PBS and MSNBC Report on Restavek Children

PBS and MSNBC Report on Haiti's Children Living in Servitude:

Our own Guerda Lexima and friends in the community of Fond des Blancs appear in this short documentary on the trials of Haiti's restavek children on the PBS program Foreign Exchange, hosted by Fareed Zakaria. Guerda is also interviewed for this article and a short video on MSNBC.

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The Campaign to End Child Servitude in Haiti

 


"I wash my mistress’s clothes [by hand] along with her husband's and two children’s clothes. I wash the dishes. Sweep, dust, and mop. I go to the market. I have to wash their clothes before I wash my own, so sometimes I don’t find time to wash my own clothes. Her children sometimes beat me and rip my clothes." --Aline Dena

Haiti is a hard place to be a child. A quarter of Haiti’s children suffer chronic malnutrition. Only about half attend school and only 2 percent complete high school.

Haiti is also a hard place to be a parent, especially in rural areas where there are far fewer schools, hunger is more common, and poverty is especially severe.

Because poor rural parents are so desperate for a better life for their children, they are especially susceptible to being lured into sending one or more children away to live with and work for a poor urban family. These parents are often led to believe that the urban family will send their child to school and provide a better life.

While some of these children do fare better with the urban family they serve, far more end up trapped in a brutal form of modern slavery. As many as one in ten (or about 300,000) Haitian children live apart from their families in unpaid domestic servitude. 

A typical child living in servitude is forced to work endlessly and given little or no time to attend school, play, form friendships, or rest. Physical and emotional abuse is common.

About three quarters of these children are girls. Many are abused sexually and end up pregnant during adolescence, which often leads to their being forced from the household. Some manage to make it back to their parents. Others end up on the street. Almost all these children, boys and girls, grow up emotionally wounded and illiterate. They grow up to fill the poorest economic strata of the poorest nation in our hemisphere.

A child living in servitude is often called a restavčk, a Creole word that literally means a "stay-with." But the word has come to be a foul word in Haiti, an insult one would use to say someone is worthless. And this is how restavčk children generally feel.

Beyond Borders combats child servitude in Haiti through its support of the Limyč Lavi (Light for Life) Foundation. Limyč Lavi leads Haiti's largest and most ambitious effort to bring an end to child servitude in Haiti.

 

Working to End Child Servitude


Under leadership from the Campaign, Haitian children march in front of the Haitian Presidential Palace to demand government action to end the exploitation of Haiti's children.
Often all that is needed to prevent rural parents from deciding to send a child into servitude is a chance for that child to attend school locally. Other parents respond to radio programs developed and broadcast to remote rural communities that talk frankly about the risks children face when sent to work for another family.

For the past four years Beyond Borders has promoted an integrated strategy for bringing an end to child servitude--an approach that supports the growth of a national child rights movement that demands the Haitian government take a stand against the exploitation of these children. Meanwhile we are working with rural communities to develop models that can be scaled up and replicated all across Haiti to improve the welfare of children and reduce the risk that they will be sent into servitude.

Learn more about the Campaign's strategies for ending child servitude.

 

Even the smallest gift will make a difference for a Haitian child.

DonateNowPlease open your heart to Haiti's children and make a gift or a pledge of regular support to the Campaign to End Child Servitude.  Beyond Borders receives no government funding and depends completely on private donations for this work.

Charity Navigator Four Star RatingWhen you pledge your support, we pledge to you to use your gift in the most efficient and responsible way possible. Our effort to make every penny count for Haiti's children has been recognized by the largest independent evaluator of charities in America. For the past four years Beyond Borders has been awarded their highest rating (four stars).

Beyond Borders needs to raise nearly $300,000 to fully support the work of the Campaign in 2008. Learn more about our financial goals for 2008.

 

Get Involved

Would you like information on how your congregation, your class, or any group of students or co-workers can help end child servitude in Haiti? E-mail us and tell us about your interest or ask us your question. There is so much you can do to help end child servitude without ever traveling to Haiti.

Of course, if you would like to travel to Haiti, tell us about that, too. We organize delegations that travel to Haiti to listen and learn and ultimately find ways of making a difference.