Posts Tagged “Mission Manna”

7.0 Quake Near Port Au Prince

7.0 Quake Near Port Au Prince

This image compels me for two reasons.

1. There is nothing so normal as a still ground beneath us. But there are fault lines all over the place in this image! It amazes me how unstable the very ground we walk on can be.

2. The sadness of the Haitian quakes was lessened a little bit for me since the people I know in Haiti were not too directly affected. However, this map shows a fault line very close to the Montrouis region. The region that Mission Manna visits twice a year. (It’s the L shaped line just SW of the word “Haiti” on the map.)

These are more reminders that we are not in control, and we need to make the best of what we have.

We must continue to Consider Haiti.

Posted via web from bournemedia’s posterous

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Eddy and the Red Ribbon Girl, Ivoire Clinic

This photo was taken a the Ivoire clinic, a few hours drive up in the Montrouis mountains. The little girl is one of about 150 kids that were seen by doctors that day. It’s very likely that this was the first time she has seen a doctor. The red tint in her hair is an indicator of malnutrition, a common health problem in Haiti.

She’s looking up at Eddy, one of our two main men on the ground in Haiti. He heads up Mission Manna’s Community Health Care Worker program. For more info go to Missionmanna.org.

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I just got back from Haiti a few days ago. I was acting as a filmmaker for Mission MANNA, a non-profit based in Asheville, NC that sends two medical teams to Haiti each year. MM also just started a year-round feeding program for 30 of the most malnourished kids in the region. The program could serve more malnourished kids with your help. See MissionManna.org

It was a great trip. We saw over 1100 kids, treating most of them for intestinal worms, and many for the effects of malnutrition.

See the travel blog for details (and pics)!

CONSIDER HAITI .COM

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