. . . this post-earthquake crisis
is not natural
or supernatural.
I want to talk about disasters.
How men make them
with embargoes, exploitation,
stigma, sabotage, scalding
debt & cold shoulders.
— Lenelle Moïse, from “Quaking Conversation”
On Jan. 12, 2010, Haiti was hit with a devastating earthquake that took the lives of thousands and displaced even more.
As reported on Democracy Now!, the earthquake ultimately resulted in the deaths of roughly 300,000 people and left more than 1.5 million homeless in what was already the poorest country in the Western Hemisphere.
A cholera epidemic, widely blamed on international U.N. troops, killed almost 8,000 people, making more than half a million sick.
Here is an interview with author Edwidge Danticat on the first anniversary of the earthquake.
Learn More
Democracy Now! news coverage on Haiti
Social Justice Books list of children’s books on Haiti
Rethinking Schools articles and teaching ideas:
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- “Love Is Shining in My Heart for You, Dear Haiti” by Natalie Labossiere
- “Quaking Conversation” a poem by Lenelle Moïse and teaching idea by Linda Christensen
- “Shock-Doctrine Schooling in Haiti: Neoliberalism off the Richter scale” by Jesse Hagopian
More resources listed below.
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