Today we gathered to celebrate the life of a beautiful little boy named Kenny. His mom cried as we sang happy birthday in Kreyol and English. Her tears were tears of pure joy and deep gratitude for the life of her son.
It was a beautiful thing to witness.
Born after the earthquake in one of the most intense places on the island this premature and tiny little boy was plucked out of the slums by earthquake medical relief workers and brought to the Heartline field hospital where many volunteers went to work saving his life. He was transported to another hospital that possessed necessary equipment and there he remained for a time getting stronger, beating the odds, fighting for his life - while many of you prayed.
Today he and his brave momma are treasured friends. They are part of our family. They live in the safe place called "Harbor House". We believe in them and we love them. Most of all, 
we know God has only just begun to work miracles in their lives.
There is no shortage of difficulty or hardship in Haiti.  
Kenny reminds us that there is no shortage of God's breathtaking provision either.  Mesi Bondye.  Thank-you God.
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HISTORY: 
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| Kenny three weeks old, very near death | 
Written February 19, 2010 By Barbie B.  (Take time to click over to Barbie's blog. You won't be disappointed.  She is currently in Haiti again and has a beautiful & unique way of sharing her  experiences working as a Physicians Assistant here.) 
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| Djenie and Kenny Feb 2010 | 
"Today our medical team found a young woman with a 17 day old baby in the  field.  A three pound baby.    The baby was dying.  Dehydrated.  Heart  rate and oxygen level and glucose dangerously low.  Small red spots of  petechia -- meaning life threatening infection -- appeared on his body  in front of our eyes.  Together our team, led by our physician, a  volunteer pediatrician, with innovation and urgency, were able to  stabilize him with our limited supplies.   We packed his fragile body  into a truck and drove to Miami tent hospital, begging them to take him  to stabilize him with their more advanced tools and supplies.  The tents  have perhaps a hundred patients each.  The staff are exhausted.  They  take the baby.  Overwhelming.
The world needs to hear the  strangled, sobbing wails of a young mother, who fears for the life of  her dying infant, one final loss in an intolerable string of  losses.    The deep, soul baring sobbing wail of a mother losing her only child,  going on and on in a darkened truck, street after crumpled street in the  tropical smoky night.  Infatiguable fear and grief.  Child's prognosis  grim.  But a small spark of hope remains.  So is the sound of the  devastation of Haiti.
In the dark, we returned from our journey  to our field hospital, soul filled with the mother's devastation.  As I  opened the metal gate from the dirt road, in the darkened tented  courtyard, we found all of the patients singing loudly in deep prayer,  arms raised over their heads.  They had called the medical staff to the  courtyard...and were singing to them.  A deep soulful harmonious  blessing.  Nurses stood, stunned, eyes filling with tears, as their  patients rose up in song, honoring them, praying for them.   So is the sound of the soul of Haiti.   The sound of hope, and joy, and love, and strength.   Haiti...Such a strong word."
Written February 20, 2010 by Barbie B.
"We arrive at the hospital and the question of the morning is, "How is  the baby?"  --  the 3 pound dying infant from the night before.  "He's  alive, and breathing on his own..." are the words that create a good  start to the day.   The sick child was found in the arms of his mother  in the crumpled slums last night by our astute medical team, who had  spent the day in devastated neighborhoods looking for ill patients  unable to access care.    If he had not been plucked from the streets,  he would now be dead.  And now, he will live.  I wonder what he will  become.  And, what will become of so many of these children...the  fragile future of this country."
Written in July 2010 by Beth McHoul:
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| Djenie, Kenny, Beth February 2010 | 
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We met Djenie when baby Kenny was 3 days old, weighed 3 pounds  and was  very sick.  Our big, white truck was doing its rounds in lower Boston,  Cite Soleil and found them among several others who were wounded and  sick.  Kenny needed to be treated and Djenie who was in the midst of  post-partum  was frightened of us and  wanted to go home.  She didn’t  know what to do with this baby and didn’t know what to make of us.  Our  doctors treated Kenny, we worked with her on breast-feeding and sent  them home as soon as possible since she was so despondent being with us.

Three  weeks later they returned on our big white truck.  He still weighed 3  pounds and Djenie had a raging breast infection.  I was attending to  Djenie while nurses took Kenny who was wrapped in a blanket.  He was  near death.  Our medical team jumped into action and life saving  measures were taken for this little guy.  We sped him to Miami Field  hospital where he stayed for several weeks.  That first night we were  sure he would die.  Djenie was sure he was fine and kept wanting to go  home.  When it finally sunk in that he wasn’t fine she wailed with a  wail that broke our hearts.  God hears.
Day after day we brought  Djenie to the field hospital to visit.  They bonded.  Breastfeeding  finally took.  Love was born – a love that is continually threatened.   The odds have always been against her being a successful mom.  Her  family is violent and there are many of them living in a small shack.   The baby’s dad died.  First we heard he was dead by gunshot and then he  in fact died in a fight by a crushing blow by a cement block.  Djenie  wailed that gut wrenching wail again.  He too was a teenager from one of  the most violent neighborhoods on earth.
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| Djenie and Beth visiting Kenny at MFH | 
Over the months Djenie and  Kenny became part of our hospital and lives.  We (Beth) kept saying he  could be discharged when he weighed five pounds.  Then ten.  Then  fifteen.  He’s over 16 pounds and they are still with us.  He is chubby,  breast fed and permanently hooked to his mom’s hip.  She runs to his  every whimper.  Parenting skills have been gained.  Her teenage  responses to his cries have vanished and a real mom has emerged.  The  mom who wouldn’t rouse to feed him now jumps to his every cry.  She’s  grown.
Djenie goes home to Cite Soleil every now and again for a few  days.  Her mom and mom’s boyfriend tell her she can live at home but not  with a child.  They continually advise her to give him to an  orphanage.  The dad’s mother has offered to take Kenny but not Djenie.
Orphanages  can be wonderful places of refuge for the abandoned child and when a  mom dies.  We ran a crèche for many years.  There are times when this is  the best answer.  We love adoption and gave many years to making  adoptions happen.   There are also overcrowded, understaffed orphanages  where children do not get the care and parenting that every child should  have.  Haiti is loaded with these places.
Djenie helps us at the  women’s program.  She is a comic and makes us laugh.  She is moody,  fights with others patients and then comes running to me to bail her  out.  I always do.  One of her jobs is to help with pregnancy tests.  We  give a lady a cup, tell her to give us a urine sample and then we give  her the news.  Eager to help Djenie told a woman to go pee in a cup but  told her to pee in the yard instead of the bathroom.  We all laughed.   Djenie giggled.  The woman didn’t realize what was funny – this is Haiti  after all.  Bathrooms aren’t always available.
Yesterday some of our  patients took their babies to a local Haitian  orphanage for a  government vaccination program.  I watched them take kids hand in hand  down the street to do their motherly duty.  They know vaccinations in  Haiti are important.  They want to be responsible.  Djenie carried Kenny  and off they went.
A few hours later Djenie came to me and said that  the woman at the orphanage offered to take Kenny into the orphanage  seeing that she was a teenager.  Djenie said,  "no thank you".
Then  the woman offered to buy Kenny saying she would give Djenie a lot of  money for him.  Djenie again said, "no thank you, I have people that are  helping me".   I listened and told her what a great mom she is and how  correct she was not to give Kenny to this woman.  I was calm.  Inside my  blood was boiling as questions raged.  Why did this woman want Kenny?   Don’t they have enough unwanted children?  Why was she singling him out  and wanting to buy him?  Would she turn around and sell him for more  money?
They are a team – Djenie and Kenny.  With help they have made  it this far and are well connected.  He is healthy – and she is growing as a  person.
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A few of today's photos ...
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| Lydia helping Antoinette get ready for the party today | 
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| Lydia helping Kenny get ready for the party today. | 
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| Amanda helping Djenie get ready for the party today | 
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| Celebrating | 
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| More celebrating | 
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 Djenie headed out after the party to go see her Mom and Grandma. She was excited to visit them with Kenny and bring them left-over birthday cake.  Just as the party broke up she asked if we would pray for her before she returned for a few days - back into the complications and challenges of her life in Cite Soleil.  We were honored to be asked and honored to pray with her.
Bondye Bon.  
God is good.