Welcome to the Grace Mission to Haiti website!!
Check out the Grace Mission Blog at www.blog.gmth.org
Grace Mission has a history that spans over 34 years of ministry beginning in 1976 in an effort to help one church in Haiti, and extending today to 28 churches, 20 schools, a medical program and medical clinic, a food distribution program and a Bible Institute. Click on the links above to see more about us.
You can now give to Grace Mission to Haiti online. Clicking on the link below will take you to a secure donation page.
https://www.donation-net.net/GraceMission/donate.cfm
Find Grace Mission, Inc at www.goodsearch.com and help support Grace Mission as you search the web.
Haiti Overview
The Republic of Haiti occupies the western third of Hispaniola, the second largest island in the Caribbean, and shares a border with the Dominican Republic. The original inhabitants of the area, the Taíno, named the island Ayiti, which means “land of high mountains.” Rugged highlands cover two-thirds of the country, while the remainder is marked by low plateaus, deep valleys, and small coastal plains. The climate is tropical, with some temperature variation depending on the altitude. Haiti sits in the middle of the hurricane belt and is subject to severe storms from June to October. Natural resources include copper, calcium carbonate, gold, marble, and hydropower.
Approximately 95 percent of Haitians are descendents of West African slaves. The remaining five percent are mulatto—a mix of Caucasian and African ancestry. French and Creole are the country’s two official languages. French is spoken by 10 percent of Haitians, while nearly everyone speaks Creole, a blend of French and African dialects. Spanish is used mostly near the border with the Dominican Republic, and English is becoming a popular language in the business sector.
Discovered by Christopher Columbus in 1492, Haiti became a Spanish and then, later, French colony. A successful slave revolt in 1801 led to Haiti becoming the first black republic to declare independence.
Country statistics
Population 9.45 million
Land mass 10,714 square miles
People per square mile 882
Life expectancy 57.6 years
Under age 5 mortality rate 80/1,000
Literacy rate 53%
Access to safe water 54%
Average annual income US$480
Religion
Christian* 96%
Other/none 4%
*Half of the population practices voodoo, often in conjunction with Christianity.
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Violence and political instability marked much of the 1800s until Haiti declared bankruptcy in 1914. Occupation by United States Marines brought economic and democratic consistency to the country for the next 20 years.
Physician (and practitioner of voodoo) Francois “Papa Doc” Duvalier seized power in 1956 in a military coup and set up a dictatorship that would last for 30 years. Jean-Bertrand Aristide served as president once in the 1990s and once in the 21st century—both times amid rebellion and protests. In 2004, Aristide stepped down and, after two years of interim leadership, René Préval was elected president. In August and September 2008, a series of four powerful storms ripped through the country, affecting nearly 800,000 people.
Haiti is the least-developed country in the Western Hemisphere and one of the poorest in the world. Many problems are endemic to the country, including widespread malnutrition, poor education, and the highest rate of HIV and AIDS in the Americas.
More than 190,000 Haitians are currently living with HIV and AIDS. Of the estimated 17,000 children living with the disease, only 300 have access to antiretroviral therapy. The epidemic is fueled by a high rate of poverty and a lack of quality education. Only 20 percent of children attend and fewer than two percent complete secondary school.
Fear of HIV and AIDS has dissuaded tourists from visiting Haiti, virtually collapsing the tourism industry and causing a high rate of unemployment. An estimated two-thirds of the labor force in Haiti is currently unemployed. Nearly 65 percent of people live below the poverty line and 78 percent live on less than $2 a day. Despite slight gains in the economy since 2005, a huge income gap exists between the impoverished Creole-speaking majority and the more affluent French-speaking minority. Around one percent of the wealthier Haitians own half the country’s wealth.
There were riots in the spring of 2008 due to nationwide food shortages. Food costs in Haiti have risen 40 percent in the last year. As a result, approximately 2.4 million Haitians cannot afford the minimum daily calories recommended by the World Health Organization. Among the more vulnerable communities, chronic malnutrition is common, with moderate to severe stunting affecting 42 percent of children under the age of five.
The church in Haiti struggles to provide for the ministry in a land where subsistence living is the norm.
14th Annual Celebration Banquet
Plan now to be at our 14th Annual Celebration Banquet to be held at Shady Maple Smorgasbord for a lunch time banquet on September 25, 2010. We had a great time of fellowship last year and the food was excellent. We had a very high satisfaction rate from the survey we conducted at the banquet. This year we are again looking for Banquet Sponsors. A sponsorship will be $100 each this year, down from $175 last year, but we are increasing the ticket cost to $8.50 each. The more sponsorships we receive, the more funds we can channel to the ministries supported by Grace Mission, so please prayerfully consider your part in this year’s banquet. We would encourage you to get your church involved, including the possibility of your children’s ministries getting involved in helping to support the banquet through a banquet sponsorship.
One suggestion we received was to seat church groups together as much as possible, so if your church sponsors the banquet and purchases tickets, we will work to see that you have a table reserved for your group to sit together. Remember that this is a celebration banquet where we take the opportunity to update the work of the mission over the previous year and celebrate God’s working. It is then also a great opportunity to invite people who may be unfamiliar with Grace Mission to be exposed to the ministry and all that God is doing through Grace Mission in Haiti. So please plan to be there, sponsor a table, purchase tickets and invite people to be a part of this exciting ministry.
Contact the mission office at: Grace Mission to Haiti, PO Box 211025, Royal Palm Beach, FL 33421, Phone: 561-791-7686; Email: director@gmth.org
Grace Mission to Haiti exists to encourage, equip and enable the church in America to serve the indigenous church of Haiti in its efforts in evangelism, church planting, Christian education, nutritional programs and medical ministries by calling the church in America to pray, share material provisions and participate in short term ministry trips to Haiti. I Corinthians 3:9 |