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2011 November Newsletter

 Uncategorized
November 28, 2011

Dear Friends:

Greetings!  As the holidays approach with the message of peace and good will,  it is a  pleasure to update you on our Foundation’s mission of ending child servitude in Haiti.  As part of our objective to raise financial support and global awareness, I spent the month of October in the United Kingdom promoting My Stone of Hope, my new book, and speaking at several high schools and universities there.  Now that I am back home, I will travel to  Haiti with a team of professors from the University of Cincinnati and Northern Kentucky University to conduct a week-long workshop on a curriculum aimed at sensitizing all Haiti’s children to the plight of those in domestic slavery , and to the environment.   Forty Haitian teachers from several elementary schools will take part and provide feedback to make the curriculum applicable to Haitian culture. Once the corrections are made, we will test the work in several schools before it’s presented to the Haitian government for implementation into Haiti’s national curriculum.  By reaching the next generation with lessons on human rights, equality, and respect, we can truly begin changing Haitian culture and the future of children in servitude.

While the Foundation continues to improve the lives of individual children caught in domestic slavery, its primary goal is to change the mentality that’s perpetuating child slavery.   We will continue to implement the projects in the call-to-action page  in My Stone of Hope.  The music video that we filmed during the summer months, which will bring the plight of children in domestic slavery to Haitian viewers, should be ready in the next few weeks.   The lyrics and the images will no doubt make child slavery a topic of conversation in Haiti and give me a focus for discussion when I speak on radio stations in Port-au-Prince.

Book sales of My Stone of Hope are steady and I am delighted to confirm that $5 per copy sold is already being donated to the foundation, towards facilitating all the projects identified.I am both truly thankful and encouraged by your continuous support and welcome any ideas or suggestions you may wish to share with me in the future.

In the meantime, I wish everyone a very merry Christmas and a prosperous 2012.

Sincerely yours,

Jean-Robert Cadet


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If you were a restavek child, you would most likely be:
One of an estimated 300,000 Haitian children enslaved in child labor.
If you were a restavek child, you would most likely be:
From an isolated, rural area of Haiti where there are no schools, no electricity, no running water and few possibilities for the future.
If you were a restavek child, you would most likely be:
Living in the city with a family who is not your own -- not as a foster child, but as their servant.
If you were a restavek child, you would most likely be:
Between the ages of 5 and 15, and missing out on your childhood.
If you were a restavek child, you would most likely be:
Three times more likely to be a girl than a boy.
If you were a restavek child, you would most likely be:
Up at dawn, before any member of the family you serve, to begin preparing for their day, and in bed well after most other children are asleep.
If you were a restavek child, you would most likely be:
Responsible for preparing the household meals, fetching water from the local well, cleaning inside and outside the house, doing laundry and emptying bedpans.
If you were a restavek child, you would most likely be:
Getting no pay for any of these activities.
If you were a restavek child, you would most likely be:
Unable to see your family or remember where they live.
If you were a restavek child, you would most likely be:
Unable to attend school consistently, if at all -- depending on your owner's financial situation and schedule.
If you were a restavek child, you would most likely be:
Hungry, as you would probably not get enough to eat or food with enough nutritional value for someone who works hard all day.
If you were a restavek child, you would most likely be:
Subjected to physical, emotional or sexual abuse.
If you were a restavek child, you would most likely:
Never have all of your rights as a child respected.
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