Reality Check Regarding Haiti

I love Tony Campolo.  Always have.  I know that there are some Christians who don’t share my love for him, but I love him because he not only preaches the true, radical gospel of Christ.  He lives it.  So, when he speaks, I listen.  Recently, I came across this article he wrote for the Huffington Post called, “Making Matters Worse in Haiti.” In light of Pat Robertson’s miserable Christian representation regarding the recent earthquake in Haiti, it was good to read another prominent Christian’s take on the state of things there.  Here’s some of what Campolo had to say:

At last count there were 9,943 faith-based organizations with ministries in Haiti. For years, with good intentions and with great dedication, they have tried to give economic assistance and spiritual help to the Haitian people. This does not take into account the thousands of church groups that have taken “mission teams” to Haiti to build schools and churches in Haitian villages across that little country. Yet Haiti has continued in a downward spiral into greater and greater poverty and social disorganization, not in spite of all these “good works,” but in great part because of them. So much of what has been done in Haiti has disempowered Haitians and diminished their dignity by doing for them what they could have done for themselves.

Does it ever occur to those leaders who take bright, enthusiastic American young people to Haiti to build hundreds and hundreds of church buildings and schools that Haitians are capable of building them? Do they even consider how many jobs they take away from Haitians because of their well-intentioned construction enterprises? Does it occur to them that when Haitians see an American youth group put up a cinder block school building in just ten days that this could contribute to a sense of inferiority as these Americans do in ten days what seems to Haitians like a miracle?

Altruistic Americans have done to the Haitians what an out-of-control welfare system has done to so many poor people here in the United States. It has made them into people who are socially and psychologically dependent on others to solve their problems and who have lost confidence in their own capabilities.

Out of the necessities created by the recent earthquake, we Americans have no choice but to respond with a gigantic handout. Children are starving. Medical care is desperately needed and new housing must be constructed. In the short run, we Americans must respond to meet these needs. We have to fear, however, that when the dust from the earthquake clears the Haitians will have fallen into a deeper condition of dependency and will be even less inclined to see themselves as the best hope for their future.

I am not suggesting that all those missionary organizations working in Haiti should pack up and go home, but I am urging them to understand that Haiti does not need clever Americans with newly contrived schemes for saving their country. Haitians do not need development programs imposed on them by expatriates. Instead, they need help in developing as self-assured persons.

May we heed these words, and may we equip and empower the Haitian people to rebuild their country, giving them the confidence that they can do it.  May we assist them and help them in Jesus’ name, but may we allow them to do it.

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3 Comments

  • David Binder says:

    I think he’s dead-on too, Mike. A fantastic book addressing mercy ministry, how it can do harm, and how it can be used to do good is “When Helping Hurts: How to Alleviate Poverty Without Hurting the Poor and Yourself.” It’s written by two really sharp dudes at Covenant who love the Lord and have a lot to say about the Church’s role in helping the poor. If you haven’t yet, you should check it out.

  • James Mason says:

    Yes! Yes! A thousand times yes! Our American giving structures are doing great harm to the advance of the gospel around the world. Most Americans are not aware that their well intentioned giving, their building projects, their clinics and their schools are often (if not usually) less helpful then they realize. In fact they are often destructive. The book mentioned in the previous comment is excellent. Other good reads are “Missions and Money” by Jonathan Bonk and “When Charity Destroys Dignity by Glenn Schwartz. Thanks for posting something we really need to pay attention to.

  • Chad The Mental Giant says:

    I liked this article a lot. I didn’t find it radical. It sounded like common sense to me. Compolo has many great things like this to say. However, I’m not sure how he reconconciles facts in this article with his belief in global financial equity. Code words for Socialism. .

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