ISHMAEL, SPORTING A HAITI NECKLACE.

Thursday, February 10, 2011

THE INCREDIBLE JOURNEY OF RALPH SAINTILUS


“I finally got the passport this morning. THANK GOD!!” the email from Ralph came glaring from my Blackberry. It was the final document needed to extricate him from Haiti. Almost a year of jumping through hoops, everything we needed, except the airline ticket, was in place. I called American Airlines and had him scheduled on the 12:30 flight out of Port-Au-Prince the following day. You don’t want to wait too long because you never know what can happen in Haiti one minute to the next. Between the political unrest, the rioting, cholera; the government can shut the airport at any given moment.

Ralph was 9 when his father left his mother, remarried and took him and his new wife to the United States. They started a life in Pompano Beach, Florida and despite the fact that Ralph missed his mom, he loved his dad and was excited about living in a country he had heard so many amazing things about. Although he did not speak a word of English, he quickly assimilated, mastered the language, made friends and was doing well in school. Everything seemed to be perfect until one day his stepmother, using the ruse of going to visit his family, took him back to Haiti. Once there, she handed him $100 dollars, took his passport and Green Card and headed straight back to Florida. After six years of living in Florida, going to school and making a life, at 15 he found himself alone and without any identification in Port-Au-Prince. Even his birth certificate was back in Florida. Haiti is not a country you want to be in without ID. You cannot go to school, get a cell phone or do much of anything for that matter, without ID.

Ralph found his way back to his mom who was barely managing, living in a small, one room hovel with her 5 year old daughter, Ralph’s new half sister. The following day, he called his stepmother's cell phone, "I'm in Miami", she said. "Miami!!" Ralph screamed in disbelief, "How about me??" "You're gonna be there for a while - get use to it", she snapped back and hung up. He cried for weeks. One week later, after continually trying to call home, the numbers were changed. That was the last he heard from them.

Ralph lived with his mom and little sister, scraping together barely enough to sustain themselves. Cramped inside this tiny room, Ralph would occasionally sleep on the roof but the frequent heavy rain made it impossible to make the roof his home. He left within a month because he knew he was a tremendous burden on his mom. From his mom’s roof he went to his aunt’s house and asked if he could stay with her. She was sweet and kind and welcomed him but after three months it became too difficult for her to care for Ralph. She had two children of her own and was struggling to keep them fed. She told him he had to leave.

With no place to go, Ralph found a few pieces of wood and some old sheets and made a shelter for himself in the outskirts of Port-Au-Prince. He lived there, with 2 other street kids, doing odd jobs for pennies or scraps of food. When it rained, he would leave his makeshift tent to find better cover for the night. For almost a year, he lived like this, barley surviving,  until January 12th, 2010. The earthquake changed everything. With fluency in English and Creole, Ralph was a valuable commodity to the thousands of relief workers. With inner ambition and a strong desire to help, he dug in. While assisting with transports, search and rescues and working as a translator for doctors, he had access to food. His daily struggle to survive was at least temporarily, over. As a gift for his hard work and translating skills, a doctor gave him a good tent. He parked himself outside of Haitian Community Hospital and his life as a relief worker began.

I met Ralph immediately after I arrived in Haiti. He was my right hand man: my translator, body guard, and keeper of my backpack. I don’t think I was there 24 hours before I started questioning him about his perfect English and his clearly American way. When he told me what happened, not only was I appalled at the recklessness of his father and stepmother, I was determined to get him home, here, back in the United States where he belongs. A year later, he is here. Amen and God Bless America!

A million thanks to Paul Waggoner, Eileen S., David C., Lisa A., and Pius D. Without these people, this doesn’t happen. These are the people who stuck their necks out, giving their time and expertise to see this through. In addition, they put up with me.


p.s. Although this act of abandonment sounds horrific by our standard of decency, it happens enough to Haitian children to earn them a name; “throw backs”.

10 comments:

  1. I'm glad he found his way back to the US. I hope that he gets more schooling and becomes whatever his heart desires!!

    ReplyDelete
  2. He will go to college. No doubt about it.

    ReplyDelete
  3. All I can say is WOW!!! I wish him nothing less than the BEST, and sounds like with you he will have that and more!!!
    LOVE TO BOTH OF YOU!!!
    Debby xoxoxo

    ReplyDelete
  4. Thank you Cory! I haven't met you but have heard so much about you from the guys (I spent about 5 months in PAP after the earthquake and a lot of time with MMRC). I know you were so instrumental in making this happen. Best wishes to Ralph...we have a crew in Seattle ready to welcome him whenever he makes his way out here.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Great work Cory! Finally, a happy ending or rather new beginning for Ralph. You've made what seemed impossible happen. Love to Ralph and see you soon.

    ReplyDelete
  6. Aw Cory, that made me cry. You and the crew are changing the lives of so many people. I am so grateful to know you!

    ReplyDelete
  7. you are your mother's child! I know how proud of you she would be. I certainly am and having met you the day you were born, always knew you were "the one". now where is Ralph staying in the US? now that he is here, is someone giving him a home and a chance to go to school? perhaps I can help in some way? It would be terrible if he went bak to the step mother's influence and it's obvious his father had to be complicit in his abandonment. Is it possible that his documents were sold and would compromise his future if not discovered. Bruce might be able to help in any official inquiry so cantact him too if you need help. Love you, dale

    ReplyDelete
  8. the body guard has a life guard now. I wish him all the best. you know the quote; "What doesn't kill you, makes you stronger"

    ReplyDelete
  9. Zip Line Lady said...
    This is fabulous. What an absolute delight it was to meet Ralph and celebrate first-hand that such a beautiful and motivated young man has chosen to come to our country and follow his dreams. What a story! What a heart! And, oh my goodness,... what a smile. I am honored to know Ralph and, of course, the little lady with the really big motor who kept the wheels in motion. We had the pleasure of visiting with Ralph at the top of the world in a beautiful restaurant lounge overlooking the city and talked about his plans to study for his GED, pursue a college degree and all that will follow. I am inspired to know that fairy tales do come true. And I'm blessed to have the same Fairy-God-Friend in Cory! Well done. Wow

    ReplyDelete