2008
2008-09-09
It’s bad - even worse than the reports from Cabaret and Gonaives would lead you to believe, and these cities, on the coast, are at least relatively accessible. In fact, most of Haiti’s 8-12 million people live in an inaccessible interior, rarely visited by the press, who focuses more on the coastal areas of the country. With the entire country denuded, any town or city at the base of a mountain will be at risk for a mudslide, any city with a river through it will be flash-flooded.
Read more: No Time For Subtlety - Dr. Fournier Featured On The Huffington Post
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- In Response to the ABC Nightline Special on Sex Trade in Haiti
- The Green Family Foundation Wins the Gold Hermes Award for Design/Web Site Overall
- Once There Was A Country: Revisiting Haiti – Award Winning Documentary On Haiti To Air On WPBT-TV, PBS Miami
- Green Family Foundation To Host World Renowned Jeweler Harry Winston Charity Event To Benefit The Department Of Pediatrics At The University Of Miami
- Global Poverty at its Worst: Mud Cookies in Haiti
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» | See how the Green Family Foundation NeighborhoodHELP program at FIU changes lives |
» | Purchase Alan Lomax In Haiti: Recordings For The Library Of Congress, 1936-1937, nominated for two GRAMMY Awards. |
A Documentary by Kimberly Green
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"Once there was a country" is being used by The Greenwood Encyclopedia of Children's Issues Worldwide as
a resource book for children issues.
» | Watch GFF President Kimberly Green's CGI Stories segment about the music of Alan Lomax. |