From The Christian Century-
In August 2015 I stood outside l’Eglise St. Matthieu, a small church
in northern Haiti, looking at a low rectangular arrangement of stones,
concrete, and rebar that was supposed to be the foundation of a new
school building. Beside me were a fellow member of Grace Episcopal
Church in Amherst, Massachusetts, and Père Joseph Tancrel Diegue, a
61-year-old Haitian priest. We were all frowning.
Three years
earlier, Grace Church had raised money to pay for the construction of
classrooms for St. Matthieu’s School. With a new classroom building, the
school’s five teachers would no longer have to try to teach five
different grades simultaneously in the church’s sanctuary, a room
smaller than a basketball court. Children at the school had carried
stones for the construction. Workers had dug trenches for the
foundation, poured the concrete, and set the stones and rebar. Now the
foundation was covered with weeds, and the rebar was starting to
oxidize. There were no walls and no rafters. No more money, either; it
had all been spent, somewhere.
More here-
https://www.christiancentury.org/article/first-person/why-our-congregation-gives-directly-church-school-haiti
Wednesday, December 26, 2018
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