The Hamilton Spectator

Haitian-Canadians mark 10 years since deadly quake

-

MONTREAL — Gael Stephenson Chancy remembers the time following the earthquake that struck Haiti 10 years ago as the moment he was forced to grow up.

As his family rode in a transport toward the military plane that would carry his family to Canada, the then-12-year-old looked out the window and saw horrific sights.

“They had piled up the bodies of the dead next to the wounded as the rescue teams were trying to hide the wounded,” he said in an interview.

“I remember the adults in my family telling me to hide the eyes of my younger cousins, and I remember thinking, ‘Why wouldn’t I hide my own eyes?’”

Chancy was one of the many Haitian-Canadians across the country who on Sunday marked the 10th anniversar­y of the catastroph­ic earthquake that devastated their mother country.

In a Montreal theatre, a crowd in the stands stood holding electronic candles during a moment of silence that gave way to thunderous drumming at exactly 4:53 p.m. — the moment the earthquake struck on Jan. 12, 2010.

Marjorie Villefranc­he, director of the Maison d’Haiti community organizati­on, said the sense of loss is still “very vivid” in Montreal’s Haitian community.

“Every time we talk about the earthquake, everybody starts crying again, so the trauma is still there,” she said. “Probably it will be for another 10 years, we don’t know.”

The Maison d’Haiti, which helped organize the ceremony, held a weekend of discussion­s, presentati­ons and artistic performanc­es to mark the anniversar­y of the tragedy.

Villefranc­he said it’s important to remember the dead but also the living, who continue to grapple with the aftermath of the disaster.

More than 200,000 people died in the earthquake, and 300,000 more were injured. Countless other lives were changed.

Laurence Magloire, a Haitian filmmaker who has spent much of her life in Canada, said she was at home editing footage when her house outside Portau-Prince began shaking, hard enough to throw her to the ground.

With a sense of foreboding, she went out in the street.

“I saw all these people running around, it wasn’t broken there,” she said. “But I was hearing downtown was totally collapsed, this place is collapsed, that place is collapsed, and then the phones collapsed.”

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau offered condolence­s Sunday to the loved ones of the victims, including 58 Canadians.

“Over the last decade, the Haitian people have shown incredible resilience in the face of challenges and obstacles, as they continue to work toward a better tomorrow,” he said in a statement.

“As steadfast partners and friends, Canada remains committed in our support for the Haitian people.”

More than 165,000 people of Haitian origin were living in Canada, the vast majority of them in Quebec, according to the 2016 census.

But despite the internatio­nal aid that poured into Haiti following the earthquake, Magloire said life in Haiti remains difficult.

Schools and hospitals still lack basic supplies — something she blames on government mismanagem­ent and corruption.

Chancy is doing his best to help. He works for the Maison d’Haiti organizati­on, where he helps with youth programmin­g and welcoming new refugees to Canada.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada