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MAF Work Vital to Ongoing Relief, Rebuilding Effort in Haiti

March 27th, 2011 No comments

Clinton Commends Organization’s Critical Role; MAF Makes Work of 60 Relief Agencies Possible

One year after a devastating earthquake struck Haiti, MAF (Mission Aviation Fellowship) is still hard at work, providing vital air transportation to fight cholera, enable relief efforts and aid in the rebuilding of the crippled nation.

MAF Haiti staff load a plane with food, including 'Manna Packs,' specially formulated food packets for people on starvation diets.“This has been a year of tragedy for Haiti, and MAF has been there from the beginning, standing alongside the Haitian people and doing all we can to improve the situation of the suffering,” said John Boyd, MAF president and CEO.

Former President Bill Clinton of the Clinton Bush Haiti Fund recently commended MAF for its vital role in the relief and rebuilding efforts.

“By organizing hundreds of relief flights and delivering thousands of pounds of supplies, you’ve had a critical impact on Haiti’s recovery,” said Clinton.

While the earthquake grabbed all the major headlines, 2010 has been a disaster-filled year for the impoverished Caribbean nation. Haiti has also suffered from Hurricane Tomas, a cholera outbreak that has killed an estimated 3,300 people and hospitalized more than 100,000, and political upheaval that has at times stifled Port-au-Prince and surrounding cities.

MAF has been working in Haiti since 1986, and has four aircraft at a permanent base at the Port-au-Prince airport. After the earthquake that crippled Haiti’s already weak infrastructure, MAF partnered with some 60 relief agencies, transported medical personnel and aid workers, delivered critical relief supplies and performed many emergency medical evacuations.  Since then, MAF has continued flying provisions, such as food, water and medical supplies – including IV solution – to help combat the country’s cholera outbreak.

“We recently flew a medical team and some 900 pounds of IV solution to a hospital in Port-de-Paix that was running short of staff and supplies,” said Boyd.  Upon landing, the MAF pilot also drove the medical team and supplies to the hospital, where more than 100 cholera patients were being treated, most of them children under age 12.  Because their veins had collapsed due to severe dehydration, traditional IVs could not be used.  The doctors taught hospital staff how to administer IVs through the bone marrow, a painful but life-saving treatment.  Since beginning the bone marrow procedures, the hospital has drastically reduced the number of deaths.

MAF personnel build a house for a Haitian family left homeless by the earthquake.As a result of the earthquake and subsequent misfortunes that have struck Haiti, the need for MAF services has pushed its Haiti operations to full capacity. The ministry serves some 16 airstrips, and has added an additional plane to its fleet to meet the demand.

While already a challenging place, new obstacles have emerged. Many Haitians are disabled, having lost limbs after being trapped under the rubble of collapsed buildings. Haitian doctors are struggling to make a living with the sudden influx of free health care and clinics. And more than one million people remain in tent cities.

“MAF’s role has increased exponentially because the infrastructure has been so compromised,” Boyd says. “MAF’s services have become paramount to the rebuilding process of Haiti.  Every week we are called upon to transport work teams and building supplies, or special equipment like water purification systems.”

MAF Haiti staff recently had an opportunity to minister in a different way by building homes for families whose houses collapsed in the earthquake. Through gifts from generous donors, MAF purchased 26 pre-fabricated structures and built them on the existing foundations. Though small by U.S. standards, the houses are well-anchored, sturdy and much appreciated by the families that were previously living in tents.

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News from MAF Haiti

March 3rd, 2010 No comments
MAF has been serving in Haiti now for over 25 years. Here is a look into some of the work that MAF staff have been involved in recently in Haiti since the earthquake January 12th 2010.  It gives a glimpse into what it is like for these folks down there.  To follow the flights of one of the two Kodiaks flying down there go to:  http://grace.ly/px8r16
John Woodberry, MAF Disaster Response/Security Manager:
  • Feb. 8: USAID has seen us moving out cargo from the ramp in under 24 hours to missions, hospitals and Christian relief agencies. This government group has approached us about moving even more. USAID food and other essentials will fly out on the KODIAKs and also be distributed by the truckload to Operation Blessing and other partner agencies.
  • Feb. 8: Flight trends into Haiti have moved past the evacuation flights and rapid influx of passengers. No longer are swarms of people trying to get in and out. There are still more passengers than we can fly, but transit between Port-au-Prince and the United States is becoming a scheduled operation where passengers book flights for specific days. The Saab airplane of NASCAR team Joe Gibbs Racing will fly with us again on Thursday and Friday. Commercial flights into Haiti are tentatively planned to resume Feb.18.
  • Feb. 8: The seaport still has only one dock open, creating a real bottleneck in the flow of relief supplies.
  • Feb. 7: While the MAF team was taking a much-needed break to watch the Super Bowl, recovery crews arrived at the airport. They were bringing the body of a US citizen who died in a collapsed hotel. The protocol and respect for the body was moving to watch.
  • Feb. 6: I was awakened at 4 a.m. by the sound of the MAF/MFI forklift running around the yard. It was James, our amazing forklift guy. The US military has given us five pallets of rice and other goods that we will transport to outlying areas on KODIAK flights.
  • Feb. 6: In less than three weeks of the MAF Haiti earthquake relief effort, we have flown around 2,500 passengers and 500,000 lbs of cargo.
  • Feb. 6: A Southern Baptist team from the Dominican Republic is in one of the large tents in our logistics yard. The team is building family-sized 15-gallon water filters. They have brought in and distributed 4,500 so far. There is great need for clean water.
  • Feb. 6: Both KODIAKs are loaded and ready to fly out early tomorrow morning. The morning will start at 6 a.m. with a C-130 that will arrive with 46,000 lbs of food, tents, medical supplies and other essential items.
  • Feb. 6: I received an e-mail from a Boeing 707 captain who sent us pizza: “You have no idea what a blessing it was to see the MAF staff at the Port-au-Prince airport this week. I hope the pizza found your folks well! It’s the least I could do, you all deserve so much. Keep up the good work. My spirit leaped when I talked to Will White yesterday. I know the LORD is working through you all in Haiti. Please continue spreading the Word through all that you do, and know that you have prayer partners in my wife Shannon and I.”
Jason Krul, Pilot, MAF Haiti:

  • Feb. 6: This afternoon I coordinated several KODIAK relief flights bringing much-needed food and water purification systems to outlying villages. One flight was bound for a region called Anse Rouge, which was suffering severe drought prior to the earthquake. We loaded the plane full of 100 water purification systems and around 1100 lbs of rice and beans for Anse Rouge.
  • While organizing the flight, I tried unsuccessfully to contact missionaries Judy and Manis Lemuel whose mission compound is near the airstrip. Lemuel Ministries is involved in many vital programs including community development, environmental improvement, youth outreach, feeding programs, and church and spiritual growth projects. Once we landed in Anse Rouge, we were immediately met by the Lemuel family! They were stunned to discover what we had brought them. Judy and Ginger cried for joy and couldn’t stop thanking MAF for remembering them. They told us water was obtained by sending boys by donkey 1.5 hours each way to draw from a river. They were overjoyed as we showed them how the water purification systems work. What a rich blessing to serve this mission community!

David Carwell, Pilot/Mechanic, MAF Haiti:

  • Feb. 6: Years ago, I took a helicopter ride to survey a site in Fond de Blanc for missionary Jean Thomas, who leased land to build an airstrip. But we had many problems getting approval for landing there as the process involved much politics. The project had been at a standstill for years but praise God that flights have begun on this airstrip.
  • We have heard from Pastor Labady that this area needs food. Many refugees and wounded from Port-au-Prince have relocated there. I pray that the opening of this airstrip will assist Jean Thomas and those who are doing the work of the Lord, bringing physical and spiritual life in that area.

Frantz Angus, Administrator, Double Harvest, Haiti:

  • Feb. 6: Please THANK all the staff from MFI and MAF for ALL the great service you have provided Haiti and missions like Double Harvest. So many medical supplies and needs were sent down on your planes at a time when we needed it the most. Thank you very much. May God keep blessing your organization.

Fred Wall, Missionary, Word for the World Baptist Ministries:

  • Feb. 6: The manna you sent us is definitely an answer to prayer. We have been trying to find ways to get nourishing foods to people in need, to buy rice, beans and oil needed and pay to transport it. Our income is limited. Then you called. We are just overjoyed at God’s goodness. Thanks for thinking about us.

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MAF Haiti Earthquake Response

January 21st, 2010 No comments
MAF Pilots Resume Flights since Devastating Quake;
Bringing Aid to Outlying Towns

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti – MAF (Mission Aviation Fellowship) missionaries have set up a Port-au-Prince airport communications center connected to a GATR VSAT satellite system, supplying direly needed high-bandwidth communications to workers from at least 16 international aid groups that have arrived since the Jan. 12 Haiti earthquake.

Huntsville, Ala.-based GATR Technologies donated the use of the GATR system for the communications center, which is located at the offices of World Concern, a relief agency operating out of the airport. Dedicated phone lines are providing telephone service for the relief agencies, facilitating the distribution of emergency supplies to the millions affected by the quake. The center also allows wireless communications, Skype, voice-over-Internet protocol and email.

GATR satellite internet equipment setup


“The earthquake destroyed the country’s infrastructure, and communication problems have so hampered relief efforts,” said MAF President John Boyd. “The GATR satellite and communications center is greatly facilitating the distribution of aid to the injured, homeless and suffering in Haiti.
“Logistics and coordination that MAF is providing to the emergency relief effort is crucial to saving lives, especially in these early days following the Haiti earthquake and later as rebuilding begins,” Boyd said.

For the first time since the earthquake struck, MAF pilots in Haiti have resumed flights using the ministry’s three aircraft. MAF flights bring desperately needed relief supplies to outlying towns and return to Port-au-Prince with internationals that had been working in Haiti before the earthquake and are evacuating the country.

The United States Air Force, which controls the Port-au-Prince airport, is sending many humanitarian cargo flights to the MAF hangar there. MAF is helping planes refuel and clear cargo through Haitian customs, as well as unload the cargo into the MAF hangar, ready for distribution.
MAF missionaries’ homes sustained little damage and are housing relief workers from many agencies. Other MAF and relief staff are sleeping on cots in the ministry’s hangar. Cargo shipping containers are serving as offices.

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