I didn't want to write about this. I don't know why exactly....maybe because I didn't know how to put it into words, how to adequately describe it enough for others to understand the pain and the weight that comes with this experience. But, I want to try. I want to try mostly because it helps when others can have a small glimpse of the reality of life in Haiti.
So here goes...
My first day back in Haiti, I was riding from Port-au-Prince to Gonaives with Mama Kathy, Keziah, Grace, and Grace's friend Amanda. I was in the back seat of the truck taking in the beauty of the green country side and starring out across the fields of rice patties. My mind was focused on thoughts about my future in Gonaives, my future teaching in Jubilee, and the other things that were about to unfold when I arrived at my new home. Those thoughts came to a sudden abrupt hault when I heard Mama Kathy say, "What was that? Should we pull over?"
I tried to look out the window on the opposite side of the truck. From what I could see, a woman was lying on the ground a few people crowded around her and a motorcycle nearby. My first thought was: motorcycle accident. Once our truck was in park, Keziah and Grace (both nurses) jumped out of the truck and raced over. Thinking that I would not be of much help in this situation, I took my time climbing down out of the back seat. But, when I walked around to the opposite side of the truck and started walking towards "the accident" I realized quickly that it was not a moto accident. It was much worse.
Wailing. Blood chilling wailing was the first thing that I heard. I could hear dozens of people wailing, screaming, and crying. At the edge of the road was a steep 20 foot grassy embankment. Because of the hurricane the day before, there was what appeared to be a muddy stream at the bottom of the bank. Laying flipped on its side in this water was an entire school bus full of men, women, and children.
I've seen these buses often. In fact, I've ridden on these same buses multiple times on the route to and from Gonaives/PAP. I've heard of terrible bus accidents. I know the buses load way too many people on them. I know the buses are in rough condition. I know that it is likely the brakes will go out on them. But, I never imagined actually seeing it with my own eyes.
As I starred down the bank at the bus, it felt surreal. It felt like a nightmare...something that normal people like me never have to experience. But it was very real. I was reminded of that with each scream that I heard. It felt like minutes that was frozen there just starring but I know it reality it was just seconds. By the time that I realized I should be doing something, Kez and Grace had already started down the bank and into the water. Grace yelled for me to get her rain boots from the truck. Happy to have a specific task, I sprinted back to the truck. When I returned with the boots, Keziah yelled for me to have Mama Kathy bring the truck closer so that we could start loading those with the worst injuries into the back of the truck to get them to a hospital.
As I told Kathy the orders, she threw some blankets and a huge pack of baby wipes at me. Not knowing what to do, I just started searching the bank for the people who looked the most injured. I handed them towels and bandages and simply said, "Hold this on your wound tightly." A woman with deep cuts on her arms and wrists, an old lady with a broken arm and sliced bicep, a woman with a very bloody gash on her head. The woman with the head injury was crying and had been repeated asking me to do something to help her. There was too much blood to see the wound so when the truck was closer I remember helping lift her into the bed of the truck to be taken to the hospital.
So many people approached me. Some crying because family members were still trapped. Some crying because they were scared. Some crying for me to help them. One man even approached me and shoved a cell phone or some sort of camera in my face and tried to interview me. I felt helpless.
After taking care of the most obvious needs, I noticed a little old grandmother and her granddaughter, roughly 18 years old, both sobbing, crying, wailing uncontrollably. There are not words to describe Haitians in mourning. It is a haunting sound. It is truly unlike anything that I have ever heard before. The grandmother was holding her left arm and it looked limp. She had a huge cut on her underarm. She probably didn't weigh more than 100 pounds. She was soaking wet and covered in mud. But, the worst part was what she was saying over and over and over again in a sing-song voice. "Ser mwen mouri. My sister is dead. My sister is dead." She and her granddaughter were both standing at the edge of the bank blocking the path in which Kez, Grace, and some men were trying to carry the injured people up from the bus.
There was chaos all around me, but I was just drawn to this grandmother. I put my arm around her. I remember repeatedly telling her, "I know, I know she's dead. But they will find her. They are searching for her. They will get her out. It is ok. You're hurt. Please come with me. You need to go to the hospital. Get in the truck. Please." She refused to leave her spot on the bank. Her granddaughter was so hysterical that she was no help at all. A few times, I left the grandmother to help others. Each time I returned she was trying to get down the bank to her sister in the bus. I think I helped pull her back up the bank at least three times. I wanted to take her pain. I wanted her to stop singing "my sister is dead". I wanted her to go to the hospital.
While all that was taking place. Kez and Grace were experiencing something totally different down below in the muddy water. Kez had been barefoot while riding in the truck and she was now barefoot and knee deep in dark chocolatey brown water helping pull people out of the bus. Because Grace is tall, she was able to hoist herself up into the bus to begin pulling people out. She said the grandmother's sister was the first person she saw. She checked for a pulse, found none, and moved on. As she and a nameless Haitian man we refer to as "yellow boots guy"began working together to get people out of the bus. Kez was outside working to pull out several men that had been pinned under the bus.
There were two dead. There was a boy with internal bleeding that Grace knew was not going to make it. There were broken femurs, compound fractures, gashes, legs nearly cut off from the body. One-by-one they were all pulled off the bus and carried up the bank.
Mama Kathy and Amanda had already raced off to the hospital with a young girl missing a leg, a man with his feet nearly cut off, a woman with a head wound and several others.
Since there was no rope and the bank was steep and slippery, several Haitian men and I assisted in making a "human chain" to pull people up the bank. One man carried someone up the bank on his shoulders. One man was carried up by four people and then laid face down on the ground. I could see a huge gash in his leg and blood all over. No one around me would help get him into the bed of a truck. The crowd along the road had grown. There were dozens of bystanders, but no one was willing to help. Two policemen had arrived, but were not offering to help do anything either. Finally, two men helped me and we lifted "facedown on the ground man" into the bed of the truck. I knew he was in pain, but he didn't make a sound. As I saw him laying in the back of the truck, I just could not comprehend the differences between the US and Haiti.
In the US, a rescue team, multiple ambulances, and probably even a fire truck would be at the scene taking care of the situation. Trained professionals. Not me, an elementary school teacher. In the US, going to a hospital would feel like a safe haven....relief. In Haiti, I cringed at the thought of taking them to a hospital. I cringed knowing that they would probably not be prepared to receive a over a dozen severely injured people. But, I quickly forced myself back to reality...this reality. This is Haiti. The best that we could do was pray, load them into the nearest pick-up truck, and take them to the most qualified place that we had.
It seemed like hours that we had been pulling people up the bank and loading them into trucks. In reality, I think it was about half an hour. Throughout all of that, the grandmother was still unwilling to get onto a truck to go to a hospital. When the bus was emptied of all the living people, Grace made her way up the bank. She saw me trying to get the grandmother onto a truck. She joined in helping me, but grandmother still refused. She would not take her eyes off of the bus. Just then, I saw the body of her sister being removed. She did too. The grandmother already knew that she was dead, but I think she needed to see her come out of the bus. I think she needed the slight bit of closure. Within a few minutes, she came to me and told me that she was ready to go to the hospital. I helped her into the backseat of a pick-up and then told her still hysterical granddaughter where they were taking her.
Then, Kez and Grace told it was time to go. Everyone was out of the bus and loaded up. The crowd was huge and on-lookers were everywhere. Traffic was backed up along the road. There was nothing more we could do. So, we left and started walking down the road towards St. Mark, the nearest city where the hospital was located. Kez was barefoot. We were covered in mud and blood that was not our own. I had my sunglasses on and I was fighting tears. Everyone that drove past us starred and commented that "those white ladies must have been in the accident, too". No one offered to give us a ride. We walked over a mile and a half before we saw our truck driving towards us.
On the drive home, Mama Kathy explained what she had experienced. She shared how no one at the hospital would help carry the injured out of the back of the truck. One hospital administrator raised his hand and told her to wait when she simply wanted to get help for the injured people in her care. Only one of the medical personnel offered to help. Several people in scrubs just starred from a distance not wanting to get their hands dirty. I heard the pain in Mama Kathy's voice as she explained that the hospital staff wanted to lay the young girl with the missing leg on the bare floor.
This is what the five of us girls are carrying now.
Things like this are the reality of every Haitian. This is part of the struggle of life in this country. Now, it is the reality of all of us who choose to live here. We share this burden. I saw things that I would have never imagined that day....things that I wish I could forget. But since I cannot forget, I want to use this. I want to learn from this. I want to understand the vast struggles of these people. I want to be able to feel what they feel. It will hurt. It does hurt. But, if I cannot share their burdens how can I truly love them?
I pray that as I walk out this life here in Haiti, God will continue to give me the strength needed, to bring peace in the midst of chaos, to bring comfort in the midst of struggle, and to bring healing in the midst of pain.
Katie I can't imagine what this was like. Thank you for sharing it. I can't help but feel helpless along with you. Thank God you guys were able to help. Wow...God, please provide for this people.
ReplyDeletewhoops, sorry this is Melissa =P
ReplyDeletelove you kate
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing! It's so heavy and so sad. Groaning with creation, "Come, Lord Jesus, come." He is the only one that can make all things right; bringing justice and peace. I am so glad you are back in Haiti. It's where you're supposed to be. :) Looking forward to seeing you again in the near future, hopefully.
ReplyDeleteKatie... you don't know me, but I attend Grace and Amanda's church in SLC, Utah. We heard of the accident last Sunday and my heart has been heavy for the Haitian people since. My heart is heavy for you too and I pray the Lord will somehow bring peace to your soul as you reflect and process yet another moment you've served these children of God. Please give yourself a hug from me.
ReplyDeleteKindly and with love,
Beth Tibbs