I Havoth Mine! Did You Get-eth Yours?

Monday, January 18, 2010

When Death Overcomes Politeness

Force Marie Jacmel from Ciné Institute on Vimeo.



I personally wish I could be there to help. I remember a recent email exchange with a friend about the plight of Detroit, MI and it's unclaimed dead, sitting in a freezer at the morgue, waiting for the 2010 budget year to start so they could bury or cremate the unclaimed remains of the poor or homeless. They had around 70 bodies at the time of the article, and I thought gee- how terrible...This massive disaster certainly brings a whole new perspective on the matter of unclaimed dead...but I really wish they would/could do what Sri Lanka and China did, take a photo of those they are burying so that someone may be able to find out if their friends and relatives are really gone instead of burying them in mass graves without even counting the bodies. Even spray paint or mark the area with a number of bodies or the names of who buried them.

Perhaps mass deaths in a warm climate on this scale just suppresses a normal "let's-give-them-closure" response. I do not know. But the Cine' Institute of film students in Haiti, have done a great job so far of trying to record this as it happens in their country.

My prayers go out to the Haitian people who marched and sang on the streets immediately following the disaster - Que Belle Spirit!!

Friday, January 15, 2010

Hate will be the destruction of us all

http://www.splcenter.org/blog/2010/01/14/haitian-catastrophe-for-racists-a-good-laugh/

 

This is so sad, but expected…Why do people hate so much? The interview with Pat Robertson saying the Haitians made a pact with the Devil and are now reaping their just rewards…well, that’s why so many good people refuse to call themselves Christians, so they’re not associated with people like Pat Robertson. For shame…

 

Heavenly Father – if you are listening…blow the wind of understanding into their hearts…and if that doesn’t work, well then you have the final say…

I pray for the Haitians who didn’t have much to begin with and have lost even that.

 

Kari Bunch


 “Start by doing what's necessary; then do what's possible; & suddenly you are doing the impossible.” St. Francis of Assisi

 

From This-Is-True and Randy Cassingham

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