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Haiti: Kids "Restavek" forced into domestic servitude

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Lost children of Haiti: Amid widespread poverty, thousands of kids are forced to become indentured servants in Haiti
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Evans Antoine
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Published by bana2166- 08-24-07
news Haiti: Kids "Restavek" forced into domestic servitude

Haiti: Kids "Restavek" forced into domestic servitude
'Restavek' system thrives as impoverished families have little choice
Updated: 6:47 a.m. ET Aug 24, 2007
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti - Evans Antoine wakes at 7 a.m. and dusts himself off from his night on the floor. While other children in his middle-class neighborhood overlooking the Haitian capital head to school, the 15-year-old puts on toeless sneakers and gets to work washing dishes, scrubbing floors and running errands at the market. He also works in the yard and sometimes wields a scythe in the family's fields.
There is little reward for his toil, except for food and a roof over his head. And often, the quality of his work isn't good enough; his caretakers sometimes hit him with a switch or slap him on the back of the scalp. Once they tied his hands and put a bag over his head before beating him with a stick.
This has been his life for the past three years.
"They tell me that I'm useless," Antoine said, speaking softly at a meeting secretly arranged by a teacher who taught him briefly and who fears for his future. "They yell at me and tell me about all the things they do for me and how easy I have it."
During the interview, Antoine never smiled. He also kept looking away while answering questions, clearly uncomfortable with the subject: his unforgiving life.
Antoine is a restavek, a Haitian term derived from the French for "stay with." But, he would rather be described by the more genial-sounding Creole phrase meaning "one who lives with people." He is among 300,000 children, 10 percent of Haitians under 18, who serve as domestics for other families, a tradition in Haiti dating back to the country's independence more than 200 years ago.
Haiti revolted against French colonial rule and became the first "black republic" in 1804. With newly emancipated slaves in power, it also became the first nation to outlaw slavery. Dependent on coffee and sugar, however, Haiti kept the plantation system after the revolution, requiring "mandatory labor" of many citizens. The masters were no longer white, but working conditions improved only marginally.
Children were particularly susceptible. The sons and daughters of slaves remained house servants following the revolution, indentured to newly rich army officers who took over the plantations.
Key to the economy
Today child workers remain an important part of Haiti's economy, a system that barely sustains a nation of 8.7 million that is wracked by poverty and lawlessness.
Haiti is the poorest country in the Western hemisphere. A little over half of primary school-age children are enrolled in school, according to UNICEF, and less than 2 percent finish secondary school.
Children become restaveks in a variety of ways. Some, like Antoine, are orphaned and taken in by family friends. Others are runaways pulled off the street. Most are given up by parents from depressed rural areas who can't afford to care for them and hope that another family will do better and send them to school.
Antoine's case is an example of what so often goes wrong. His adoptive family promised to pay his tuition, but when it came time to do so, his adoptive father reacted harshly. "He said I was lying and he beat me," he said.
In fact, the majority of families are only slightly better off than restaveks' parents, despite living in the capital.
"It is not in Haitian culture to send children away," said Guerda Constante, a child-rights activist in the small coastal city of Jacmel. "Parents do this because they do not have the means to provide for their needs. It seems strange, but the parents are acting with love."
Promises by host families to feed, educate and take care of the children are just too alluring to poor parents, Constante said. In some cases, the new family meets those promises, but in most cases, she says, "the difference between the promise and reality is seen on the first day they arrive."
Rural poverty
It takes a bumpy four hours in a 4x4 to make the 60-mile trek from Port-au-Prince to the rural village of Fond des Blancs, where electricity and running water are scarce. The center of activity — a foreign foundation-funded hospital, a church and an outdoor meeting hall — sit in the middle of the valley.
Over the treeless mountains to the south lies the Caribbean Sea. Single-room, thatched-roof huts dot the landscape, many housing families with 10 children or more.
Fond des Blancs has little communication with Port-au-Prince and the capital's political system has nearly no influence on the area. Lack of police has made it a favorite destination for Colombian planes to drop drugs for local Haitian runners to send onto the United States.
While some families farm or make charcoal, most have no regular means of support. In the most depressed areas, fortunate children are those that are fed once a day.
Children in places like these, activists say, are most at risk of winding up in the restavek system. A group of Fond des Blancs residents formed the Committee to Promote the Rights of Children of Fond des Blancs (COSEDERF) last year in an effort to keep children in the community.
The committee circulated a petition which asks Haitian leaders to "fulfill Haiti's obligations to provide free and compulsory education," believing fewer parents would send their children away if they had access to schooling.
"More than 50 percent of the children in Fond des Blancs don't have the chance to go to school," said Briel Leveille, a community leader and member of COSEDERF. "It is said that education is the foundation of development. It is through education that Haitians will one day come out of this misery."
One U.S. community gets involved
Hearing about the lack of education, one American school has become involved with the Haitian community.
At the Seth Boyden Elementary school in Maplewood, N.J., the PTA is trying to set up a sister-school relationship with those in Fond des Blancs. Students have been collecting school supplies and attended a Haitian Flag Day celebration.
"I hope we can do a lot more than this," said Tamara Thompson, a former U.N. observer in Haiti who now resides in Maplewood and has a 9-year-old son who attends Seth Boyden. "Education is a key to ending the restavek system and it is their right."
For now, however, many parents in Fond des Blancs see the restavek system as the only hope for their children.
"I'm afraid to send them, but I really don't have any choice," said Rodette Clermanceau, a mother of 10 in Fond des Blancs. She is sending two of her children to Port-au-Prince to work for other families. Clermanceau has been raising her children alone since the father was sent to prison.
"If I had the financial means, I would not give them away," she said.
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  #1 (permalink)  
By intruder on 08-29-07, 10:43 AM
This practice needs to END and it really starts @ family planning
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  #2 (permalink)  
By angegardien on 08-29-07, 11:22 AM
This is a very complex problem which exists in all poor countries. People must eat, and as long as the economic factors are not favorable, that practice will remain.
family planning or any other kind of plannings will have no effects on starving stomachs.
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By karizmua on 08-29-07, 03:11 PM
Saw the video on CNN - it's heart broken - a sad reality! It's too complex to even pinpoint it to the economy. Haiti gen lajan pou chanje sa, se struktu ki manke. Tout kolon social worker sa yo ki fe documan sa, poukisa yo pa met yon proje sou pie! But then again, how many of them are going to follow through with the project? Everyone is out to get theirs. I do not see the point of bringing a topic to the media's attention if there isn't a plan of action. What's the point of identifying a problem when there is no problem solving plan?
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By intruder on 08-29-07, 03:15 PM
Quote:
Originally Posted by angegardien View Post
This is a very complex problem which exists in all poor countries. People must eat, and as long as the economic factors are not favorable, that practice will remain.
family planning or any other kind of plannings will have no effects on starving stomachs.
I disagree. Family planning does have an effect because it's people that cant afford to have children that are having them then sending them to live with strangers. If you cant afford it stop popping babies
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  #5 (permalink)  
By karizmua on 08-29-07, 03:26 PM
Quote:
Originally Posted by intruder View Post
I disagree. Family planning does have an effect because it's people that cant afford to have children that are having them then sending them to live with strangers. If you cant afford it stop popping babies
Easy to say Intruder, but in third world countries infant mortality rate is very high. Parents do not know if the first, second, third, fourth, fifth (you get the point) child is going to survive. So family can be educated, but if the Country as a whole do not make progress in all aspects this is going to be around for a lonnnnnnnggg time.
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By intruder on 08-29-07, 03:47 PM
Quote:
Originally Posted by karizmua View Post
Easy to say Intruder, but in third world countries infant mortality rate is very high. Parents do not know if the first, second, third, fourth, fifth (you get the point) child is going to survive. So family can be educated, but if the Country as a whole do not make progress in all aspects this is going to be around for a lonnnnnnnggg time.
I'm not saying family planing is the ONLY factor but it's a major factor
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