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U.S. Military Partners with NWHCM in Humanitarian Mission

Tuesday, August 17th, 2010

Mission staff and missionaries assist military personnel with medical work, military returns favor with construction efforts


By Andy Olsen, NWHCM Media Director

Tuesday, August 17, 2010 — American Marines, sailors, soldiers and airmen descended on Port-de-Paix and Saint-Louis du Nord in July during a large-scale humanitarian effort in partnership with Northwest Haiti Christian Mission.

As part of the military’s Operation Continuing Promise relief campaign, servicemen, civilian workers and NWHCM staff worked to treat more than 4,000 Haitians for medical problems between July 24 and August 3. Workers set up medical treatment sites in both Saint-Louis du Nord and Port-de-Paix.

NWHCM missionary Grant Roszkowiak stands at NWHCM's campus in Saint-Louis du Nord with a group of military servicemen from multiple countries, all participation in the U.S. military's Operation Continuing Promise campaign.

“The intent of this mission is to bring (Army, Air Force, Navy and Marines) from all over the region to provide fundamental medical, optometry and dental care to the folks in this region,” Navy Cmdr. Cyrus Rad said in a Marines press release. “We bring patients in and they choose which service they want whether its eyes, dental or medical, and we take care of them to the best of our ability.”

The mission also provided veterinarian service, with Army vets traveling throughout the streets of Port-de-Paix to screen and treat more than 440 animals.

At Northwest Haiti Christian Mission’s main campus in Saint-Louis du Nord, servicemen installed bathrooms in NWHCM’s surgery wing, wired portions of the baby orphanage, donated building supplies and assisted with other construction projects. They also donated pallets of medicines, school supplies, patient care packages and other supplies.

“The military loved it so much here they decided to stay! They came for two nights and were even at devotions,” said NWHCM Executive Director Janeil Owen. “They said they never have had an NGO of this caliber that welcomed them with such open arms and was ready to assist them at every corner. Anything they needed — from interpreters to junction boxes — we had it ready for them.”

Owen, along with NWHCM Lab and Pharmacy Director Maureen Moore and missionary Grant Roszkowiak, were flown by helicopter to visit the USS Iwo Jima, the aircraft carrier that was the staging ground for the civil-military operation. While there, they toured the ship and met with the U.S. ambassador to Haiti, Kenneth Merten.

Military members said they hope to return to the Northwest soon, possibly as early as December.



Seabird Sees Haiti

Tuesday, August 17th, 2010

Lead singer Aaron Morgan shared his thoughts from the Christian band’s recent trip to Haiti, and in particular how the Miriam Center touched his family.


The band Seabird has quickly made its presence known on the national Christian music scene since its first album debuted in 2008. Since then, the Cincinnati-based group’s music has been featured on radio stations across the country and on television outlets including MTV, CBS and ABC (their songs have been used as themes in hit television series including Grey’s Anatomy, Pushing Daisies and Numb3rs). Seabird has toured solo and with groups including NeedToBreathe, David Crowder Band and Jars of Clay.

Morgan poses with children at Northwest Haiti Christian Mission. Photo courtesy Aaron Morgan.

In June, Seabird visited Northwest Haiti Christian Mission as part of a trip with Help Heal Haiti, a division of Northwest Haiti Christian Mission. The group visited NWHCM’s multi-faceted ministries and has been an advocate for the mission’s work at concerts and other venues. Seabird’s lead vocalist Aaron Morgan recently answered a few questions for Northwest Haiti Christian Mission’s media director Andy Olsen about their experience.

NWHCM: Why did Seabird decide to visit Haiti?
AM: My dad is a missionary and inspired me to go to Youth With A Mission right out of high school. YWAM is where I really fell in love with world missions and traveling abroad. When I started the band I had always hoped to use our music to get us into countries that might otherwise be closing their doors to Christianity. This is something I’m still very passionate about, so when the opportunity to go with HelpHealHaiti was presented I immediately wanted to make it work.

NWHCM: Was what you found in Haiti different than what you expected?
AM: I expected Haiti to be more island-ish, if you will. And it was in parts, but it reminded me a lot of Ghana, Africa. Not just because of the people but because of the way people live and work. The buildings and homes also reminded me of my time in Ghana. I also expected to see more of the Voodoo and spiritual oppression than we did. I can remember being in Malaysia and feeling a spiritual heaviness, but I didn’t experience that as much in Haiti. Even while visiting the Voodoo temple it seemed like more of a scam than anything real or powerful. Men were talking on their cell phones while accepting money from villagers waiting to pray to the voodoo doll they believe fell from the sky.

NWHCM: Tell about a moment of experience that you had in Haiti that was powerful for you or that made a lasting impression.
AM: When my wife Celeste and I visited the Miriam Center (special needs orphanage) for the first time it was difficult for me to hold back the tears. I was introduced to a little 4 year old girl who couldn’t walk or talk mostly because of malnourishment. My daughter London just turned 4 and my heart was broken thinking about what it must be like to have a disabled child because you don’t have enough food to keep them healthy. That was something I’ll never forget. The kids in the Miriam Center are so well taken care of, but the need there is still so great.

NWHCM: What, if any, plans does Seabird have for increased involvement in Haiti?
AM: We have been speaking about our trip to Haiti at our performances and have been selling HelpHealHaiti shirts to help support what the NWHCM is doing there. We’ll also be coordinating with HelpHealHaiti director Brent Bramer to organize a benefit concert later this year.

NWHCM: In what ways did the trip affect your faith or walk with God?
AM: This trip was an excellent reminder for me to be thankful to God for all the little things in life. It’s so incredibly easy to be ungrateful when things don’t go our way. But to see the way the Christians in Haiti give thanks to God for all things really puts things into perspective.

NWHCM: Bands and celebrities visit Haiti and other distressed countries all the time. Why do you think such visits are important? Does being a Christian band change the role that such a visit plays?
AM: I think if a band has a platform to share about the needs of a place like Haiti it can be very important. We obviously recognize that people in America already know Haiti needs help, but if we can show them how simply some of these needs can be met it might inspire more people to go for themselves and give. Being Christians in a band certainly does change the role or responsibility we have on a trip like this. We’re not there simply to give out food or to purify water, we’re there to save souls and to quench an everlasting thirst.



The New Neighbors

Sunday, June 20th, 2010

How one short-term mission team dug deeper to get to know a Haitian community – and found a sustainable way to help.


By Andy Olsen, NWHCM Media Director

They listened for days, scribbling on pads of paper. In the hot ocean air of La Baie des Moustiques, the church group from Rockford, Illinois, walked door-to-door to nearly every house in the small town. They asked questions about everything – about who lived where, about who did what, about health and about livestock.

A short-term mission team from Rockford, Illinois, conducts a community needs assessment in La Baie des Moustiques. Photo by Dustin Waller / Contributor

It was Northwest Haiti Christian Mission’s first-ever community needs assessment, a town-wide survey intended to paint a picture of the strengths and weaknesses of the town.

It was the beginning of something big.

Such survey work is the foundation of NWHCM’s Neighbors Project, NWHCM’s new approach to community development. The Neighbors Project facilitates meaningful cross-cultural church-to-church relationships that are dynamic and transformational for both churches and their communities.

With the Neighbors Project, we partner American churches with Haitian churches. They work together to serve people in the Haitian community, sharing physical and spiritual resources with the mutual goal of spreading the Gospel through holistic ministry – that is, by addressing both spiritual and other needs.

The primary goal of the Neighbors Project is to encourage community development projects that are thoughtful, planned, and born out of the real needs of Haitian communities.

The Rockford group is one of a handful of churches working with NWHCM in community development (they actually began their partnership with the La Baie des Moustiques community before the Neighbors Project was conceived). The group quickly recognized that “La Baie” is a fishing village, yet many people there lost their fishing boats in the hurricanes that slammed Northwest Haiti in 2008.

The group decided to work side-by-side with community members to begin replacing those boats. Funded initially by the group, the boat project is designed to eventually be self-funding. Fisherman who receive a boat are expected to take a portion of their profits from selling fish and contribute it toward building another boat.

The concept is simple, but it has significant ramifications. Community members learn and practice biblical concepts of caring for one another, and members of the group learn to invest through service and relational ministry, in addition to providing financial resources.

At NWHCM, we believe that all ministry must be done in Christ-like love, which will show itself in demonstrated respect for both Haitians and foreigners.

And at the center, that is what the Neighbors Project is all about: Listening first with compassion, then acting with wisdom and respect.

Learn more about the Neighbors Project by clicking here, or by contacting Curtis Rogers, NWHCM Community Development Coordinator, at curtis.rogers@nwhcm.org.




Meet the Neighbors

Thursday, June 17th, 2010

The Neighbors Project is NWHCM’s approach to community development. Spend some time clicking around here to learn what it’s all about.

NWHCM staff perform a community needs assessment in La Baie des Moustiques. Needs assessments form the foundation of the Neighbors Project, NWHCM

By Andy Olsen, NWHCM Media Director

I travelled recently with a children’s minister who was returning from a mission trip. She and a group of Americans had led a VBS program on the trip, and she gave a glowing report about her experience. But as she was processing it all, she made an observation.

“I’m glad we got to do what we did,” she said. “But I think it would be even better if, instead of leading the VBS ourselves, we could equip some women in the (local) church to run VBS programs themselves. That way, they could do it even when Americans aren’t there.”

She has a point.

Northwest Haiti Christian Mission was founded on forging lasting, transformational relationships between North Americans and communities in Northwest Haiti. We place the Church at the center of that relationship, using it as an instrument for evangelism and community development. Our goal is nothing less than changing Haitian communities forever by sharing the love of Christ and meeting basic human needs.

But sometimes in overseas ministry, we sell ourselves (and the nationals) short by not using our God-given creativity. We limit our efforts to merely handing out “stuff” and going home, or by assuming we know the best ways to help. While we have the best intentions and certainly a lot of gifts and talents to offer, we very often forget that the nationals have a lot of gifts and talents to offer, as well.

At NWHCM, we want to make sure we are investing the hard work and service of our mission teams in the most effective ways to help Haitian communities. That’s why we’ve launched the Neighbors Project, an exciting initiative that helps focus our ministry efforts to make sure we’re meeting real needs.

The Neighbors Project is about partnering North Americans with Haitian communities – not in a paternalistic way, but in a spirit of side-by-side service and ministry. It’s a partnership where Haitians and North Americans share physical and spiritual resources, with the mutual goal of spreading the gospel through holistic ministry – that is, bringing people out of spiritual, physical, economic, and social poverty.

Simply put, it’s about loving our neighbors in the global Church in the same way we love our own churches.

Have you ever done short-term mission and wondered if you could do more? Have you ever wanted to think outside the mission trip? Spend some time exploring here to learn more about the Neighbors Project. You’ll be glad you did.

This column originally appeared in the June issue of Northwest Notes, NWHCM’s semi-monthly newsletter.




NWHCM launches Help Heal Haiti

Tuesday, May 25th, 2010

Photo and design by Kyle Ellis


Tuesday, May 25, 2010

Northwest Haiti Christian Mission has launched Help Heal Haiti, a new ministry aimed at mobilizing the next generation across America to invest in Northwest Haiti and make a difference in Jesus’ name.

More than just a slogan, Help Heal Haiti (HHH) hopes to become nothing short of a movement to help change lives in the poorest region of Haiti. By partnering with youth groups, college campuses and other communities of concerned individuals, HHH will offer tools for raising awareness of the needs in Haiti and providing opportunities to meet them.

“This generation is hungry to be a part of something real, something life changing,” said Brent Bramer, HHH Director. “We have a great opportunity to inform, equip and empower the next generation to help bring sustainable change to Haiti through the work of NWHCM. I’m humbled and thrilled to see God move” through HHH.

In coming months, HHH will begin offering ready-made packages for group awareness events and fundraisers. HHH will also work with next-generation groups to encourage traveling to Haiti for hands-on involvement in holistic ministry.

HHH is a fully integrated part of NWHCM, yet it brings with it a distinct brand that will enable the mission to develop partnerships in new areas. To learn more, visit the HHH website by clicking here, or contact Brent Bramer, HHH Director, at brent@helphealhaiti.com.



Launching the “New” Baie

Thursday, May 13th, 2010

A new campus opening in La Baie des Moustiques this summer will offer a safer home for staff and a hub of sorts for new development initiatives. An update from the campus director there.


Curtis Rogers lives in La Baie des Moustiques with his wife, Danielle, and manages NWHCM’s facilities there.

By Curtis Rogers, Community Development Coordinator

Since the hurricanes and tropical storms of 2008, our entire staff at the mission campus in La Baie des Moustiques has been excited to move to our new campus “up the hill.” We were blessed to be spared from any major storms in 2009 and we do not plan on taking any more chances this year, as we expect to be operating from the new campus by the end of June.

A panorama of NWHCM's new campus in La Baie des Moustiques, which is nearing completion (click to see larger image). Andy Olsen / NWHCM staff

The new campus will be home for both Danielle and me, and also the Cius family (Michelet, Gernide, John Terly, Geneva, Rose Madjie and Michael). It will also be the site of a new children’s home, and we are excited to bring Maxi Iphraim, who grew up in the mission orphanage in Port-de-Paix, onto campus to live with the kids and help run the house. We have spent significant time assessing a number of needy children to possibly bring into this home. We’ve been praying over each one. We expect that there will be quite a few children living with us by the end of the summer.

We want to make sure people know that we are not forgetting about the “old” campus down the hill and all of the important work that has been invested there over the years. The main building, which we call “Miss Pat’s House,” will continue to serve as the group home, where visitors and short-term missionaries will stay while working in La Baie. Our current house on the old campus will be the site of a new clinic after we move out. We hope to employ Haitian nurses there to meet the medical needs of the town. This building will not only offer a clean and safe place to receive medical care daily, it will also serve as a base for medical teams from North America as they serve outlying communities in the Far West. The church building will retain its current function as both the church and the school, although we will need to build a new school in the near future. Michelet’s old house will serve as a classroom as the school grows.

As you can see, the work in La Baie is growing exponentially. One of the primary roles for the campus is serving as a laboratory for many differing development projects and ideas that we hope to duplicate in the Northwest. Whether through farms, composting toilets, micro-loans, or fishing supply stores, the campus at La Baie (like all of the NWHCM campuses) strives to meet the needs of the community in a holistic fashion, partnering with community members for real change. As a staff, we truly believe that the move to the new buildings has already and will continue to open up many opportunities for us to assess the needs of, partner with, and reach the goals of the small part of Northwest Haiti that we serve.



CBS News features Pierre Garcon partnership with NWHCM

Friday, May 7th, 2010


Thursday, May 6, 2010

Saint-Louis du Nord, Haiti — CBS News today featured Northwest Haiti Christian Mission’s partnership with Indianpolis Colts receiver Pierre Garçon, a joint effort that has helped provide millions of meals for needy Haitians and is rebuilding a school in the Port-au-Prince area.

The piece, which was shown on the CBS Evening News, highlights the experiences of Garçon and his family members as they visited Haiti for the first time since the January 12 earthquake that killed more than 200,000 people there and decimated the country’s fragile economy. The video and story also feature the relief work of NWHCM through its child nutrition programs and orphanages.

Garçon, a Haitian-American, launched his Pierre Garçon Helping Hands Foundation last year to focus on boosting education and food relief in the Western Hemisphere’s poorest country. He was catapulted into the spotlight earlier this year after the earthquake and the Colts’ Superbowl bid.

Read more about the Garçon’s partnership with NWHCM.

See the story and read the article on CBSNews.com.

Watch the Story :: Video Courtesy CBS News


Watch CBS News Videos Online



Now available: Powerful video highlighting child malnutrition

Thursday, May 6th, 2010

“The Hungry” takes an in-depth look at malnutrition and how NWHCM is fighting it


Thursday, May 6, 2010 – Northwest Haiti Christian Mission today released “The Hungry,” a video photo essay project that draws attention to the causes and effects of hunger and child malnutrition in Northwest Haiti, and the ways NWHCM is working to help.

The result of more than a year of documentary photography work by NWHCM photojournalist Andy Olsen, “The Hungry” follows the stories of two children: A severely malnourished girl being treated in NWHCM’s hospital, and another malnourished girl enrolled in one of NWHCM’s child nutrition programs. Through the eyes of these children and their families, the video explores the complex set of factors that contribute to poverty and hunger.

The video was produced before the January 12 earthquake that forever changed Haiti, but the issues it confronts are no different now than they were before the quake. As with other natural disasters in Haiti, the earthquake has only placed greater strains on Haiti’s economy and food supply.

Churches, individuals, organizations and other groups are encouraged to use “The Hungry” as a tool to raise awareness of the issues of hunger and malnutrition. It is a perfect accessory for packing events and fundraisers in conjunction with NWHCM or its ministry partners, Feed My Starving Childen and Kids Agains Hunger.

“The Hungry” is also available on NWHCM’s resources page.

The Hungry


Watch in HD




CBS News features NWHCM medical ministry

Monday, April 26th, 2010

Calls mission clinic “one of the best in the area” of Northwest Haiti


Saturday, April 24, 2010

Saint-Louis du Nord, Haiti — A story aired on CBS News Saturday highlighting the efforts of Northwest Haiti Christian Mission’s medical clinic to help meet the enormous health needs in the country’s Northwest Department.

The piece, which was shown on the CBS Evening News, outlines Haiti’s dire public health climate even before the January 12 earthquake that destroyed most of the health-care infrastructure in Port-au-Prince. CBS News medical correspondent Dr. Jon LaPook calls NWHCM’s clinic “one of the best in the region,” noting, however, that both public hospitals and NGOs must be better equipped to fully address the country’s medical problems.

In the piece, LaPook tells the story of NWHCM’s medical staff having to share an oxygen machine between a premature baby and an expectant mother experiencing labor complications, because only one machine was available.

“The reality is that even the best-equipped NGO hospitals in Haiti have to make very hard decisions every day because resources are so limited, compared with hospitals in the United States,” said Andy Olsen, NWHCM media director. “LaPook’s story underscores the huge need for greater financial support of medical ministries in Haiti, and the need for governments to invest in Haiti’s public health infrastructure.”

NWHCM has been providing free and low-cost medical care in Northwest Haiti for more than 20 years. It’s medical facilities are almost entirely staffed by trained Haitian doctors and nurses, and surgeries are offered at various times throughout the year by NWHCM’s many visiting surgery teams. Click here to learn more about NWHCM’s medical programs.

View more about LaPook’s reflections on his experience at NWHCM’s clinic.

Click here to view the full video segment on CBS.

Watch the Story :: Video Courtesy CBS News


Watch CBS News Videos Online



Hope on the Horizon

Tuesday, April 20th, 2010

A fisherman trades his tackle for earthquake relief efforts


By Andy Olsen, NWHCM Media Director

Port Canaveral, FL — David Bates’ friends say he made things stink here. Bates thought it smelled like money.

ShrimpBoatSlideshow_BTTNThe local seafood baron in his heyday, Bates owned a small fleet of shrimp- and scallop-laden boats that once dotted this bay. His company’s property was visible from almost any spot along the water in Port Canaveral. The shells spit out by his processing plant piled up so high that today they form part of the city’s coastline.

That was before plummeting seafood prices, soaring energy costs, and real estate-hungry cruise lines pushed Bates and his wife, Lisa, to retire. They sold most of their shrimp boats, trusty white workhorses that had literally fished the world.

“It got to the point where we could buy shrimp from Asia, ship it here, package it, and resell it for cheaper than we could sell our shrimp,” said Lisa, who is was also Bates’ business partner. “We said we would never do that.”

Instead, they found themselves looking for something to do with the shrimp boats they could not sell. When a devastating earthquake struck Port-au-Prince, Haiti, on January 12, and damaged the Caribbean nation’s main seaport, David felt led to load one of his boats with relief supplies and sail it to Haiti.

And so began a partnership with Northwest Haiti Christian Mission to deliver food and other badly needed supplies to Haiti’s northern coast. Through a series of connections at his church, First Christian Church of Merritt Island, Bates was put in touch with NWHCM and began retrofitting one of his ships, the Capt. Scott B., to haul cargo to Haiti.

Donated goods from across the country started rolling into a NWHCM warehouse in Port Canaveral. On February 22, Bates and his crew began a two-week process of loading the ship. On March 9, it sailed into Port-de-Paix and crews unloaded more than half a million meals of relief food, generators, barrels full of medicine and medical supplies, and hundreds of water filtration systems.

“I’ve always thought God has blessed me and my family beyond my dreams,” David told Florida Today, a local newspaper. “I figure we could give something back. It thrills me to be able to do it.”

A special thanks to NWHCM staff and missionaries Cameron Mayhill and Mike and Teresa Grant for helping coordinate the effort.




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Northwest Haiti Trips

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