SOS Children's Villages began its work in Haiti in 1978. The director of an orphanage in Petite Place Cazeau decided to get in touch with our organisation. Not much later, the joint decision to hand over this orphanage to SOS Children's Villages was made. The terrible 2010 earthquake that destroyed vast parts of the country made the presence of SOS Children's Villages even more important. At present there are three SOS Children's Villages in Haiti, two SOS Youth Facilities, three SOS Hermann Gmeiner Schools, one SOS Vocational Training Centre and three SOS Social Centres.
Please help us ensure a loving home for every Haitian child. Sponsor a child in Haiti now.
For just $36/month you can sponsor a child and help provide an orphaned or abandoned child with:
- A safe and nurturing home
- A loving SOS mother
- Quality education
- Healthcare
- Nutritious food
- Clothing and toys
- All the things necessary for a bright future
SOS Children's Villages in Haiti
At present, our organisation is supporting Haitian children and young people by providing day care, education, vocational training and medical assistance in two different locations.
During the recent earthquake, the SOS Children's village located in Santo was only slightly damaged. Around 300 unaccompanied children had to be taken in temporarily.
In 2005, SOS Children's Villages initiated its SOS Family Strengthening Programs, which enable children who are at risk of losing parental care to grow up within a caring family environment. Children whose parents cannot take care of them will find a loving home in one of the SOS families.
A country marked by political instability and natural disasters
The Republic of Haiti has a total population of roughly 10 million, with roughly 900,000 living in the country's capital, Port-au-Prince. Its official languages are Creole and French.
In the year 1804, Haiti was the very first nation in the Americas to gain independence, ending slavery at the same time. With revolutionary leader Jean Jacques Dessalines assuming power, the country became the first black-led republic in the world.
However, the country has undergone decades of poverty, economic dependence, political instability and nearly 30 years of brutal dictatorship under Francois Duvalier (“Papa Doc”) and his son Jean-Claude (“Baby Doc”). It is now the poorest nation in the Americas.
In January 2010, a massive earthquake struck Haiti and caused the death of an estimated 220,000 people. Hundreds of thousands lost their homes and are now living in provisional shelters or on the streets, waiting to be resettled.
To make things worse, the earthquake was followed by a cholera epidemic, hurricane “Thomas”, and badly organised presidential elections that caused further chaos in the streets of Port-au-Prince.
The country's economy is in ruins and fully depends on international cooperation and aid. A drastic increase in migratory flows from Haiti to the Dominican Republic has been recorded since 2010.
Haiti is the poorest country in the western hemisphere
Roughly 80 per cent of Haitians live on less than two US dollars a day, most of them under precarious conditions. They face a life without proper sanitation, electricity or running water. Nearly 40 per cent lack access to clean drinking water.
Historically, Haiti has always been a country with a significantly uneven distribution of income: roughly 50 per cent of the country's wealth is owned by only one per cent of its population.
Haiti is currently ranked 145th by the Human Development Index (HDI), making it the lowest ranked country in the region. The index measures the achievements made by a country as concerns education, health and income. The adult literacy rate in Haiti amounts to 65.3 per cent, one of the worst figures in the Americas.
HIV/AIDS infections had already been one of the leading causes of death prior to the earthquake. Due to the disaster, they may now pose an even greater threat. At 1.9 per cent, the HIV/AIDS prevalence rate in Haiti is one of the highest in the world.
Hundreds of thousands of children at risk
Children undoubtedly remain the most vulnerable section of Haiti's population after a disaster of such magnitude. They face trauma and severe psychological damage.
As a result of the earthquake, thousands of Haitian children were orphaned or abandoned by their parents. Before the catastrophe, an estimated 440,000 children had been growing up without parental care. Presumably, this number has now risen even further.
Haiti is marked by the highest rates of infant, under-five and maternal mortality in the Western hemisphere: nearly 72 children per 1,000 live births die before they reach the age of five. It is expected that this figure has now worsened due to precarious living conditions and the non-existent medical infrastructure in the country. Nearly all hospitals and schools were destroyed and despite international efforts to rebuild them, progress in Haiti has been slow.
According to the United Nations, roughly 300,000 children in Haiti work in conditions similar to slavery. Most of them work as domestics for wealthier families where they frequently experience physical abuse. It has been reported that many of these children are forced to sleep outside, on a piece of cardboard. Those who do not work as domestics usually shine shoes, sell merchandise at traffic lights or are involved in commercial sex work. Less than two per cent of Haitian children ever complete secondary school.
The aforementioned HIV/AIDS problem has a great impact on Haiti's youth: an estimated 156,000 pregnant women in Haiti tested positive for HIV in 2010. In 2009, the number was 132,000: an increase of nearly 25,000 within only one year. Consequently, around 100,000 Haitian children aged between 0-17 are orphaned as a result of AIDS: many of them contract the virus from their mothers.
Our Impact
Image
The SOS Children's Village in Haiti provides loving homes to orphaned and abandoned children |
3 VILLAGES | 471 Orphaned and Abandoned Children |
Image
The SOS Youth Facilities in Haiti provides youth with a loving environment where they learn to transition into independent living and to expand their education |
2 YOUTH FACILITIES | 284 Youths in our Care |
Image
SOS Vocational Training Centres in Haiti provide young adults from our youth centres, SOS villages and the surrounding community with the skills they will need to secure reliable employment. They provide realistic job opportunities for the future and an avenue to independence. |
1 VOCATIONAL TRAINING CENTRES | 531 Youth and adult students |
Image
SOS Social Centres in Haiti aim is to help families, in particular women and children, living in communities neighbouring the SOS Children's Villages to gradually escape from poverty, and to help young people become self-reliant. |
3 SOCIAL CENTRES | 10218 Beneficiaries |
Image
SOS Emergency Relief Programs in Haiti are designed to meet the urgent needs of children and their families. If the need persists beyond the initial crisis, SOSís commitment to those who we help is reflected by the creation of long-term relief and support in those areas. |
1 EMERGENCY RELIEF PROGRAMS | Emergency relief recipients |