, the region's French Field Strategy coordinator who had also flown in for the meetings, Emailed the Caribbean Communications Office to say the situation "is grave and urgent."
"There are many injured all over the city," Dawson said Tuesday. "Major buildings, three and four stories, are down. ... Neighbors who work for the United Nations report many injured ... people carrying wounded through the streets."
"We have no news yet of our Nazarene families off campus," Dawson said. "The earthquake was centered in the mid portion of the Central District. Dr. Lucien Jean Baptiste is the D.S. (district superintendent) and is on the road for an assembly in the South Central portion of Haiti. We do not know his whereabouts or information on him and the driver yet." (Update: Lucien Jean Baptiste and his driver are reported safe.)
The population in the capital area is approximately two million people, living in dense urban communities, and they continue to experience significant aftershocks. Catastrophic casualties and damage are expected, as Haiti's weak infrastructure is not prepared for this kind of disaster.
"Our prayers and thoughts are with our Haitian family of more than 115,000 Nazarenes who have suffered such loss today," Caribbean Regional Director John Smee said on Tuesday evening.
Please be in prayer for the Haitian people and the Nazarene churches in Haiti. Pray for those injured in the debris and those involved in relief efforts.
============================
Update: January 13
Warrick, Dawson, and three staff members visited two churches close to their location. Both churches are secure and show no signs of damage.
Dawson reports:
There are literally thousands of people milling the streets. Bodies are covered with sheets on the sidewalks. Cars are crushed by falling buildings and walls. The Children's Hospital in Petion-Ville has collapsed completely. Many large buildings have collapsed. The hillside huts are piles of rubble in many places. Traffic jams abound. People are still in shock and openly grieving in the streets. We comforted people at several sites this morning as they anxiously and tearfully wait while citizen rescuers attempt to remove their loved ones from the rubble.
[We] slept on mattresses in the grass [last night] along with 40-50 staff, neighbors and families. There are still tremors off and on all night and this morning. Hundreds of thousands of people in Port-au-Prince area slept outside last night. Communications are still very sporadic.
We will keep you posted on the situation, which is even more grave this morning than we had anticipated. We truly feel your prayers.
=========================
Update: January 14
The Caribbean Region reports five members of the Tabarre Church of the Nazarene were killed in the earthquake. The Bible college in Petion-ville is relatively intact, but efforts are already underway to ration water, food, and diesel. These essentials are quickly diminishing.
Nazarene church buildings in and around Petion-ville, at least initially, seem to have held up to the main earthquake and following aftershocks. Independent news outlets are reporting that the main Catholic cathedral in downtown Port-au-Prince has been heavily damaged. The Bel-Aire Church of the Nazarene is a few blocks from this Catholic church and the status of Bel-Aire church and its members is still unknown.
Warrick, who earlier was safely moved to Florida, remains with Caribbean Region Office personnel in order to help facilitate response initiatives on behalf of the denomination. NCM-Caribbean reports relief efforts are well underway and local churches in Haiti have been offering immediate care, comfort, shelter, and supplies where able. (story)
=======================
January 15
National NCM Coordinator for Haiti Walliere Pierre gives a firsthand account of the earthquake and its aftermath. (story)
Update: January 18
Two Church of the Nazarene U.S. Navy chaplains have been alerted and are on their way to Haiti. Chaplain Jeff Mason will be aboard the USNS Comfort (the hospital ship) and Chaplain Richard Bonnette will be sailing out of North Carolina. Chaplain Bonnette just returned from a six-month deployment in December and he and his service members are being asked to deploy again for at least two months. Please keep both in your prayers.
Additional news concerning the earthquake and how it's affecting Nazarenes around the world:
Nampa, Idaho, locals among the Haiti earthquake survivors
A Nampa family of four is among the seven missionary families with Nampa-based Mission Aviation Fellowship in Haiti who survived the country's deadly earthquake, according to a spokeswoman for the organization. For more on the Edgertons, who worked with the Mexico/Central America Region for several years, click here.
NNU graduate rescued
Katie Zook, a 2009 Northwest Nazarene graduate, was pulled from the basement of the collapsed Friends of Haiti Organization building in the Port-au-Prince area. She suffered a bruised lung and bruises on her legs. For more on Katie's story, click here or here.
News to share? Email us at submitnews @ncnnews.com.
How to Help
Persons and churches wishing to make a donation online can do so through Nazarene Compassionate Ministries at ncm.org. Checks can be marked "Caribbean Disaster Response ACM1204" and mailed to Global Treasury Services, PO Box 843116 Kansas City, MO 64184. In Canada, checks should be made payable and sent to the Church of the Nazarene Canada, 20 Regan Road, Unit 9, Brampton, Ontario L7A 1C3.
For more ways to help, go to www.ncm.org/HaitiEarthquake.
--Caribbean Region Communications, NCN News (Slideshow available) -> Volunteer
As we look to long-term relief efforts, construction teams and translators will be an integral part of the process.
Currently we are looking for structural engineers and other highly skilled construction workers. We are also in need of French and Kreyol speaking persons to assist teams in Haiti.
If you are interested in volunteering for 3 months or less:
Volunteer with NCM Caribbean: http://www.caribnaz.org/haitirelief/Volunteers_view.php
If you are interested in volunteering for more than 3 months: http://www.missioncorps.org/?page=ministry.html
Volunteer through Nazarene Mission Corps
----------------------------------------------------
http://www.aerdo.net/blog/?p=516
Dr. Bill Dawson - Haiti Nazarene Mission
January 14th, 2010 on 11:53 pm
The Nazarene Mission in Haiti suffered only loss of several hundred feet of security wall. No other structural damage. No injuries on our campus.
Nazarene Compassionat Ministries is working to assess how we may best bring teams of medical personnel and our overall response. We have over 520 churches spread across the entire country and can serve as distribution sites for other groups needing assistance in distributing relief supplies. We do have some space on our campus to store suppiles as well. If we can be of assistance please do not hesitate to contact me at bdawson @caribnaz.org
Nazarene Compassionate Ministries
The Church of the Nazarene is exploring all avenues to assist in relief including plans to provide medical attention, food, and shelter as well as other material support. Nazarene Compassionate Ministries in the Caribbean is working with several groups who specialize in medicine and disaster response to provide immediate relief.
Currently, we are seeking to provide people with food, water, and shelter. For a complete list of items that you, or your group or church can send, click here. You can find directions on how and where to ship these items here.
Please contact ncm @nazarene.org with inquiries. www.ncm.org/haitiearthquake
http://www.ncnnews.com/nphweb/html/ncn/article.jsp?id=10008830
The Church of the Nazarene in Haiti had been holding district assemblies for its 11 districts this week. General Superintendent J.K. Warrick flew into Haiti Tuesday afternoon for those assemblies. Communication with personnel in Haiti has been difficult due to phone lines being down, but Warrick was able to get a text message out from the Nazarene Seminary campus in Petion-ville, outside of Port-au-Prince, on Tuesday to say he and other church leaders on campus were safe. (Related: On-site in Haiti, Warrick calls on Nazarenes to pray and act)
What is not known is the full extent of loss of life or property damage beyond the campus walls. Bill Dawson, the region's French Field Strategy coordinator who had also flown in for the meetings, Emailed the Caribbean Communications Office to say the situation "is grave and urgent."
"There are many injured all over the city," Dawson said Tuesday. "Major buildings, three and four stories, are down. ... Neighbors who work for the United Nations report many injured ... people carrying wounded through the streets."
"We have no news yet of our Nazarene families off campus," Dawson said. "The earthquake was centered in the mid portion of the Central District. Dr. Lucien Jean Baptiste is the D.S. (district superintendent) and is on the road for an assembly in the South Central portion of Haiti. We do not know his whereabouts or information on him and the driver yet." (Update: Lucien Jean Baptiste and his driver are reported safe.)
The population in the capital area is approximately two million people, living in dense urban communities, and they continue to experience significant aftershocks. Catastrophic casualties and damage are expected, as Haiti's weak infrastructure is not prepared for this kind of disaster.
"Our prayers and thoughts are with our Haitian family of more than 115,000 Nazarenes who have suffered such loss today," Caribbean Regional Director John Smee said on Tuesday evening.
Please be in prayer for the Haitian people and the Nazarene churches in Haiti. Pray for those injured in the debris and those involved in relief efforts.
============================
Update: January 13
Warrick, Dawson, and three staff members visited two churches close to their location. Both churches are secure and show no signs of damage.
Dawson reports:
There are literally thousands of people milling the streets. Bodies are covered with sheets on the sidewalks. Cars are crushed by falling buildings and walls. The Children's Hospital in Petion-Ville has collapsed completely. Many large buildings have collapsed. The hillside huts are piles of rubble in many places. Traffic jams abound. People are still in shock and openly grieving in the streets. We comforted people at several sites this morning as they anxiously and tearfully wait while citizen rescuers attempt to remove their loved ones from the rubble.
[We] slept on mattresses in the grass [last night] along with 40-50 staff, neighbors and families. There are still tremors off and on all night and this morning. Hundreds of thousands of people in Port-au-Prince area slept outside last night. Communications are still very sporadic.
We will keep you posted on the situation, which is even more grave this morning than we had anticipated. We truly feel your prayers.
=========================
Update: January 14
The Caribbean Region reports five members of the Tabarre Church of the Nazarene were killed in the earthquake. The Bible college in Petion-ville is relatively intact, but efforts are already underway to ration water, food, and diesel. These essentials are quickly diminishing.
Nazarene church buildings in and around Petion-ville, at least initially, seem to have held up to the main earthquake and following aftershocks. Independent news outlets are reporting that the main Catholic cathedral in downtown Port-au-Prince has been heavily damaged. The Bel-Aire Church of the Nazarene is a few blocks from this Catholic church and the status of Bel-Aire church and its members is still unknown.
Warrick, who earlier was safely moved to Florida, remains with Caribbean Region Office personnel in order to help facilitate response initiatives on behalf of the denomination. NCM-Caribbean reports relief efforts are well underway and local churches in Haiti have been offering immediate care, comfort, shelter, and supplies where able. (story)
=======================
January 15
National NCM Coordinator for Haiti Walliere Pierre gives a firsthand account of the earthquake and its aftermath. (story)
Update: January 18
Two Church of the Nazarene U.S. Navy chaplains have been alerted and are on their way to Haiti. Chaplain Jeff Mason will be aboard the USNS Comfort (the hospital ship) and Chaplain Richard Bonnette will be sailing out of North Carolina. Chaplain Bonnette just returned from a six-month deployment in December and he and his service members are being asked to deploy again for at least two months. Please keep both in your prayers.
Additional news concerning the earthquake and how it's affecting Nazarenes around the world:
Nampa, Idaho, locals among the Haiti earthquake survivors
A Nampa family of four is among the seven missionary families with Nampa-based Mission Aviation Fellowship in Haiti who survived the country's deadly earthquake, according to a spokeswoman for the organization. For more on the Edgertons, who worked with the Mexico/Central America Region for several years, click here.
NNU graduate rescued
Katie Zook, a 2009 Northwest Nazarene graduate, was pulled from the basement of the collapsed Friends of Haiti Organization building in the Port-au-Prince area. She suffered a bruised lung and bruises on her legs. For more on Katie's story, click here or here.
News to share? Email us at submitnews @ncnnews.com.
How to Help
Persons and churches wishing to make a donation online can do so through Nazarene Compassionate Ministries at ncm.org. Checks can be marked "Caribbean Disaster Response ACM1204" and mailed to Global Treasury Services, PO Box 843116 Kansas City, MO 64184. In Canada, checks should be made payable and sent to the Church of the Nazarene Canada, 20 Regan Road, Unit 9, Brampton, Ontario L7A 1C3.
For more ways to help, go to www.ncm.org/HaitiEarthquake.
--Caribbean Region Communications, NCN News (Slideshow available)
(show/hide changes)Thu Feb 25 02:18:32 +0000 2010 by LTel:main_phone: See Notes below or/and website -> 1.800.310.6362
(show/hide changes)Thu Feb 25 02:16:02 +0000 2010 by LTel:address: -> SEE U.S./CANADIAN ADDR IN NOTES
(show/hide changes)Wed Feb 24 07:37:11 +0000 2010 by DNug:main_phone: -> See Notes below or/and website
notes: http://www.aerdo.net/blog/?p=516
Dr. Bill Dawson - Haiti Nazarene Mission
January 14th, 2010 on 11:53 pm
The Nazarene Mission in Haiti suffered only loss of several hundred feet of security wall. No other structural damage. No injuries on our campus.
Nazarene Compassionat Ministries is working to assess how we may best bring teams of medical personnel and our overall response. We have over 520 churchs spread across the entire country and can serve as distribution sites for other groups needing assistance in distributing relief supplies. We do have some space on our campus to store suppiles as well. If we can be of assistance please do not hesitate to contact me at bdawson @caribnaz.org
Nazarene Compassionate Ministries
The Church of the Nazarene is exploring all avenues to assist in relief including plans to provide medical attention, food, and shelter as well as other material support. Nazarene Compassionate Ministries in the Caribbean is working with several groups who specialize in medicine and disaster response to provide immediate relief.
Currently, we are seeking to provide people with food, water, and shelter. For a complete list of items that you, or your group or church can send, click here. You can find directions on how and where to ship these items here.
Please contact ncm @nazarene.org with inquiries. www.ncm.org/haitiearthquake
http://www.ncnnews.com/nphweb/html/ncn/article.jsp?id=10008830
The Church of the Nazarene in Haiti had been holding district assemblies for its 11 districts this week. General Superintendent J.K. Warrick flew into Haiti Tuesday afternoon for those assemblies. Communication with personnel in Haiti has been difficult due to phone lines being down, but Warrick was able to get a text message out from the Nazarene Seminary campus in Petion-ville, outside of Port-au-Prince, on Tuesday to say he and other church leaders on campus were safe. (Related: On-site in Haiti, Warrick calls on Nazarenes to pray and act)
What is not known is the full extent of loss of life or property damage beyond the campus walls. Bill Dawson, the region's French Field Strategy coordinator who had also flown in for the meetings, Emailed the Caribbean Communications Office to say the situation "is grave and urgent."
"There are many injured all over the city," Dawson said Tuesday. "Major buildings, three and four stories, are down. ... Neighbors who work for the United Nations report many injured ... people carrying wounded through the streets."
"We have no news yet of our Nazarene families off campus," Dawson said. "The earthquake was centered in the mid portion of the Central District. Dr. Lucien Jean Baptiste is the D.S. (district superintendent) and is on the road for an assembly in the South Central portion of Haiti. We do not know his whereabouts or information on him and the driver yet." (Update: Lucien Jean Baptiste and his driver are reported safe.)
The population in the capital area is approximately two million people, living in dense urban communities, and they continue to experience significant aftershocks. Catastrophic casualties and damage are expected, as Haiti's weak infrastructure is not prepared for this kind of disaster.
"Our prayers and thoughts are with our Haitian family of more than 115,000 Nazarenes who have suffered such loss today," Caribbean Regional Director John Smee said on Tuesday evening.
Please be in prayer for the Haitian people and the Nazarene churches in Haiti. Pray for those injured in the debris and those involved in relief efforts.
============================
Update: January 13
Warrick, Dawson, and three staff members visited two churches close to their location. Both churches are secure and show no signs of damage.
Dawson reports:
There are literally thousands of people milling the streets. Bodies are covered with sheets on the sidewalks. Cars are crushed by falling buildings and walls. The Children's Hospital in Petion-Ville has collapsed completely. Many large buildings have collapsed. The hillside huts are piles of rubble in many places. Traffic jams abound. People are still in shock and openly grieving in the streets. We comforted people at several sites this morning as they anxiously and tearfully wait while citizen rescuers attempt to remove their loved ones from the rubble.
[We] slept on mattresses in the grass [last night] along with 40-50 staff, neighbors and families. There are still tremors off and on all night and this morning. Hundreds of thousands of people in Port-au-Prince area slept outside last night. Communications are still very sporadic.
We will keep you posted on the situation, which is even more grave this morning than we had anticipated. We truly feel your prayers.
=========================
Update: January 14
The Caribbean Region reports five members of the Tabarre Church of the Nazarene were killed in the earthquake. The Bible college in Petion-ville is relatively intact, but efforts are already underway to ration water, food, and diesel. These essentials are quickly diminishing.
Nazarene church buildings in and around Petion-ville, at least initially, seem to have held up to the main earthquake and following aftershocks. Independent news outlets are reporting that the main Catholic cathedral in downtown Port-au-Prince has been heavily damaged. The Bel-Aire Church of the Nazarene is a few blocks from this Catholic church and the status of Bel-Aire church and its members is still unknown.
Warrick, who earlier was safely moved to Florida, remains with Caribbean Region Office personnel in order to help facilitate response initiatives on behalf of the denomination. NCM-Caribbean reports relief efforts are well underway and local churches in Haiti have been offering immediate care, comfort, shelter, and supplies where able. (story)
=======================
January 15
National NCM Coordinator for Haiti Walliere Pierre gives a firsthand account of the earthquake and its aftermath. (story)
Update: January 18
Two Church of the Nazarene U.S. Navy chaplains have been alerted and are on their way to Haiti. Chaplain Jeff Mason will be aboard the USNS Comfort (the hospital ship) and Chaplain Richard Bonnette will be sailing out of North Carolina. Chaplain Bonnette just returned from a six-month deployment in December and he and his service members are being asked to deploy again for at least two months. Please keep both in your prayers.
Additional news concerning the earthquake and how it's affecting Nazarenes around the world:
Nampa, Idaho, locals among the Haiti earthquake survivors
A Nampa family of four is among the seven missionary families with Nampa-based Mission Aviation Fellowship in Haiti who survived the country's deadly earthquake, according to a spokeswoman for the organization. For more on the Edgertons, who worked with the Mexico/Central America Region for several years, click here.
NNU graduate rescued
Katie Zook, a 2009 Northwest Nazarene graduate, was pulled from the basement of the collapsed Friends of Haiti Organization building in the Port-au-Prince area. She suffered a bruised lung and bruises on her legs. For more on Katie's story, click here or here.
News to share? Email us at submitnews @ncnnews.com.
How to Help
Persons and churches wishing to make a donation online can do so through Nazarene Compassionate Ministries at ncm.org. Checks can be marked "Caribbean Disaster Response ACM1204" and mailed to Global Treasury Services, PO Box 843116 Kansas City, MO 64184. In Canada, checks should be made payable and sent to the Church of the Nazarene Canada, 20 Regan Road, Unit 9, Brampton, Ontario L7A 1C3.
For more ways to help, go to www.ncm.org/HaitiEarthquake.
--Caribbean Region Communications, NCN News (Slideshow available) -> http://www.aerdo.net/blog/?p=516
Dr. Bill Dawson - Haiti Nazarene Mission
January 14th, 2010 on 11:53 pm
The Nazarene Mission in Haiti suffered only loss of several hundred feet of security wall. No other structural damage. No injuries on our campus.
Nazarene Compassionat Ministries is working to assess how we may best bring teams of medical personnel and our overall response. We have over 520 churches spread across the entire country and can serve as distribution sites for other groups needing assistance in distributing relief supplies. We do have some space on our campus to store suppiles as well. If we can be of assistance please do not hesitate to contact me at bdawson @caribnaz.org
Nazarene Compassionate Ministries
The Church of the Nazarene is exploring all avenues to assist in relief including plans to provide medical attention, food, and shelter as well as other material support. Nazarene Compassionate Ministries in the Caribbean is working with several groups who specialize in medicine and disaster response to provide immediate relief.
Currently, we are seeking to provide people with food, water, and shelter. For a complete list of items that you, or your group or church can send, click here. You can find directions on how and where to ship these items here.
Please contact ncm @nazarene.org with inquiries. www.ncm.org/haitiearthquake
http://www.ncnnews.com/nphweb/html/ncn/article.jsp?id=10008830
The Church of the Nazarene in Haiti had been holding district assemblies for its 11 districts this week. General Superintendent J.K. Warrick flew into Haiti Tuesday afternoon for those assemblies. Communication with personnel in Haiti has been difficult due to phone lines being down, but Warrick was able to get a text message out from the Nazarene Seminary campus in Petion-ville, outside of Port-au-Prince, on Tuesday to say he and other church leaders on campus were safe. (Related: On-site in Haiti, Warrick calls on Nazarenes to pray and act)
What is not known is the full extent of loss of life or property damage beyond the campus walls. Bill Dawson, the region's French Field Strategy coordinator who had also flown in for the meetings, Emailed the Caribbean Communications Office to say the situation "is grave and urgent."
"There are many injured all over the city," Dawson said Tuesday. "Major buildings, three and four stories, are down. ... Neighbors who work for the United Nations report many injured ... people carrying wounded through the streets."
"We have no news yet of our Nazarene families off campus," Dawson said. "The earthquake was centered in the mid portion of the Central District. Dr. Lucien Jean Baptiste is the D.S. (district superintendent) and is on the road for an assembly in the South Central portion of Haiti. We do not know his whereabouts or information on him and the driver yet." (Update: Lucien Jean Baptiste and his driver are reported safe.)
The population in the capital area is approximately two million people, living in dense urban communities, and they continue to experience significant aftershocks. Catastrophic casualties and damage are expected, as Haiti's weak infrastructure is not prepared for this kind of disaster.
"Our prayers and thoughts are with our Haitian family of more than 115,000 Nazarenes who have suffered such loss today," Caribbean Regional Director John Smee said on Tuesday evening.
Please be in prayer for the Haitian people and the Nazarene churches in Haiti. Pray for those injured in the debris and those involved in relief efforts.
============================
Update: January 13
Warrick, Dawson, and three staff members visited two churches close to their location. Both churches are secure and show no signs of damage.
Dawson reports:
There are literally thousands of people milling the streets. Bodies are covered with sheets on the sidewalks. Cars are crushed by falling buildings and walls. The Children's Hospital in Petion-Ville has collapsed completely. Many large buildings have collapsed. The hillside huts are piles of rubble in many places. Traffic jams abound. People are still in shock and openly grieving in the streets. We comforted people at several sites this morning as they anxiously and tearfully wait while citizen rescuers attempt to remove their loved ones from the rubble.
[We] slept on mattresses in the grass [last night] along with 40-50 staff, neighbors and families. There are still tremors off and on all night and this morning. Hundreds of thousands of people in Port-au-Prince area slept outside last night. Communications are still very sporadic.
We will keep you posted on the situation, which is even more grave this morning than we had anticipated. We truly feel your prayers.
=========================
Update: January 14
The Caribbean Region reports five members of the Tabarre Church of the Nazarene were killed in the earthquake. The Bible college in Petion-ville is relatively intact, but efforts are already underway to ration water, food, and diesel. These essentials are quickly diminishing.
Nazarene church buildings in and around Petion-ville, at least initially, seem to have held up to the main earthquake and following aftershocks. Independent news outlets are reporting that the main Catholic cathedral in downtown Port-au-Prince has been heavily damaged. The Bel-Aire Church of the Nazarene is a few blocks from this Catholic church and the status of Bel-Aire church and its members is still unknown.
Warrick, who earlier was safely moved to Florida, remains with Caribbean Region Office personnel in order to help facilitate response initiatives on behalf of the denomination. NCM-Caribbean reports relief efforts are well underway and local churches in Haiti have been offering immediate care, comfort, shelter, and supplies where able. (story)
=======================
January 15
National NCM Coordinator for Haiti Walliere Pierre gives a firsthand account of the earthquake and its aftermath. (story)
Update: January 18
Two Church of the Nazarene U.S. Navy chaplains have been alerted and are on their way to Haiti. Chaplain Jeff Mason will be aboard the USNS Comfort (the hospital ship) and Chaplain Richard Bonnette will be sailing out of North Carolina. Chaplain Bonnette just returned from a six-month deployment in December and he and his service members are being asked to deploy again for at least two months. Please keep both in your prayers.
Additional news concerning the earthquake and how it's affecting Nazarenes around the world:
Nampa, Idaho, locals among the Haiti earthquake survivors
A Nampa family of four is among the seven missionary families with Nampa-based Mission Aviation Fellowship in Haiti who survived the country's deadly earthquake, according to a spokeswoman for the organization. For more on the Edgertons, who worked with the Mexico/Central America Region for several years, click here.
NNU graduate rescued
Katie Zook, a 2009 Northwest Nazarene graduate, was pulled from the basement of the collapsed Friends of Haiti Organization building in the Port-au-Prince area. She suffered a bruised lung and bruises on her legs. For more on Katie's story, click here or here.
News to share? Email us at submitnews @ncnnews.com.
How to Help
Persons and churches wishing to make a donation online can do so through Nazarene Compassionate Ministries at ncm.org. Checks can be marked "Caribbean Disaster Response ACM1204" and mailed to Global Treasury Services, PO Box 843116 Kansas City, MO 64184. In Canada, checks should be made payable and sent to the Church of the Nazarene Canada, 20 Regan Road, Unit 9, Brampton, Ontario L7A 1C3.
For more ways to help, go to www.ncm.org/HaitiEarthquake.
--Caribbean Region Communications, NCN News (Slideshow available)
(show/hide changes)Wed Feb 24 07:33:52 +0000 2010 by DNug:notes: http://www.aerdo.net/blog/?p=516
Dr. Bill Dawson - Haiti Nazarene Mission
January 14th, 2010 on 11:53 pm
The Nazarene Mission in Haiti suffered only loss of several hundred feet of security wall. No other structural damage. No injuries on our campus.
Nazarene Compassionat Ministries is working to assess how we may best bring teams of medical personnel and our overall response. We have over 520 churchs spread across the entire country and can serve as distribution sites for other groups needing assistance in distributing relief supplies. We do have some space on our campus to store suppiles as well. If we can be of assistance please do not hesitate to contact me at bdawson@caribnaz.org
Nazarene Compassionate Ministries
The Church of the Nazarene is exploring all avenues to assist in relief including plans to provide medical attention, food, and shelter as well as other material support. Nazarene Compassionate Ministries in the Caribbean is working with several groups who specialize in medicine and disaster response to provide immediate relief.
Currently, we are seeking to provide people with food, water, and shelter. For a complete list of items that you, or your group or church can send, click here. You can find directions on how and where to ship these items here.
Please contact ncm@nazarene.org with inquiries. www.ncm.org/haitiearthquake
http://www.ncnnews.com/nphweb/html/ncn/article.jsp?id=10008830
The Church of the Nazarene in Haiti had been holding district assemblies for its 11 districts this week. General Superintendent J.K. Warrick flew into Haiti Tuesday afternoon for those assemblies. Communication with personnel in Haiti has been difficult due to phone lines being down, but Warrick was able to get a text message out from the Nazarene Seminary campus in Petion-ville, outside of Port-au-Prince, on Tuesday to say he and other church leaders on campus were safe. (Related: On-site in Haiti, Warrick calls on Nazarenes to pray and act)
What is not known is the full extent of loss of life or property damage beyond the campus walls. Bill Dawson, the region's French Field Strategy coordinator who had also flown in for the meetings, Emailed the Caribbean Communications Office to say the situation "is grave and urgent."
"There are many injured all over the city," Dawson said Tuesday. "Major buildings, three and four stories, are down. ... Neighbors who work for the United Nations report many injured ... people carrying wounded through the streets."
"We have no news yet of our Nazarene families off campus," Dawson said. "The earthquake was centered in the mid portion of the Central District. Dr. Lucien Jean Baptiste is the D.S. (district superintendent) and is on the road for an assembly in the South Central portion of Haiti. We do not know his whereabouts or information on him and the driver yet." (Update: Lucien Jean Baptiste and his driver are reported safe.)
The population in the capital area is approximately two million people, living in dense urban communities, and they continue to experience significant aftershocks. Catastrophic casualties and damage are expected, as Haiti's weak infrastructure is not prepared for this kind of disaster.
"Our prayers and thoughts are with our Haitian family of more than 115,000 Nazarenes who have suffered such loss today," Caribbean Regional Director John Smee said on Tuesday evening.
Please be in prayer for the Haitian people and the Nazarene churches in Haiti. Pray for those injured in the debris and those involved in relief efforts.
============================
Update: January 13
Warrick, Dawson, and three staff members visited two churches close to their location. Both churches are secure and show no signs of damage.
Dawson reports:
There are literally thousands of people milling the streets. Bodies are covered with sheets on the sidewalks. Cars are crushed by falling buildings and walls. The Children's Hospital in Petion-Ville has collapsed completely. Many large buildings have collapsed. The hillside huts are piles of rubble in many places. Traffic jams abound. People are still in shock and openly grieving in the streets. We comforted people at several sites this morning as they anxiously and tearfully wait while citizen rescuers attempt to remove their loved ones from the rubble.
[We] slept on mattresses in the grass [last night] along with 40-50 staff, neighbors and families. There are still tremors off and on all night and this morning. Hundreds of thousands of people in Port-au-Prince area slept outside last night. Communications are still very sporadic.
We will keep you posted on the situation, which is even more grave this morning than we had anticipated. We truly feel your prayers.
=========================
Update: January 14
The Caribbean Region reports five members of the Tabarre Church of the Nazarene were killed in the earthquake. The Bible college in Petion-ville is relatively intact, but efforts are already underway to ration water, food, and diesel. These essentials are quickly diminishing.
Nazarene church buildings in and around Petion-ville, at least initially, seem to have held up to the main earthquake and following aftershocks. Independent news outlets are reporting that the main Catholic cathedral in downtown Port-au-Prince has been heavily damaged. The Bel-Aire Church of the Nazarene is a few blocks from this Catholic church and the status of Bel-Aire church and its members is still unknown.
Warrick, who earlier was safely moved to Florida, remains with Caribbean Region Office personnel in order to help facilitate response initiatives on behalf of the denomination. NCM-Caribbean reports relief efforts are well underway and local churches in Haiti have been offering immediate care, comfort, shelter, and supplies where able. (story)
=======================
January 15
National NCM Coordinator for Haiti Walliere Pierre gives a firsthand account of the earthquake and its aftermath. (story)
Update: January 18
Two Church of the Nazarene U.S. Navy chaplains have been alerted and are on their way to Haiti. Chaplain Jeff Mason will be aboard the USNS Comfort (the hospital ship) and Chaplain Richard Bonnette will be sailing out of North Carolina. Chaplain Bonnette just returned from a six-month deployment in December and he and his service members are being asked to deploy again for at least two months. Please keep both in your prayers.
Additional news concerning the earthquake and how it's affecting Nazarenes around the world:
Nampa, Idaho, locals among the Haiti earthquake survivors
A Nampa family of four is among the seven missionary families with Nampa-based Mission Aviation Fellowship in Haiti who survived the country's deadly earthquake, according to a spokeswoman for the organization. For more on the Edgertons, who worked with the Mexico/Central America Region for several years, click here.
NNU graduate rescued
Katie Zook, a 2009 Northwest Nazarene graduate, was pulled from the basement of the collapsed Friends of Haiti Organization building in the Port-au-Prince area. She suffered a bruised lung and bruises on her legs. For more on Katie's story, click here or here.
News to share? Email us at submitnews@ncnnews.com.
How to Help
Persons and churches wishing to make a donation online can do so through Nazarene Compassionate Ministries at ncm.org. Checks can be marked "Caribbean Disaster Response ACM1204" and mailed to Global Treasury Services, PO Box 843116 Kansas City, MO 64184. In Canada, checks should be made payable and sent to the Church of the Nazarene Canada, 20 Regan Road, Unit 9, Brampton, Ontario L7A 1C3.
For more ways to help, go to www.ncm.org/HaitiEarthquake.
--Caribbean Region Communications, NCN News (Slideshow available) -> http://www.aerdo.net/blog/?p=516
Dr. Bill Dawson - Haiti Nazarene Mission
January 14th, 2010 on 11:53 pm
The Nazarene Mission in Haiti suffered only loss of several hundred feet of security wall. No other structural damage. No injuries on our campus.
Nazarene Compassionat Ministries is working to assess how we may best bring teams of medical personnel and our overall response. We have over 520 churchs spread across the entire country and can serve as distribution sites for other groups needing assistance in distributing relief supplies. We do have some space on our campus to store suppiles as well. If we can be of assistance please do not hesitate to contact me at bdawson @caribnaz.org
Nazarene Compassionate Ministries
The Church of the Nazarene is exploring all avenues to assist in relief including plans to provide medical attention, food, and shelter as well as other material support. Nazarene Compassionate Ministries in the Caribbean is working with several groups who specialize in medicine and disaster response to provide immediate relief.
Currently, we are seeking to provide people with food, water, and shelter. For a complete list of items that you, or your group or church can send, click here. You can find directions on how and where to ship these items here.
Please contact ncm @nazarene.org with inquiries. www.ncm.org/haitiearthquake
http://www.ncnnews.com/nphweb/html/ncn/article.jsp?id=10008830
The Church of the Nazarene in Haiti had been holding district assemblies for its 11 districts this week. General Superintendent J.K. Warrick flew into Haiti Tuesday afternoon for those assemblies. Communication with personnel in Haiti has been difficult due to phone lines being down, but Warrick was able to get a text message out from the Nazarene Seminary campus in Petion-ville, outside of Port-au-Prince, on Tuesday to say he and other church leaders on campus were safe. (Related: On-site in Haiti, Warrick calls on Nazarenes to pray and act)
What is not known is the full extent of loss of life or property damage beyond the campus walls. Bill Dawson, the region's French Field Strategy coordinator who had also flown in for the meetings, Emailed the Caribbean Communications Office to say the situation "is grave and urgent."
"There are many injured all over the city," Dawson said Tuesday. "Major buildings, three and four stories, are down. ... Neighbors who work for the United Nations report many injured ... people carrying wounded through the streets."
"We have no news yet of our Nazarene families off campus," Dawson said. "The earthquake was centered in the mid portion of the Central District. Dr. Lucien Jean Baptiste is the D.S. (district superintendent) and is on the road for an assembly in the South Central portion of Haiti. We do not know his whereabouts or information on him and the driver yet." (Update: Lucien Jean Baptiste and his driver are reported safe.)
The population in the capital area is approximately two million people, living in dense urban communities, and they continue to experience significant aftershocks. Catastrophic casualties and damage are expected, as Haiti's weak infrastructure is not prepared for this kind of disaster.
"Our prayers and thoughts are with our Haitian family of more than 115,000 Nazarenes who have suffered such loss today," Caribbean Regional Director John Smee said on Tuesday evening.
Please be in prayer for the Haitian people and the Nazarene churches in Haiti. Pray for those injured in the debris and those involved in relief efforts.
============================
Update: January 13
Warrick, Dawson, and three staff members visited two churches close to their location. Both churches are secure and show no signs of damage.
Dawson reports:
There are literally thousands of people milling the streets. Bodies are covered with sheets on the sidewalks. Cars are crushed by falling buildings and walls. The Children's Hospital in Petion-Ville has collapsed completely. Many large buildings have collapsed. The hillside huts are piles of rubble in many places. Traffic jams abound. People are still in shock and openly grieving in the streets. We comforted people at several sites this morning as they anxiously and tearfully wait while citizen rescuers attempt to remove their loved ones from the rubble.
[We] slept on mattresses in the grass [last night] along with 40-50 staff, neighbors and families. There are still tremors off and on all night and this morning. Hundreds of thousands of people in Port-au-Prince area slept outside last night. Communications are still very sporadic.
We will keep you posted on the situation, which is even more grave this morning than we had anticipated. We truly feel your prayers.
=========================
Update: January 14
The Caribbean Region reports five members of the Tabarre Church of the Nazarene were killed in the earthquake. The Bible college in Petion-ville is relatively intact, but efforts are already underway to ration water, food, and diesel. These essentials are quickly diminishing.
Nazarene church buildings in and around Petion-ville, at least initially, seem to have held up to the main earthquake and following aftershocks. Independent news outlets are reporting that the main Catholic cathedral in downtown Port-au-Prince has been heavily damaged. The Bel-Aire Church of the Nazarene is a few blocks from this Catholic church and the status of Bel-Aire church and its members is still unknown.
Warrick, who earlier was safely moved to Florida, remains with Caribbean Region Office personnel in order to help facilitate response initiatives on behalf of the denomination. NCM-Caribbean reports relief efforts are well underway and local churches in Haiti have been offering immediate care, comfort, shelter, and supplies where able. (story)
=======================
January 15
National NCM Coordinator for Haiti Walliere Pierre gives a firsthand account of the earthquake and its aftermath. (story)
Update: January 18
Two Church of the Nazarene U.S. Navy chaplains have been alerted and are on their way to Haiti. Chaplain Jeff Mason will be aboard the USNS Comfort (the hospital ship) and Chaplain Richard Bonnette will be sailing out of North Carolina. Chaplain Bonnette just returned from a six-month deployment in December and he and his service members are being asked to deploy again for at least two months. Please keep both in your prayers.
Additional news concerning the earthquake and how it's affecting Nazarenes around the world:
Nampa, Idaho, locals among the Haiti earthquake survivors
A Nampa family of four is among the seven missionary families with Nampa-based Mission Aviation Fellowship in Haiti who survived the country's deadly earthquake, according to a spokeswoman for the organization. For more on the Edgertons, who worked with the Mexico/Central America Region for several years, click here.
NNU graduate rescued
Katie Zook, a 2009 Northwest Nazarene graduate, was pulled from the basement of the collapsed Friends of Haiti Organization building in the Port-au-Prince area. She suffered a bruised lung and bruises on her legs. For more on Katie's story, click here or here.
News to share? Email us at submitnews @ncnnews.com.
How to Help
Persons and churches wishing to make a donation online can do so through Nazarene Compassionate Ministries at ncm.org. Checks can be marked "Caribbean Disaster Response ACM1204" and mailed to Global Treasury Services, PO Box 843116 Kansas City, MO 64184. In Canada, checks should be made payable and sent to the Church of the Nazarene Canada, 20 Regan Road, Unit 9, Brampton, Ontario L7A 1C3.
For more ways to help, go to www.ncm.org/HaitiEarthquake.
--Caribbean Region Communications, NCN News (Slideshow available)
(show/hide changes)Thu Jan 21 00:25:01 +0000 2010 by DNug:notes: http://www.aerdo.net/blog/?p=516
Dr. Bill Dawson - Haiti Nazarene Mission
January 14th, 2010 on 11:53 pm
The Nazarene Mission in Haiti suffered only loss of several hundred feet of security wall. No other structural damage. No injuries on our campus.
Nazarene Compassionat Ministries is working to assess how we may best bring teams of medical personnel and our overall response. We have over 520 churchs spread across the entire country and can serve as distribution sites for other groups needing assistance in distributing relief supplies. We do have some space on our campus to store suppiles as well. If we can be of assistance please do not hesitate to contact me at bdawson@caribnaz.org
Nazarene Compassionate Ministries
The Church of the Nazarene is exploring all avenues to assist in relief including plans to provide medical attention, food, and shelter as well as other material support. Nazarene Compassionate Ministries in the Caribbean is working with several groups who specialize in medicine and disaster response to provide immediate relief.
Currently, we are seeking to provide people with food, water, and shelter. For a complete list of items that you, or your group or church can send, click here. You can find directions on how and where to ship these items here.
Please contact ncm@nazarene.org with inquiries. www.ncm.org/haitiearthquake
http://www.ncnnews.com/nphweb/html/ncn/article.jsp?id=10008830
The Church of the Nazarene in Haiti had been holding district assemblies for its 11 districts this week. General Superintendent J.K. Warrick flew into Haiti Tuesday afternoon for those assemblies. Communication with personnel in Haiti has been difficult due to phone lines being down, but Warrick was able to get a text message out from the Nazarene Seminary campus in Petion-ville, outside of Port-au-Prince, on Tuesday to say he and other church leaders on campus were safe. (Related: On-site in Haiti, Warrick calls on Nazarenes to pray and act)
What is not known is the full extent of loss of life or property damage beyond the campus walls. Bill Dawson, the region's French Field Strategy coordinator who had also flown in for the meetings, Emailed the Caribbean Communications Office to say the situation "is grave and urgent."
"There are many injured all over the city," Dawson said Tuesday. "Major buildings, three and four stories, are down. ... Neighbors who work for the United Nations report many injured ... people carrying wounded through the streets."
"We have no news yet of our Nazarene families off campus," Dawson said. "The earthquake was centered in the mid portion of the Central District. Dr. Lucien Jean Baptiste is the D.S. (district superintendent) and is on the road for an assembly in the South Central portion of Haiti. We do not know his whereabouts or information on him and the driver yet." (Update: Lucien Jean Baptiste and his driver are reported safe.)
The population in the capital area is approximately two million people, living in dense urban communities, and they continue to experience significant aftershocks. Catastrophic casualties and damage are expected, as Haiti's weak infrastructure is not prepared for this kind of disaster.
"Our prayers and thoughts are with our Haitian family of more than 115,000 Nazarenes who have suffered such loss today," Caribbean Regional Director John Smee said on Tuesday evening.
Please be in prayer for the Haitian people and the Nazarene churches in Haiti. Pray for those injured in the debris and those involved in relief efforts.
Update: January 13
Warrick, Dawson, and three staff members visited two churches close to their location. Both churches are secure and show no signs of damage.
Dawson reports:
There are literally thousands of people milling the streets. Bodies are covered with sheets on the sidewalks. Cars are crushed by falling buildings and walls. The Children's Hospital in Petion-Ville has collapsed completely. Many large buildings have collapsed. The hillside huts are piles of rubble in many places. Traffic jams abound. People are still in shock and openly grieving in the streets. We comforted people at several sites this morning as they anxiously and tearfully wait while citizen rescuers attempt to remove their loved ones from the rubble.
[We] slept on mattresses in the grass [last night] along with 40-50 staff, neighbors and families. There are still tremors off and on all night and this morning. Hundreds of thousands of people in Port-au-Prince area slept outside last night. Communications are still very sporadic.
We will keep you posted on the situation, which is even more grave this morning than we had anticipated. We truly feel your prayers.
Update: January 14
The Caribbean Region reports five members of the Tabarre Church of the Nazarene were killed in the earthquake. The Bible college in Petion-ville is relatively intact, but efforts are already underway to ration water, food, and diesel. These essentials are quickly diminishing.
Nazarene church buildings in and around Petion-ville, at least initially, seem to have held up to the main earthquake and following aftershocks. Independent news outlets are reporting that the main Catholic cathedral in downtown Port-au-Prince has been heavily damaged. The Bel-Aire Church of the Nazarene is a few blocks from this Catholic church and the status of Bel-Aire church and its members is still unknown.
Warrick, who earlier was safely moved to Florida, remains with Caribbean Region Office personnel in order to help facilitate response initiatives on behalf of the denomination. NCM-Caribbean reports relief efforts are well underway and local churches in Haiti have been offering immediate care, comfort, shelter, and supplies where able. (story)
January 15
National NCM Coordinator for Haiti Walliere Pierre gives a firsthand account of the earthquake and its aftermath. (story)
Update: January 18
Two Church of the Nazarene U.S. Navy chaplains have been alerted and are on their way to Haiti. Chaplain Jeff Mason will be aboard the USNS Comfort (the hospital ship) and Chaplain Richard Bonnette will be sailing out of North Carolina. Chaplain Bonnette just returned from a six-month deployment in December and he and his service members are being asked to deploy again for at least two months. Please keep both in your prayers.
Additional news concerning the earthquake and how it's affecting Nazarenes around the world:
Nampa, Idaho, locals among the Haiti earthquake survivors
A Nampa family of four is among the seven missionary families with Nampa-based Mission Aviation Fellowship in Haiti who survived the country's deadly earthquake, according to a spokeswoman for the organization. For more on the Edgertons, who worked with the Mexico/Central America Region for several years, click here.
NNU graduate rescued
Katie Zook, a 2009 Northwest Nazarene graduate, was pulled from the basement of the collapsed Friends of Haiti Organization building in the Port-au-Prince area. She suffered a bruised lung and bruises on her legs. For more on Katie's story, click here or here.
News to share? Email us at submitnews@ncnnews.com.
How to Help
Persons and churches wishing to make a donation online can do so through Nazarene Compassionate Ministries at ncm.org. Checks can be marked "Caribbean Disaster Response ACM1204" and mailed to Global Treasury Services, PO Box 843116 Kansas City, MO 64184. In Canada, checks should be made payable and sent to the Church of the Nazarene Canada, 20 Regan Road, Unit 9, Brampton, Ontario L7A 1C3.
For more ways to help, go to www.ncm.org/HaitiEarthquake.
--Caribbean Region Communications, NCN News (Slideshow available) -> http://www.aerdo.net/blog/?p=516
Dr. Bill Dawson - Haiti Nazarene Mission
January 14th, 2010 on 11:53 pm
The Nazarene Mission in Haiti suffered only loss of several hundred feet of security wall. No other structural damage. No injuries on our campus.
Nazarene Compassionat Ministries is working to assess how we may best bring teams of medical personnel and our overall response. We have over 520 churchs spread across the entire country and can serve as distribution sites for other groups needing assistance in distributing relief supplies. We do have some space on our campus to store suppiles as well. If we can be of assistance please do not hesitate to contact me at bdawson@caribnaz.org
Nazarene Compassionate Ministries
The Church of the Nazarene is exploring all avenues to assist in relief including plans to provide medical attention, food, and shelter as well as other material support. Nazarene Compassionate Ministries in the Caribbean is working with several groups who specialize in medicine and disaster response to provide immediate relief.
Currently, we are seeking to provide people with food, water, and shelter. For a complete list of items that you, or your group or church can send, click here. You can find directions on how and where to ship these items here.
Please contact ncm@nazarene.org with inquiries. www.ncm.org/haitiearthquake
http://www.ncnnews.com/nphweb/html/ncn/article.jsp?id=10008830
The Church of the Nazarene in Haiti had been holding district assemblies for its 11 districts this week. General Superintendent J.K. Warrick flew into Haiti Tuesday afternoon for those assemblies. Communication with personnel in Haiti has been difficult due to phone lines being down, but Warrick was able to get a text message out from the Nazarene Seminary campus in Petion-ville, outside of Port-au-Prince, on Tuesday to say he and other church leaders on campus were safe. (Related: On-site in Haiti, Warrick calls on Nazarenes to pray and act)
What is not known is the full extent of loss of life or property damage beyond the campus walls. Bill Dawson, the region's French Field Strategy coordinator who had also flown in for the meetings, Emailed the Caribbean Communications Office to say the situation "is grave and urgent."
"There are many injured all over the city," Dawson said Tuesday. "Major buildings, three and four stories, are down. ... Neighbors who work for the United Nations report many injured ... people carrying wounded through the streets."
"We have no news yet of our Nazarene families off campus," Dawson said. "The earthquake was centered in the mid portion of the Central District. Dr. Lucien Jean Baptiste is the D.S. (district superintendent) and is on the road for an assembly in the South Central portion of Haiti. We do not know his whereabouts or information on him and the driver yet." (Update: Lucien Jean Baptiste and his driver are reported safe.)
The population in the capital area is approximately two million people, living in dense urban communities, and they continue to experience significant aftershocks. Catastrophic casualties and damage are expected, as Haiti's weak infrastructure is not prepared for this kind of disaster.
"Our prayers and thoughts are with our Haitian family of more than 115,000 Nazarenes who have suffered such loss today," Caribbean Regional Director John Smee said on Tuesday evening.
Please be in prayer for the Haitian people and the Nazarene churches in Haiti. Pray for those injured in the debris and those involved in relief efforts.
============================
Update: January 13
Warrick, Dawson, and three staff members visited two churches close to their location. Both churches are secure and show no signs of damage.
Dawson reports:
There are literally thousands of people milling the streets. Bodies are covered with sheets on the sidewalks. Cars are crushed by falling buildings and walls. The Children's Hospital in Petion-Ville has collapsed completely. Many large buildings have collapsed. The hillside huts are piles of rubble in many places. Traffic jams abound. People are still in shock and openly grieving in the streets. We comforted people at several sites this morning as they anxiously and tearfully wait while citizen rescuers attempt to remove their loved ones from the rubble.
[We] slept on mattresses in the grass [last night] along with 40-50 staff, neighbors and families. There are still tremors off and on all night and this morning. Hundreds of thousands of people in Port-au-Prince area slept outside last night. Communications are still very sporadic.
We will keep you posted on the situation, which is even more grave this morning than we had anticipated. We truly feel your prayers.
=========================
Update: January 14
The Caribbean Region reports five members of the Tabarre Church of the Nazarene were killed in the earthquake. The Bible college in Petion-ville is relatively intact, but efforts are already underway to ration water, food, and diesel. These essentials are quickly diminishing.
Nazarene church buildings in and around Petion-ville, at least initially, seem to have held up to the main earthquake and following aftershocks. Independent news outlets are reporting that the main Catholic cathedral in downtown Port-au-Prince has been heavily damaged. The Bel-Aire Church of the Nazarene is a few blocks from this Catholic church and the status of Bel-Aire church and its members is still unknown.
Warrick, who earlier was safely moved to Florida, remains with Caribbean Region Office personnel in order to help facilitate response initiatives on behalf of the denomination. NCM-Caribbean reports relief efforts are well underway and local churches in Haiti have been offering immediate care, comfort, shelter, and supplies where able. (story)
=======================
January 15
National NCM Coordinator for Haiti Walliere Pierre gives a firsthand account of the earthquake and its aftermath. (story)
Update: January 18
Two Church of the Nazarene U.S. Navy chaplains have been alerted and are on their way to Haiti. Chaplain Jeff Mason will be aboard the USNS Comfort (the hospital ship) and Chaplain Richard Bonnette will be sailing out of North Carolina. Chaplain Bonnette just returned from a six-month deployment in December and he and his service members are being asked to deploy again for at least two months. Please keep both in your prayers.
Additional news concerning the earthquake and how it's affecting Nazarenes around the world:
Nampa, Idaho, locals among the Haiti earthquake survivors
A Nampa family of four is among the seven missionary families with Nampa-based Mission Aviation Fellowship in Haiti who survived the country's deadly earthquake, according to a spokeswoman for the organization. For more on the Edgertons, who worked with the Mexico/Central America Region for several years, click here.
NNU graduate rescued
Katie Zook, a 2009 Northwest Nazarene graduate, was pulled from the basement of the collapsed Friends of Haiti Organization building in the Port-au-Prince area. She suffered a bruised lung and bruises on her legs. For more on Katie's story, click here or here.
News to share? Email us at submitnews@ncnnews.com.
How to Help
Persons and churches wishing to make a donation online can do so through Nazarene Compassionate Ministries at ncm.org. Checks can be marked "Caribbean Disaster Response ACM1204" and mailed to Global Treasury Services, PO Box 843116 Kansas City, MO 64184. In Canada, checks should be made payable and sent to the Church of the Nazarene Canada, 20 Regan Road, Unit 9, Brampton, Ontario L7A 1C3.
For more ways to help, go to www.ncm.org/HaitiEarthquake.
--Caribbean Region Communications, NCN News (Slideshow available)
region: -> Haiti, Caribbean
(show/hide changes)Wed Jan 20 04:54:40 +0000 2010 by tfri:name: Church of the Nazarene (WALK-IN FACILITY) -> Church of the Nazarene (WALK-IN FACILITY, SUPPLY DISTRIBUTION)
notes: Nazarene Compassionate Ministries
The Church of the Nazarene is exploring all avenues to assist in relief including plans to provide medical attention, food, and shelter as well as other material support. Nazarene Compassionate Ministries in the Caribbean is working with several groups who specialize in medicine and disaster response to provide immediate relief.
Currently, we are seeking to provide people with food, water, and shelter. For a complete list of items that you, or your group or church can send, click here. You can find directions on how and where to ship these items here.
Please contact ncm@nazarene.org with inquiries. www.ncm.org/haitiearthquake
http://www.ncnnews.com/nphweb/html/ncn/article.jsp?id=10008830
The Church of the Nazarene in Haiti had been holding district assemblies for its 11 districts this week. General Superintendent J.K. Warrick flew into Haiti Tuesday afternoon for those assemblies. Communication with personnel in Haiti has been difficult due to phone lines being down, but Warrick was able to get a text message out from the Nazarene Seminary campus in Petion-ville, outside of Port-au-Prince, on Tuesday to say he and other church leaders on campus were safe. (Related: On-site in Haiti, Warrick calls on Nazarenes to pray and act)
What is not known is the full extent of loss of life or property damage beyond the campus walls. Bill Dawson, the region's French Field Strategy coordinator who had also flown in for the meetings, Emailed the Caribbean Communications Office to say the situation "is grave and urgent."
"There are many injured all over the city," Dawson said Tuesday. "Major buildings, three and four stories, are down. ... Neighbors who work for the United Nations report many injured ... people carrying wounded through the streets."
"We have no news yet of our Nazarene families off campus," Dawson said. "The earthquake was centered in the mid portion of the Central District. Dr. Lucien Jean Baptiste is the D.S. (district superintendent) and is on the road for an assembly in the South Central portion of Haiti. We do not know his whereabouts or information on him and the driver yet." (Update: Lucien Jean Baptiste and his driver are reported safe.)
The population in the capital area is approximately two million people, living in dense urban communities, and they continue to experience significant aftershocks. Catastrophic casualties and damage are expected, as Haiti's weak infrastructure is not prepared for this kind of disaster.
"Our prayers and thoughts are with our Haitian family of more than 115,000 Nazarenes who have suffered such loss today," Caribbean Regional Director John Smee said on Tuesday evening.
Please be in prayer for the Haitian people and the Nazarene churches in Haiti. Pray for those injured in the debris and those involved in relief efforts.
Update: January 13
Warrick, Dawson, and three staff members visited two churches close to their location. Both churches are secure and show no signs of damage.
Dawson reports:
There are literally thousands of people milling the streets. Bodies are covered with sheets on the sidewalks. Cars are crushed by falling buildings and walls. The Children's Hospital in Petion-Ville has collapsed completely. Many large buildings have collapsed. The hillside huts are piles of rubble in many places. Traffic jams abound. People are still in shock and openly grieving in the streets. We comforted people at several sites this morning as they anxiously and tearfully wait while citizen rescuers attempt to remove their loved ones from the rubble.
[We] slept on mattresses in the grass [last night] along with 40-50 staff, neighbors and families. There are still tremors off and on all night and this morning. Hundreds of thousands of people in Port-au-Prince area slept outside last night. Communications are still very sporadic.
We will keep you posted on the situation, which is even more grave this morning than we had anticipated. We truly feel your prayers.
Update: January 14
The Caribbean Region reports five members of the Tabarre Church of the Nazarene were killed in the earthquake. The Bible college in Petion-ville is relatively intact, but efforts are already underway to ration water, food, and diesel. These essentials are quickly diminishing.
Nazarene church buildings in and around Petion-ville, at least initially, seem to have held up to the main earthquake and following aftershocks. Independent news outlets are reporting that the main Catholic cathedral in downtown Port-au-Prince has been heavily damaged. The Bel-Aire Church of the Nazarene is a few blocks from this Catholic church and the status of Bel-Aire church and its members is still unknown.
Warrick, who earlier was safely moved to Florida, remains with Caribbean Region Office personnel in order to help facilitate response initiatives on behalf of the denomination. NCM-Caribbean reports relief efforts are well underway and local churches in Haiti have been offering immediate care, comfort, shelter, and supplies where able. (story)
January 15
National NCM Coordinator for Haiti Walliere Pierre gives a firsthand account of the earthquake and its aftermath. (story)
Update: January 18
Two Church of the Nazarene U.S. Navy chaplains have been alerted and are on their way to Haiti. Chaplain Jeff Mason will be aboard the USNS Comfort (the hospital ship) and Chaplain Richard Bonnette will be sailing out of North Carolina. Chaplain Bonnette just returned from a six-month deployment in December and he and his service members are being asked to deploy again for at least two months. Please keep both in your prayers.
Additional news concerning the earthquake and how it's affecting Nazarenes around the world:
Nampa, Idaho, locals among the Haiti earthquake survivors
A Nampa family of four is among the seven missionary families with Nampa-based Mission Aviation Fellowship in Haiti who survived the country's deadly earthquake, according to a spokeswoman for the organization. For more on the Edgertons, who worked with the Mexico/Central America Region for several years, click here.
NNU graduate rescued
Katie Zook, a 2009 Northwest Nazarene graduate, was pulled from the basement of the collapsed Friends of Haiti Organization building in the Port-au-Prince area. She suffered a bruised lung and bruises on her legs. For more on Katie's story, click here or here.
News to share? Email us at submitnews@ncnnews.com.
How to Help
Persons and churches wishing to make a donation online can do so through Nazarene Compassionate Ministries at ncm.org. Checks can be marked "Caribbean Disaster Response ACM1204" and mailed to Global Treasury Services, PO Box 843116 Kansas City, MO 64184. In Canada, checks should be made payable and sent to the Church of the Nazarene Canada, 20 Regan Road, Unit 9, Brampton, Ontario L7A 1C3.
For more ways to help, go to www.ncm.org/HaitiEarthquake.
--Caribbean Region Communications, NCN News (Slideshow available) -> http://www.aerdo.net/blog/?p=516
Dr. Bill Dawson - Haiti Nazarene Mission
January 14th, 2010 on 11:53 pm
The Nazarene Mission in Haiti suffered only loss of several hundred feet of security wall. No other structural damage. No injuries on our campus.
Nazarene Compassionat Ministries is working to assess how we may best bring teams of medical personnel and our overall response. We have over 520 churchs spread across the entire country and can serve as distribution sites for other groups needing assistance in distributing relief supplies. We do have some space on our campus to store suppiles as well. If we can be of assistance please do not hesitate to contact me at bdawson@caribnaz.org
Nazarene Compassionate Ministries
The Church of the Nazarene is exploring all avenues to assist in relief including plans to provide medical attention, food, and shelter as well as other material support. Nazarene Compassionate Ministries in the Caribbean is working with several groups who specialize in medicine and disaster response to provide immediate relief.
Currently, we are seeking to provide people with food, water, and shelter. For a complete list of items that you, or your group or church can send, click here. You can find directions on how and where to ship these items here.
Please contact ncm@nazarene.org with inquiries. www.ncm.org/haitiearthquake
http://www.ncnnews.com/nphweb/html/ncn/article.jsp?id=10008830
The Church of the Nazarene in Haiti had been holding district assemblies for its 11 districts this week. General Superintendent J.K. Warrick flew into Haiti Tuesday afternoon for those assemblies. Communication with personnel in Haiti has been difficult due to phone lines being down, but Warrick was able to get a text message out from the Nazarene Seminary campus in Petion-ville, outside of Port-au-Prince, on Tuesday to say he and other church leaders on campus were safe. (Related: On-site in Haiti, Warrick calls on Nazarenes to pray and act)
What is not known is the full extent of loss of life or property damage beyond the campus walls. Bill Dawson, the region's French Field Strategy coordinator who had also flown in for the meetings, Emailed the Caribbean Communications Office to say the situation "is grave and urgent."
"There are many injured all over the city," Dawson said Tuesday. "Major buildings, three and four stories, are down. ... Neighbors who work for the United Nations report many injured ... people carrying wounded through the streets."
"We have no news yet of our Nazarene families off campus," Dawson said. "The earthquake was centered in the mid portion of the Central District. Dr. Lucien Jean Baptiste is the D.S. (district superintendent) and is on the road for an assembly in the South Central portion of Haiti. We do not know his whereabouts or information on him and the driver yet." (Update: Lucien Jean Baptiste and his driver are reported safe.)
The population in the capital area is approximately two million people, living in dense urban communities, and they continue to experience significant aftershocks. Catastrophic casualties and damage are expected, as Haiti's weak infrastructure is not prepared for this kind of disaster.
"Our prayers and thoughts are with our Haitian family of more than 115,000 Nazarenes who have suffered such loss today," Caribbean Regional Director John Smee said on Tuesday evening.
Please be in prayer for the Haitian people and the Nazarene churches in Haiti. Pray for those injured in the debris and those involved in relief efforts.
Update: January 13
Warrick, Dawson, and three staff members visited two churches close to their location. Both churches are secure and show no signs of damage.
Dawson reports:
There are literally thousands of people milling the streets. Bodies are covered with sheets on the sidewalks. Cars are crushed by falling buildings and walls. The Children's Hospital in Petion-Ville has collapsed completely. Many large buildings have collapsed. The hillside huts are piles of rubble in many places. Traffic jams abound. People are still in shock and openly grieving in the streets. We comforted people at several sites this morning as they anxiously and tearfully wait while citizen rescuers attempt to remove their loved ones from the rubble.
[We] slept on mattresses in the grass [last night] along with 40-50 staff, neighbors and families. There are still tremors off and on all night and this morning. Hundreds of thousands of people in Port-au-Prince area slept outside last night. Communications are still very sporadic.
We will keep you posted on the situation, which is even more grave this morning than we had anticipated. We truly feel your prayers.
Update: January 14
The Caribbean Region reports five members of the Tabarre Church of the Nazarene were killed in the earthquake. The Bible college in Petion-ville is relatively intact, but efforts are already underway to ration water, food, and diesel. These essentials are quickly diminishing.
Nazarene church buildings in and around Petion-ville, at least initially, seem to have held up to the main earthquake and following aftershocks. Independent news outlets are reporting that the main Catholic cathedral in downtown Port-au-Prince has been heavily damaged. The Bel-Aire Church of the Nazarene is a few blocks from this Catholic church and the status of Bel-Aire church and its members is still unknown.
Warrick, who earlier was safely moved to Florida, remains with Caribbean Region Office personnel in order to help facilitate response initiatives on behalf of the denomination. NCM-Caribbean reports relief efforts are well underway and local churches in Haiti have been offering immediate care, comfort, shelter, and supplies where able. (story)
January 15
National NCM Coordinator for Haiti Walliere Pierre gives a firsthand account of the earthquake and its aftermath. (story)
Update: January 18
Two Church of the Nazarene U.S. Navy chaplains have been alerted and are on their way to Haiti. Chaplain Jeff Mason will be aboard the USNS Comfort (the hospital ship) and Chaplain Richard Bonnette will be sailing out of North Carolina. Chaplain Bonnette just returned from a six-month deployment in December and he and his service members are being asked to deploy again for at least two months. Please keep both in your prayers.
Additional news concerning the earthquake and how it's affecting Nazarenes around the world:
Nampa, Idaho, locals among the Haiti earthquake survivors
A Nampa family of four is among the seven missionary families with Nampa-based Mission Aviation Fellowship in Haiti who survived the country's deadly earthquake, according to a spokeswoman for the organization. For more on the Edgertons, who worked with the Mexico/Central America Region for several years, click here.
NNU graduate rescued
Katie Zook, a 2009 Northwest Nazarene graduate, was pulled from the basement of the collapsed Friends of Haiti Organization building in the Port-au-Prince area. She suffered a bruised lung and bruises on her legs. For more on Katie's story, click here or here.
News to share? Email us at submitnews@ncnnews.com.
How to Help
Persons and churches wishing to make a donation online can do so through Nazarene Compassionate Ministries at ncm.org. Checks can be marked "Caribbean Disaster Response ACM1204" and mailed to Global Treasury Services, PO Box 843116 Kansas City, MO 64184. In Canada, checks should be made payable and sent to the Church of the Nazarene Canada, 20 Regan Road, Unit 9, Brampton, Ontario L7A 1C3.
For more ways to help, go to www.ncm.org/HaitiEarthquake.
--Caribbean Region Communications, NCN News (Slideshow available)
client_contact_name: -> Dr. Bill Dawson
client_contact_email: -> bdawson@caribnaz.org
(show/hide changes)Wed Jan 20 04:42:57 +0000 2010 by tfri:(show/hide changes)(hide history)