One House


Thank you for being involved in, coming along side, and joining in this journey and mission.  Since you and I are new to Heartline, I wanted to take a moment and share a story written by Beth McHoul.  Who is Beth?  Beth and John have lived in Haiti for 22 years.  They are truly the heart of Heartline.

This story takes place in the same area as the previous posts: First Drops of Water From Well and Water is Found.  There are so many things happening at Heartline, it is hard to pick.  This is a good story to share since the last posts were around this same topic.

By Beth McHoul

I dislike rain.  I know we need it, I know droughts are terrible things but I don’t like rain.  As a runner I hate puddles that ruin my running shoes.  As a driver I hate that I occasionally splash a pedestrian who has worked so hard to keep clean and dry.  I hate rain because my roof leaks in spite of two hard working group that have attempted to fix it.  I hate the mud, the mess, the dreariness.
These are inconveniences, silly things that don’t matter.  The real reason I hate rain is that people living around me are so negatively affected by it.  Tents and small houses have mud floors.  These people get wet.  Their belongings get moldy, their children sit in the mud and everything they call home gets dirty and wet.

But this week there is one less!!!!  One less family in a moldy, stinky tent.  One less family with a mud floor.  One less family getting rained on.

Olez is a middle-aged woman with a lot on her plate.  She first came to our field hospital when her granddaughter, an infant, got stepped on in their tent.  Olez is raising this infant because her daughter, the baby’s mother, died in the earthquake.  She is also raising her severely handicapped 8 year old boy, has a deaf/mute son, a sick husband and at the time we met her another sick son who has since died.

A nurse volunteering with Heartline after the earthquake  fell in love with baby Rose and Olez.  Lise Budreau’s persistent love and care for them has made a difference.

Olez would come weekly and pick up infant formula for her granddaughter.  Lise also sent money and supplies for her.  I had no idea until I went to her tent just how poor this family was and how much they were dealing with.

Olez and her family were given one of the Heartline Houses in Corail.  I offered to help move some of the family’s belongings and was once again taken back at the sight of how this family lived.  Cynde Knutson and I hauled an old, broken bike with one wheel, tubs of dirty, old clothing, and a child sized filthy wheel chair to my pick up truck and off we went to the new house.  Most of us would have considered her belongings trash.

Fittingly the new house is on Jerusalem Road!  We twisted, turned and rocked while we made our way through the labyrinth of roads in Corail toward the five  Heartline houses.  They are beige and shine against the mountain.  Good thing or I would still be going through the maze of streets to find them.

corail.jpg Finally we met up with the rest of Olez’s family at their new, sweet house.  It was cool, even in the Haitian afternoon.  A table and chairs, a family bed, a handicapped boy on the floor, a well outside, a septic system being put in.  A better life.   A drier life.  A home to call their own rather than a squatter’s tent.

We laughed, we rejoiced, we chatted, we were delighted.  Baby Rose ran in and out of the new house.
That night it rained again.  I grumbled and stated to my visiting friend Cynde that I dislike rain.  Ever optimistic she stated,  “One less family is in that rain tonight, Olez and her family are dry!”

That’s often how change is made – one family at a time.


6 responses to “One House”

  1. A good reminder that we can’t fix everything all at once, God is only asking that we do what He asks and help where and when He calls us to do. One family at a time makes an amazing difference in a place that has so little, in a country that needs so much. ” do not be overcome by evil but overcome evil by doing good.” Romans 12:21 love you guys!

    • Yes, you are very right! Thank you for the verse, soooo good! Love overcomes many obstacles. We should not be tired by doing good!

  2. Tammy ,

    Thanks for all that you have been doing in Haiti. You are truly one out of a million people who could help the Haitians, but choose not to give up the comforts of the States. I hope Ryan and Melissa continue to follow in your footsteps, they are also making a difference, one day at a time.

    John Mortier

  3. Wonderful, uplifting story. We take a dry place to eat and sleep for granted. The simplest things mean so much to others. Thanks for helping us remember how much we have to be thankful for.

    Hear ECC team will be visiting Haiti sometime next year!

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