It is easier to build strong children than to repair broken men -- Frederick Douglass

Updates

     
1  2  3   of   3   >  >>  
Jan 08 at 8:45am
It’s a social revolution. Before the song was distributed to the schools, I asked 200 children at three different public schools if they would take in restaveks--child domestic slaves when they grow up. Nearly half had raised their hands. Then I paid a teacher to teach the song to thesechildren and returned two weeks later. When I asked the same question as before, not a hand was raised. At that point, I knew that we had a powerful tool in the fight against child slavery.
Sep 05 at 9:25am
My summer in Haiti presented many challenges, but I also saw tremendous progress towardchildren rights.
Apr 22 at 12:19pm
"Jean-Robert! Jean-Robert!" I heard a child calling my name from a distance, while buying fruit at a market in Port-au-Prince, Haiti on April 5th. I paid no attention to her, for many people in Haiti are called Jean-Robert, and I didn’t know anyone in that neighborhood.
Feb 10 at 10:01am
Sunday January 12, was the fourth anniversary of the earthquake that devastated Haiti. The country is slowly rising from the rubble with the construction of roads, ports and major reparation to the airport.
Nov 13 at 11:15am
Greetings Dear Friends:

I have decided that the best way to update you on the Foundation’s work over the summer is to share with you the enclosed article by Cincinnati journalist Mark Curnutte. Mr. Curnutte, who writes about determined people trying to make a better life for others, joined me in Haiti to report on how we help children in domestic slavery. I think his publication, which went national, paints a vivid picture of our activities.

Jul 08 at 12:06pm
Dear Friends:

April and May 2013 were two of our busiest months in Haiti: Progress on the upcoming film,First Communion, sensitizing school children and radio programs.

Mar 15 at 12:07pm
The music video,LANBI KONNEN(Youtube) that we produced 2011 is still being played on Haiti’s popular television and radio stations. It has inspired mediapersonalities to speak on the issue of child slavery, and the legal system to prosecute abusers of children. This is excellent progress becausein the 60’s children in servitude were often whipped at the police station.
Sep 20 at 5:30am
Changing attitudes is like chiseling a stone into a statue on a public square. People will stop to look only when a work of art begins to emerge.
Jun 21 at 10:30am
THE CONCH SHELL HAS SOUNDED FOR ALL HAITI’S CHILDREN,  a music video to call attention to the plight of children in slavery,  is being played on most TV stations in Port-au-Prince, the Haitian capital.It has brought smiles to the faces of many children in servitude who have seen it, and made the singers that appear on the video recognizable figures and  advocates for children trapped in domestic slavery.
Apr 18 at 8:17am
"This song, LANBI KONNEN, written and composed by Haitian author Marie-Carmel Berrouet Perodin, dedicated to Jean-Robert Cadet, is being played on Hatian radio and TV stations. We want to influence the new generation so that Haiti will love all of its children."
Show More     
1  2  3   of   3   >  >>  

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.
Copyright Jean-Robert Cadet Restavek Organization. All rights reserved. | Site by: Sound Press Design