Send Haiti Healing Vibrations Bless the Survivors With Tranquility
Heaven help us all! All love, heart and prayers are focused on Haiti and The HealMobile wishes our family and friends the purest energies of loving kindness and phoenix-like regeneration. We are all bent low by this tragedy and any "collection" begins with collecting our own selves from this. So I bid you collect your thoughts. Money and supplies are surely needed, and we can also help by sending calming thoughts. Like Carolyn A. Butts of African Voices magazine, I am donating to organizations providing medical assistance because many of the hospitals have been destroyed or abandoned. Four initiatives aiding in the crisis are: 1) Lambi Fund of Haiti, PO Box 18955, Washington, DC 20036 US: 202-833-3713. Give online through Paypal or credit card, http://www.lambifund.org/ 2) Muslims who are working to help out have set up this web page: www.islamicreliefusa.org/emergencies/haiti-earthquake 3) St. Paul Community Baptist Church ,859 Hendrix Street (between Linden Blvd & Stanley Avenue) Brooklyn, NY 11207, will be the Brooklyn drop off location for YeleHaiti, the non-profit foundation founded and led by Grammy Award Winner Wyclef Jean. Please direct any questions regarding this project to SPCBC. Central Office (718) 257-1300 ext. 100 or Monica Britton at mbritton@spcbc.com. Also visit yele.org N.B. WYCLEF AND HIS ASSISTANT ARE BEING SCRUTINIZED FOR HER $100,000+ SALARY. You should investigate and exercise discernment before texting "Yele" to 501501, which will give $5 to Wyclef's foundation, automatically charged to your cell phone bill. 4) To align with expatriates working on comprehensive
solutions for Haiti,
visit Neg Mawon online. The words mean "man in hiding" and the word mawon is close to maroon in meaning. The idea is for everyone to come out of hiding and go back to the country to help it rebuild. There is also a famous Neg Mawon statue in tribute~ "to the brown men in hiding (slaves) who ran away into the mountains and became the slave armies lead by Boukman for 13 years against the St. Dominque's colonists and later, Napoleon's army. These slave armies were commanded by General Toussaint Louverture and later by General Jean-Jacques Dessalines to ultimate victory over the French at the Battle of Vertires on 18 November 1803." Mr. McDuff Goldman, an organizer and City College of New York student, is still in the process of building and want to coordinate repatriation efforts and sustainable solutions to the island nation's challenges. So return to his site often if you find it is not fully operational when you visit www.negmawon.org. Towards recovery and triumph, Niamo N. Muid-Davis aka Sister Nancy
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