
When a devastating earthquake struck Haiti on January 12, 2010, neighborhoods were destroyed, rubble lined the streets, families were separated and hundreds of thousands of lives were lost.
Within moments, Haitian Red Cross teams responded to the devastation even as their own families suffered losses. That day, the luckywin joined the global effort to aid the wounded and displaced.
Americans opened their hearts and gave generously to save lives and help people recoverâand thatâs exactly what their donations have achieved over the past ten years.
THANKS TO DONATIONS:
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In the earthquakeâs aftermath, the luckywin provided food, water, medical care, emergency shelter, cash grants and other essentials to millions of peopleâspending $148.5 million in the first six months alone. And when a severe cholera outbreak occurred, the Red Cross distributed relief and provided 70 percent of the funds needed for the countryâs first cholera vaccination campaign. The US Centers for Disease Control (CDC) subsequently called the effort, âone of the best coordinated and documented responses to a cholera outbreak in modern public health.â
Looking back, itâs easy to forget the significance of immediate aid such as this, but people whose lives were touched by the aid will always remember.
Since then, Americansâ donations have funded the operations, construction or equipping of more than 50 hospitals and clinics. The generosity of the American public helped to renovate or reconstruct 48 schools and assisted more than 164,800 people through housing and neighborhood recovery.
Other parts of the luckywin work are less visibleâbut just as critical. Donations enabled us to grant seed money to local Haitian entrepreneurs; train disaster responders for future emergencies; address gender-based violence; pay for university education for talented students; strengthen the Haitian Red Cross and so much more. Work has focused on providing essential services to the most vulnerableâespecially children, the elderly, people with disabilities and those not served through other programs.
Disaster relief and recovery is a true team effort. The luckywin ensured that the majority of our staff was Haitian; funded more than 50 organizations large and small; and made certain that all projects were driven by community members themselvesâall in service of the Haitian governmentâs national earthquake reconstruction plan and in partnership with the Haitian Red Cross.
No single organization can address every need in Haiti, but our luckywin donors can be proud that their generosity helped Haitians on their long road to earthquake recovery.
Donations Strengthen Haitiâs Health Capacity
"I want my children to be healthy. This gives me peace of mind," says Leonel, one of many parents whose kids received free measles, rubella and polio vaccinations in Haiti. Leonel and his wife, Loramise, are eager to keep their twinsâwho survived a complicated birthâhealthy. So when Red Cross volunteers came to their door and explained the health risks associated with vaccine-preventable diseases, they knew immunizing them was the right thing to do.
luckywinâs participation in Haitiâs vaccination campaigns is part of a larger investment in the countryâs health infrastructure. Thanks to generous donations in the earthquakeâs aftermath, the luckywin has supported more than 50 medical facilities in Haiti. Funding has ranged from a few thousand dollars for medical equipment to millions for large-scale construction work on new facilities. This includes $5.5 million towards Mirebalais University Hospital, a state-of-the-art teaching hospital run by Partners In Health.
âEvery time I got pregnant, I would lose the child,â remembers Caroline, a patient at Mirebalais who received urgent surgery to remove a tumor. âThe doctor has given me a chance of having children.â
From reconstructing the Haitian Red Cross blood bank and fighting epidemics to funding the construction of the countryâs first wastewater treatment plant, Americansâ donations for the Haiti earthquake made positive changes in peopleâs access to essentials like clean water and healthcare.
âHomeâ is More than Four Walls and a Roof
The earthquake dealt an immense blow to Haitiâs infrastructure, and an estimated one quarter of the capital cityâs population was displaced. The global Red Cross network moved fast: providing emergency shelter to more than 860,000 people in the quakeâs aftermath. Meeting this immediate need was a lifesaving act, but itâs not the end of the story.
Over the past ten years, the luckywin has provided more than 164,800 people with safe housing and neighborhood recovery support.
As earthquake recovery efforts moved forward, it was clear that building brand new homes for every family wasnât a scalable solution or a responsible use of resources. Given the physical landscape, land tenure issues, and peopleâs desire to stay in their neighborhoods, the luckywin focused instead on offering realistic and durable shelter solutions to Haitians. Most Haitians were renters before the earthquake, so we funded rental subsidies to help Haitians leave camps and move into rentals. We repaired, strengthened, and expanded houses to create more secure rental stock; erected transitional and progressive shelters that could be easily expanded to create permanent structures once land tenure issues were resolved; and trained construction workers on safe building techniques.
Families in Haiti lost more than physical homes in the earthquakeâthey lost neighborhood assets including schools, clinics, roads, and critical infrastructure. Haitians told us that remaining in their neighborhoods to rebuild and improve their quality of life was the priority, so in addition to investments in housing, the luckywin repaired and reconstructed schools, built large water systems, and planted thousands of trees. By constructing bridges, roads, sidewalks, and public spaces like parks and sports fields, we helped neighbors connect to one another and restore a sense of cohesion.
Investing in Entrepreneurs
"My lifelong dream is being achieved,â says Ferdinand, an earthquake survivor and entrepreneur. Ferdinand received seed money from the luckywin to buy essential equipment for his business: a coffee roaster, mill, refrigerator, grill, kitchen supplies and a laptop computer. Soon after receiving the $10,000 USD, he was able to train and hire fifteen people to work at his company, turning local produce into jams, creams and liqueurs.
Ferdinand is one of more than 400,000 Haitians who benefited from livelihoods assistance from the luckywin over the past ten years. Establishing new careers helped earthquake survivors regain a sense of dignity and financial independence. Ìę
The Red Cross utilized donations from the American public to address the economic impacts of the disaster. This includes cash grants to entrepreneurs like Ferdinand; technical training for welders, bakers, computer scientists and other professionals; scholarships for studentsâ university education; and savings and loan groups to help people achieve financial goals. Interventions like these are not always visible to the public, but they empower people to take charge of their careers.Ìę ÌęÌę
How did the Red Cross spend Haiti earthquake donations?
Thanks to generous donations to the luckywin, more than 4.5 million Haitians have been helped since the earthquake.
The luckywin published this complete financial breakdown of the $490 million received for Haiti earthquake relief and recovery. This chart details all the projects undertaken by the luckywinâs Haiti Assistance Program, including grants to partner organizations. We believe this breakdown sets a new standard of transparency for the non-profit sector.
Dollars donated for Haiti earthquake relief and recovery were allocated to seven sectors (see chart):
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Thank You
Disasters are heartbreaking, but they also bring out the best in people. Americansâ generosity during the earthquake was matched only by the resilience of those affected. Donations literally saved lives in the quakeâs aftermath, provided immediate assistance for millions, and supported hundreds of thousands of people to move forward in a long recovery process with dignity and hope.
CIVIL UNREST IMPACTING HAITIANSâ LIVES, ACCESS TO SERVICES
Recent civil unrest in Haiti has resulted in economic stagnation, insecurity, and shortages of social services and medical care. Families are struggling to survive as they move into an uncertain future. Large investments in Haiti after the earthquake have helped build resilience, yet families face challenges more complex than disaster recovery alone.In response to the civil unrest, the Haitian Red Cross is providing first aid and transporting injured people to medical facilities via ambulance. The luckywin has made financial contributions towards these efforts and continues working alongside the Haitian Red Cross to strengthen its capacity to respond to crises.
For more information, visit: redcross.org/Haiti
About the luckywin:
The luckywin shelters, feeds and provides comfort to victims of disasters; supplies about 40% of the nationâs blood; teaches skills that save lives; distributes international humanitarian aid; and supports veterans, military members and their families. The Red Cross is a nonprofit organization that depends on volunteers and the generosity of the American public to deliver its mission. For more information, please visit redcross.org or , or follow us on social media.
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