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Entries in Haiti (5)

Tuesday
May112010

Two Kindergartners Raise Money for Haiti

Thanks to Stacy Adkins for the following post: 

Paige Adkins and Virginia Varden, two local kindergartners, hosted a yard sale and a lemonade stand on Saturday, May 8 and raised nearly $500 to send to Haiti. The money will be hand delivered by John Varden, who is the husband of Nancy Varden, an associate pastor at Orange United Methodist Church. John will be building chicken coops for Haitian families, and the money the girls raised will be used to purchase chickens to fill the coops. "We want to help kids who are hungry," says Paige. A few of their friends joined in to help raise funds. See below for some photos, taken by Jean Lombos Photography:

Paige Adkins.

Paige Adkins, Virgina Varden, Tony Congdon and Eli Sennhauser.

Wednesday
Mar102010

Two Chapel Hill Doctors Treat Haiti Victims

Like everyone else, Dr. Patrick Guiteras followed the news reports of the January earthquake in Haiti and feltDr. Franklin Tew and Dr. Patrick Guiteras with Micah Johnson, a medical student at Brown. sympathy for the victims. But he hadn’t considered traveling to help them until he received an e-mail from his daughter, an actress in New York.

“She said, 'It’s terrible what’s happened. Here’s a number if you think you or some of your friends want to go,’' Guiteras recalls. “I said ‘I better go.’”

Guiteras, 67 and a doctor at Chapel Hill Family Medicine, recruited his friend Dr. Franklin Tew, also 67, who is retired, to go on the trip, which was coordinated by the International Medical Alliance. The doctors, who met in medical school at UNC in 1965, arrived in Jimani, Dominican Republic on Valentine’s Day with medical supplies in hand. There, 40 miles from the earthquake zone, tents with dirt floors were set up for victims who had fled. Medical volunteers slept on the floor of a dorm-like building.

“They were still operating on people with major extremity trauma, amputations, crush injuries,” says Guiteras. “We were there as medical people to look after the patients after they’d been operated on.” Guiteras and Tew worked 12 hours a day alongside volunteers from Brown University, the Mayo Clinic and Louisiana State University. Many patients were treated for complications The tent housed 29 male and female patients.that resulted from their surgeries -- infections, anemia, blood pressure and diabetes. Others were preparing for more rounds of surgery.

Both Guiteras and Tew were struck by the resilient and joyful spirit of the Haitian people.

“Every morning, we’d make our rounds. Here are people missing part of a leg or maybe their child is dead,” says Guiteras. “Yet they look you in the eye and ask you how you are.”

“You could hear them singing hymns in the tents at night,” says Tew. “Women just singing at top of voices and clapping.”

After five days, the pair returned home, with a changed outlook.

“The thing I learned about me is that we get so settled in our life here in the U.S.,” says Tew. “We have so many privileges. We really forget about the plight of other people in the world. That’s something I don’t want to forget -- the people there, their determination and the joy they had despite dire circumstances.”

“It was a powerful experience,” says Guiteras. “It reminded me of many things we all need to know about how other people live.”A Creole translator shows some Carolina pride.

However, Guiteras says he has no illusions about his contributions. “I think I did a little bit of good for a few people,” he says. “But I wonder what these folks are going to go back to. And what’s going to happen to the country.”

And what does his daughter think? “She said, ‘I’m proud of you, Daddy,’” says Guiteras. “If you get your daughter’s approval, it was all worthwhile."

Wednesday
Feb102010

Showing Heart for Haiti 

This morning, I wrote about the hatred that surrounds the UNC-Duke rivalry, which is all in good fun, of course. But Valentine's Day is fast approaching, and there are plenty of opportunities to show the love -- particularly for those struggling in Haiti.

On Friday, from 2:30 to 5:30, businesses on Market Street in Southern Village will offer treats and goodies to customers. Start at Harrington Bank, where you can pick up a goody bag, then head to the Christ United Methodist Church office to make a donation to relief efforts in Haiti. Then reward your good deed. The Tumble Gym will offer each child a free 30 minutes of gym time. Other perks: The Lumina will serve free popcorn, Subway will distribute free cookies, kids can get temporary tattoos at Village Pediatrics and State Farm will give free coloring books.

The Chapel Hill Country Club is hosting Haiti Relief Casino Night on Friday. Enjoy blackjack, poker, craps and roulette while raising money for the American Red Cross. A $50 donation is payable at the door (cash or check) and 100% of proceeds will go directly to Haiti relief. There will be a cash bar.

The advanced art classes at Chapel Hill High and East Chapel Hill High (more than 100 students) have put aside their regular projects for two weeks to make works in response to the crisis in Haiti. On Saturday, from 2 to 6, the works will be exhibited at Open Eye Café in Carrboro and sold in order to raise money for the American Red Cross relief effort.

On Sunday, from 1 to 4, The ArtsCenter will host a Valentine’s Day extravaganza, Love to Haiti. Proceeds will benefit Hearts with Haiti, a Raleigh nonprofit that supports three children’s homes in Haiti. Adults can enjoy acting and improv, portrait painting, jewelry making, ceramic handbuilding and shag and line dancing. Kids can make valentines and collages and play with clay. The cost is $10 per person; $15 for two people or $25 per family. Tickets are available at the door. An additional $10 per adult is required for those wanting to partake in painting, jewelry making or handbuilding (you can pre-register). There will also be art by kids for sale, courtesy of the ArtsCenter’s After School Arts Immersion Program. Special guests include Chuck Davis, founder of  the Durham-based African American Dance Ensemble (AADE), who also established Resurrection Dance Theatre at St. Joseph Home for Boys in Haiti. Davis will speak on his personal relationship with children in Haiti as well as partnership with Hearts with Haiti. Also, local singer-songwriter extraordinare Billy Sugarfix will perform at 3:30.

Monday
Jan252010

Chapel Hill's Haitian Relief Day

The community is coming together to help Haiti.

The Chapel Hill-Carrboro Chamber of Commerce, Chapel Hill Magazine, 1360 WCHL and The Siena Hotel are urging local businesses and residents to participate in “Chapel Hill’s Haitian Relief Day” by donating a percentage of their sales on Wednesday, Jan. 27 to the cause.

The Siena Hotel's General Manager Anthony Carey is leading the effort. Local retail, restaurants, corporate, media and health care businesses are raising money in a variety of ways to help. Any business wishing to participate should contact Anthony Carey at 929-4000. In addition, some businesses are choosing to simply make a donation and also encouraging their employees to donate. Participating businesses are invited to come together at The Siena Hotel on Thursday, Jan. 28 at 3:30 p.m. when Mayor Mark Kleinschmidt will present the Orange County office of the American Red Cross with the proceeds. See below for a list of participating businesses:

A Southern Season/Weathervane

Carolina Inn/Carolina Crossroads

Lark Home Apparel

Sheraton Chapel Hill/Shula's 347

Siena Hotel/Il Palio

Top of The Hill

Town Hall Grill

Chapel Hill Magazine

WCHL 1360

Wednesday
Jan202010

Help for Haiti

First thing this morning, I got an e-mail we can all feel good about.

It read:

The historic Carolina Inn will donate $5 to the American Red Cross Haiti efforts for every room night reservation booked as part of its 72-Hour Sale starting Wednesday, Jan. 20 at 10 a.m. and ending Sat., January 23 at 10 a.m.

 The special $105 per night rate includes breakfast for two and is available from Jan. 20-29, Feb. 1-2, 7-9, 11, 14-17, 21-22 and March 4-7, 14-18, 28-31.

Reservations can be made by calling 800-962-8519 or online at www.CarolinaInn.com and using promo code 72HR0120.

Do you know of other fundraising efforts happening around here? Let us know (andrea@chapelhillmagazine.com or comment on this post) so that we can help spread the word.