Object Permanence

We’re supposed to develop Object Permanence within the first year of our lives but I sometimes wonder if we’ve all still got a long way to go.

Child development expert and psychologist Jean Piaget coined the phrase Object Permanence to describe the stage in a child’s life when they start to realise that an object still exists even when they can’t see, hear, or touch it. Most agree that children reach that point at about eight or nine months of age.

I wonder if we need to develop some Object Permanence regarding Haiti.

The massive tragedy that hit Haiti has already started to slip from our headlines. Stories about the relief efforts are now moving further and further inside our newspapers rather than being splashed across the front page.

I know that such a tragedy can’t continue to occupy the same place in our hearts, minds or media, but we can’t afford to forget. Just because we can’t see, hear, or touch the hurt each day, we must maintain our Object Permanence.

In weeks, months and even years from now, the people of Haiti will still be dealing with losing around 200 000 mothers, fathers and children. The millions of people affected will still be trying to put their lives together.

I’ve seen first hand the kind of conditions the Haitian people faced every day before the earthquake hit. It’s a long road back to even those conditions but we can’t let things go back to how they were. We need to ensure that things are better than they have been. That’ll take years and probably even decades but these people require our ongoing assistance.

Compassion has been working in Haiti for over 40 years and they’ll be there long after the initial clean up and relief effort is over. I’ve seen the work they do and know how much of a difference it makes. That’s why I’ll still be making whatever contributions I can to help Haiti and its people over the coming years.

Please donate generously to Compassion to help those in Haiti. Click here to give through Compassion International. If you’re in Australia, click here to donate through Compassion Australia.



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Compassion’s Tim Glenn live from Haiti

With the relentless barrage of information about the recent earthquakes in Haiti we can feel overwhelmed and it’s hard to know just what we can do to make a dent in what seems to be an impossible situation.

Thankfully organisations such as Compassion are turning our dollars into practical help on the ground in Haiti.

Tim Glenn is the Director of Child Advocacy for Compassion in the US. He is currently in Haiti helping with the urgent relief effort. This morning during my radio programme on 98.5 Sonshine FM I spoke to Tim about the current situation.

You can hear our conversation by clicking the play button of the audio player at the bottom of this post.

Please donate generously to Compassion to help those in Haiti. Click here to give through Compassion International. If you’re in Australia, click here to donate through Compassion Australia.

[audio:http://mpegmedia.sonshinefm.ws/feeds/MOR220110_0949.mp3]

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A remarkable survival story

This remarkable interview with Dan Wooley of Compassion about his experience in the aftermath of the Haiti earthquake has special significance for me. The hotel in which Dan was trapped, Hotel Montana, is the hotel where I stayed when I was in Haiti in April 2008.

We had to leave Haiti very quickly when food riots began to escalate. Dan was trapped under the rubble of the hotel longer than the total time I spent in Haiti.

It’s hard for me to even recognise what’s left of the hotel.

Please donate generously to Compassion to help those in Haiti. Click here to give through Compassion International. If you’re in Australia, click here to donate through Compassion Australia.



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Wess Stafford talks about Haiti

Compassion International’s President, Wess Stafford, updates us on the latest from Haiti.

Compassion has been working in Haiti for over 40 years so they are able to work quickly and effectively through their existing networks in this devastated country.

Please donate generously to Compassion to help those in Haiti. Click here to give through Compassion International. If you’re in Australia, click here to donate through Compassion Australia.



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Update on Haiti from Compassion

Edouard Lassegue is the Vice President Compassion Latin America and Caribbean RegionThings were already extremely difficult for Haiti’s desperately poor population of over nine million but yesterday’s earthquake has now brought about further untold suffering. Estimates say that over a hundred thousand people may be dead and that well over three million people will be affected by the magnitude 7 quake and strong aftershocks.

This morning during my radio programme on 98.5 Sonshine FM I spoke to Edouard Lassegue about the devastation in Haiti.

Edouard is Compassion’s Vice President, Latin America and Caribbean Region. He is based in Miami where he is trying to gather information so that he can coordinate Compassion’s immediate relief efforts.

The tragedy has struck very close to home for Edouard who is Haitian and was once the Compassion Country Director for Compassion in Haiti. He has family and friends in the country and his heart is breaking with the current tragic situation.

Listen to what he had to say by clicking the play button on the audio player at the bottom of this post.

You can donate to the emergency appeal set up by Compassion Australia by clicking here.

Edouard was in Haiti with our Australian team in April 2008 when we had to exit the country rather quickly as rioting and looting took hold in Port-au-Prince.

When we made our somewhat risky trip to the airport to leave Haiti, Edouard was the one who stepped out of the ‘safety’ of our vehicles to try to find a way forward. He’s a very brave man who quite possibly saved our lives.

[audio:http://mpegmedia.sonshinefm.ws/feeds/MOR140110_0947.mp3]

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