Language

Benjamin Melançon's Reporter's Notebook

 

Gérard Jean-Juste, recuperating in Miami, gets award on MLK day

Father Gérard Jean-Juste received an award for his struggle for the rights of refugees on the occasion of Martin Luther King Day at a celebration in Miami, where he has been for several months to recuperate and receive medical treatment following his arrest and lengthy imprisonment by the interim government of Gérard Latortue.

Many other political prisoners remain in jail in Haiti.

(The article has little else of interest other than this update on a high-profile political prisoner of the coup regime, but right now you can still only get these unofficial AHP translations by e-mail, so it's included after the jump.)

Port-au-Prince, January 16, 2007 (AHP)- The Haitian priest, Father Gérard Jean-Juste, received an award Monday for his spirit of liberty and his courage in the struggle for refugee and immigrant rights.  

The Catholic priest, who worked for years at the Haitian Refugee Center in Little Haiti, Miami, has been in that city for several months to recuperate and receive medical treatment following his arrest and lengthy imprisonment by the interim government of Gérard Latortue based on his political affiliation.

Gerard Jean-Juste received the Spirit of Freedom Award award at a ceremony marking the birthday of the African American religious leader, the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Junior, who was assassinated in Memphis on April 4, 1968.  

The parish priest of Sainte-Claire de Petite Place Cazeau (in northern Port-au-Prince) participated in the ceremony alongside well-known figures such as Martin Luther King III [...]

Florida state Senator Frederica Wilson opened the annual breakfast ceremony by encouraging reflection on the large number of people who have been killed in South Florida, especially black youths.  

"The carnage must end. That's what Doctor King would  want us to do, take back the community from the hooligans, said Ms. Wilson.  

In his remarks, Father Jean-Juste, described by Frederica Wilson as the Mandela of South Florida, advocated a new environment that offers young people a better life.  

Let them stay away from this culture of death", he said.

~~~
benjamin melançon

Agaric Design Collective, Open Source Web Development

People Who Give a Damn, building the infrastructure for a network of everyone

Comments

An NGO working with Jean-Juste's church

HaitiAnalysis.com published an article a few days ago about the What If? Foundation and its work with Father Jean-Juste'Sainte Claire's parish of Ti plas kazo.

See http://www.haitianalysis.com/2007/1/24/whatif-foun dation-aids-youth-in-port-au-prince

Add comment

Our Policy on Comment Submissions: Co-publishers of Narco News (which includes The Narcosphere and The Field) may post comments without moderation. All co-publishers comment under their real name, have contributed resources or volunteer labor to this project, have filled out this application and agreed to some simple guidelines about commenting.

Narco News has recently opened its comments section for submissions to moderated comments (that’s this box, here) by everybody else. More than 95 percent of all submitted comments are typically approved, because they are on-topic, coherent, don’t spread false claims or rumors, don’t gratuitously insult other commenters, and don’t engage in commerce, spam or otherwise hijack the thread. Narco News reserves the right to reject any comment for any reason, so, especially if you choose to comment anonymously, the burden is on you to make your comment interesting and relevant. That said, as you can see, hundreds of comments are approved each week here. Good luck in your comment submission!

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.

More information about formatting options

CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.

User login

Reporters' Notebooks