Tim,

Great! Keep us posted! We'll help find tools and solutions in the days and 
months and years ahead.

Thanks to your descriptions of what's going on and thanks to others with 
first-hand knowledge, my friends and I now have a truer understanding of the 
obstacles Haiti's people face and the assets they have to work with. Their 
existing strengths include the Haitian tradition of family and their long 
history of pitching in to help one another. Sometimes, well-meaning outsiders 
who are in a rush to help Haiti unintentionally overlook those inherent Haitian 
strengths or they undervalue them.

At times as outsiders we unintentionally reinvent the wheel. Or we fail to 
integrate our institutional efforts with powerful informal efforts on the 
ground. Or as outsiders we divert attention from community organizations and 
individuals that have years of proven success in Haiti, including people who 
already know what works, what's needed and how best to dispense it.

I just returned from DC where I spent nine days quietly recruiting support: a 
variety of highly visible people and also highly connected people who get big 
things done behind-the-scenes. What unites them is they all act neighborly and 
respectfully when they have time. They will make time. These people will pitch 
in occasionally at a distance or work with purpose over a longer stretch of 
time to help frontline responders overcome obstacles. These people want no pay 
for themselves and no money for their organizations. Doing powerful good is 
compensation enough for them. 

We'll watch your posts and others to see what's needed. I'll let you know once 
we've built our online presence and are ready to try out the system. Should be 
in a few days. 

Travel well! And thanks again for making it real and keeping it real.

Mark


On Mar 21, 2010, at 12:35 PM, Timothy Falconer wrote:

> Hi everyone,
> 
> I'm sitting here with Beth Santos, about to board a plane to Port-Au-Prince, 
> Haiti where we'll be joined by Bill Stelzer and John Engle.
> 
> After spending the night at John's house, we'll fly to the island of Lagonav 
> where we'll start a two week workshop at Matènwa Community Learning Center 
> with Chris Low, Benaja Antoine, 20 trainee mentors, and 26 children.  Our 
> goal is for these twenty mentors to train another twenty mentors, so that 
> they can all lead eight Waveplace pilots using XO laptops and Squeak Etoys, 
> all in the next two months.  Hopefully this will set the stage for a much 
> larger deployment this summer, starting with our expanded workshop in St John 
> in late May (May 24th to June 2nd).
> 
> I'd like to extend a huge thank you to OLPC for redonating the 200 laptops 
> that are being used by the 40 mentors and 160 children in Haiti.  Adam, Nia, 
> Matt, and SJ have been invaluable to Waveplace in the last two months.  OLPC 
> is truly a great organization.
> 
> I've been blogging each morning for the last ten days, and will continue to 
> blog every morning throughout the next six weeks.   Follow along at:
> 
> http://waveplace.com/news/blog
> 
> We'll also be twittering frequently, so please subscribe to 
> http://twitter.com/waveplace.
> 
> Anyway, here we go folks.  It's been a busy two months, but we'll be there in 
> a few hours.
> 
> Take care,
> Tim
> 
> --
> Timothy Falconer
> Waveplace Foundation
> http://waveplace.com
> 610-797-3100

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