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Siblings look to rebuild
hospital, orphanage
‘The country has to be rebuilt ... forever,' former Bethesda resident
says
by Andrew Ujifusa | Staff Writer | The Gazette
Dominique
Verella, a former Bethesda resident, stands in front of one of the
ruined buildings at a medical and education facility run by her brother
Dr. Michel-Henry Brutus, on the outskirts of Port-au-Prince. It took 20
years for Brutus to build the facility, called HELP, which is now
destroyed.
PORT-AU-PRINCE, HAITI — In the
plantain fields of Vaudreuil, there used to be a place where people
learned what their world could become.
Framed by the mountains to the east, on the outskirts of Port-au-Prince,
the cluster of buildings was the life's labor of Dr. Michel-Henry Brutus.
Over two decades, Brutus built a hospital, a maternity ward, a pharmacy
and an agricultural center where young people could learn to grow crops.
Fifty pregnant women and 100 children every day were fed at Brutus'
clinic, part of his HELP Inc. health and development organization in Haiti.
Brutus' sister, Dominique Verella, a dozen years removed from a quiet life
in Bethesda, used her brother's work as an inspiration. After spending
most of her life as an educator and child
care worker, she planned to start a forestry school in the
mountains. Brutus was about to open an orphanage at his Vaudreuil
HELP facility.
It is all gone.
The afternoon of Jan. 12, Verella and her sister Regine Brutus were going
to visit the grave of their father, Ludovic Brutus, in whose honor the
pavilion at HELP is named. Suddenly, the road beneath them shook and
buckled.
"I thought it was a coup," Verella said.
This was not an idle observation. She and her family fled Haiti in 1990
following political unrest. She lived in Bethesda
for about eight years while her oldest daughter Ayisha, now 20, attended
Lyceé Rochambeau on Forest Road. Her husband Frantz, a former Minister
of Public Works in Haiti, took a job at the World
Bank. She volunteered to teach Haitian children French, and
appreciated the relative peace and quiet. She enjoyed the cherry blossoms
in the spring.
But she missed how the leaves never fell from the trees in Haiti. She
longed for the opportunities to help Haitian people. In 1998, when her
family deemed it safe, she came back.
"It's not my country. That's it," she said of her time in the
United States.
After the shaking stopped on Jan. 12, the ravaged carcasses of buildings
and the bodies of the dead were before her. At that moment, and for days
after, the wails of her countrymen rang in her ears.
"People were yelling, because they had lost two, three, four kids at
a time, entire families," she said.
Her youngest daughter Fredgina, 3, was watching television at a neighbor's
house when the shaking started and houses began falling.
"They just had time to pick her up," said Verella, 49.
Her son Jeremi, 12, was at school and was not hurt, and her husband Frantz
was spared injury.
It took Verella two hours to walk home, where she found that her house in
ruins.
The first thought that
shot through Michel-Henry Brutus' mind after the shaking stopped was:
"I must find my family." He had just left his father's grave
when the earthquake struck.
But he stayed to help the wounded in the street for several hours, then
came home thinking his family was dead. His three children and wife
survived, and are in the Dominican
Republic, along with Jeremi and Fredgina.
Brutus and Verella count themselves lucky. Many of their neighbors and
close friends did not survive.
One of Brutus' darkest memories is of a 22-year-old Mexican woman visiting
her fiancé in Port-au-Prince. He tried to resuscitate her in the street.
She was dead by the time her fiancé arrived at Sacre Coeur Hospital with
the woman on the back of a motorcycle.
Verella and Brutus are staying with Regine Brutus. They sleep outside,
fearing that another aftershock will bring the walls down.
"I can't imagine how they are going to rebuild this country,"
Verella said, staring out of a truck window at Port-au-Prince's streets
and waving at the scene with a despairing hand. Several times she
muttered, "Oh my god," like the spoken half of Port-au-Prince's
dismal, silent catechism.
The second devastating blow for Verella and Michel-Henry Brutus came when
they saw the HELP clinic in Vaudreuil. Every building was either badly
damaged or destroyed. Their orphanage collapsed before it could help its
first child. The agricultural school's water pump, capable of producing
650 gallons per minute, was broken. An $80,000 surgical microscope from
HELP's hospital was gone, along with other medical
equipment and supplies, snatched by desperate Haitians.
"They looted my hospital," said Brutus, 54. "You name it,
they took it."
And the church their father built in Vaudreuil, �glise de St.
Joseph, across from HELP's crucial water pump, was almost reduced to a
jumble of broken stone. But the front of the church and the cross at its
pinnacle remained upright.
"We have to rebuild that church," Verella said.
The HELP facility was empty when Verella and Brutus pulled up to it Saturday
evening, although one family was standing not far from the gate, as
if waiting to be let in for medical care like any other day. Inside the
walls, the second floor of the pharmacy had dropped over the first one,
crushing it completely. Part of the maternity ward was still standing, but
it had deep cracks running up its walls.
Brother and sister did not go inside. They stared at the wreckage and
spoke to each other quietly, Verella leaning on her brother's shoulder.
She paused at the remains of a small building outside the walls where the
staff used to congregate during breaks. A pastel blue door remained
upright, hanging limply off a doorframe left standing in the rubble, like
a surrealist vision.
"We used to have parties here," she recalled.
At Brutus' side Saturday
night was Vital Pierre, the doctor's assistant for 15 years who
helped to maintain HELP. One of the collapsed buildings is named after
him. He said he had an opportunity to move to the U.S. before the
earthquake but is now determined not to leave so he can help Brutus put
two decades of work back together.
"Given my devotion to Haiti, I had to stay. I had to make the choice
to stay," said Pierre, in French. "I'm working until things get
better, to see that HELP is being rebuilt."
An engineer who worked on HELP's buildings, Pierre Belancé, also wants to
see the facility returned to what it was. "Without this hospital,
everyone in the locality would be in so much trouble," Belancé said,
standing in the courtyard with Brutus and Verella. Attached to a fence
bordering nearby farmland in Vaudreuil, a sign read "Land for
Sale" in French. Brutus had intense conversations on his phone
throughout Saturday evening, planning how to get HELP back on its feet.
After the earthquake, Brutus was managing to treat patients in two of
HELP's health annexes in the Port-au-Prince area. Another HELP annex was
still standing but was structurally unsound. No electricity was available
in one and the supply of medicines only stretched over a few shelves. He
is giving basic care to about 100 patients a day. Verella is convinced
that when Haitians deforested huge swathes of country to make room for
shantytowns and other short-sighted uses, they weakened the ground and
caused the earthquake's damage to be greater. For this reason, despite the
disaster, she still wants to continue with plans to build a school of
forestry in the mountains. "It's a lot of work to change the
mentality of a population," she said. While the country once had 60
percent forest cover, Haiti had dropped to 1 percent by 2007, according to
one estimate from the International Conference on Reforestation
and Environmental Regeneration of Haiti. On the matter of education in
general, Verella was thinking big, determined that at least one pillar of
Haiti be rebuilt. The child care worker and planner inside of her were
still forging ahead. "Let's say 75 percent of schools are gone,"
she said. "So, we'll need more schools and educators. It's one of the
foundations of a nation." She brushed aside any concerns for her
security. "At this time, this moment, we cannot leave. We have to
stay," Verella said. "The country has to be rebuilt, and rebuilt
forever."
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