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Seated on a piece of concrete that was once home but is now a piece of rubble, is a small child. No older than two-years-old, covered in debris and wearing torn clothes, she sits and waits.

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Operation Haitian Orphan

Published: Tuesday, February 2, 2010

Updated: Tuesday, February 2, 2010 13:02

Haitian Orphan

File


Seated on a piece of concrete that was once home but is now a piece of rubble, is a small child. No older than two-years-old, covered in debris and wearing torn clothes, she sits and waits.

Her stomach growls, her throat is dry and she has not eaten in days. Dried blood, from an old cut, is stained on her face. She has no one to aid her, feed her or take her into their arms. Her face is consumed with agony and isolation. What she once knew has now become a faded memory.

She doesn’t know where to go, so she continues to sit on that piece of concrete. Tears start to fill her eyes, as she has now been sitting there for weeks – but it seems to her as if it has been forever. She begins to cry as people pass by without taking notice.

If no one comes to rescue her, she will eventually be in the hands of people that may use her body and her innocence to make money, or to leave her on the side of the street to eventually die.

There are more than 400,000 Haitian children that have become orphans after the devastating earthquake that struck Port-au-Prince. These children have nowhere to go, and some of the people looking after them are traffickers who want to sell the babies or use the children to make money. These people may even make the children perform sexual deeds or might sell them to illegal adoption agencies.

Don Lovell, a resident and student in Albany, Ga., was more than disturbed when he heard about the earthquake that killed and harmed thousands, leaving Haiti seeking and hoping for help.

 “I have always had a burden for orphans,” said Lovell. “I guess it is because I was one for a few months before I was adopted.”

Lovell felt a connection with kids that had no place else to go. He knew that he couldn’t physically go to Haiti at the time, but he still wanted to do something.

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