EMAIL DETAILS
SUBJECT:
Fwd: FLOTUS and Dr. Biden Haiti Pool Report 3 B
PRI: NORMAL
FROM:
E
eschwerin@rosemontseneca.com
DATE:
2010-04-13 18:29:31
MSG_ID:
<18961FD1-5DFA-4314-B61B-9509FA776902@rosemontseneca.com>
RECIPIENTS:
TO:
H
Hunter Biden
<hbiden@rosemontseneca.com>
CONTENT:
TEXT: YES |
HTML: YES
PROCESSED
Eric D. Schwerin Rosemont Seneca Partners, LLC 1010 Wisconsin Ave., NW Suite 705 Washington, DC 20007 (202) 333-1880 eschwerin@rosemontseneca.com P Consider the environment before printing this email. Begin forwarded message: > From: "Owens, Missy" <Missy.Owens@hq.doe.gov> > Date: April 13, 2010 2:26:42 PM EDT > To: "hbiden@rosemontseneca.com" <hbiden@rosemontseneca.com>, "Eric Schwerin (eschwerin@rosemontseneca.com)" <eschwerin@rosemontseneca.com>, BB <beaub@comcast.net>, "ashleybiden@yahoo.com" <ashleybiden@yahoo.com>, Kathleen Biden <kathleenbiden@mac.com>, "jack.owens4@gmail.com" <jack.owens4@gmail.com>, Valerie Biden Owens <valerie@jswco.com> > Subject: FW: FLOTUS and Dr. Biden Haiti Pool Report 3 B > > > > From: bounce-834885-2253447@list.whitehouse.gov [mailto:bounce-834885-2253447@list.whitehouse.gov] On Behalf Of White House Press Office > Sent: Tuesday, April 13, 2010 2:10 PM > To: Owens, Missy > Subject: FLOTUS and Dr. Biden Haiti Pool Report 3 B > > JCharles@miamiherald.com > > > Addendum with info on St. Pierre > > After meeting with President Rene Preval and his wife, Elisabeth Delatour Preval, (your pool was not privy to the meeting) FLOTUS and Dr. Biden both were transported from the palace, through the Champs de Mars, where tens of thousands now call home. They arrived at a site behind the Le Musee d'Art Haitien, where the First Lady of Haiti Elisabeth Delatour Preval has set up a children's safe space with help from internationally known Haitian artist Philippe Dodard. > > The program, Plas Timoun or the Children's Place was set up by Haiti's first lady shortly after the earthquake. There are two sites one in downtown(which the first lady visited) and another in Petionville. Some 900 children take part in the program daily, and 2000 are fed. There Haitian artists, led by well-known artist Dodard, work with children on art projects as part of a post-quake therapy program. > > The buses, where the children do art therapy were donated by the first lady of the Dominican Republic. > > Dozens of children greeted the FLOTUS and Dr. Biden, singing "welcome" in English. FLOTUS danced with the children, shrugging her shoulders and shaking her hips as they sang. At the end she gave several of them high fives, while smiling. > > As one group ended, another group of children sang a song in Creole, "We are glad to see you..We say let's be happy." Following a brief play, she and Dr. Biden stepped onto one of the buses where both chatted with three kids sitting at an art table. Haiti's first lady served as a translator. > > FLOTUS drew a fish, she said, because the children requested it. > > The green buses were decorated with red, white and blue balloons, the color of the Haitian flag. Three children stood holding bright red flowers to give to the first lady. > > > Minutes later FLOTUS, now wearing gray All-Stars tennis shoes (Dr. Biden is wearing a black pair now) walked past a few onlookers near the Champs de Mars to the nearby quake-damaged College Episcopal. She waved to the camp dwellers trying to get a peek of her. > > The high school was damaged by the quake. At least 20 people were killed. > > The sounds of saws could be heard in the background where workers - with funds from the government of Haiti - are helping to rebuild classrooms. > > Background: > > Plas Timoun “The Children’s Place” was developed by Mrs. Préval, Philippe Dodard, an internationally respected Haitian graphic artist and painter, and a group of psychologists, educators and politicians. > > Six to ten year-old children living in tent cities receive mental health services, including art and music therapy, and access to sports, food, and water. Activities take place in busses donated by the Dominican Republic . The Haitian Ministry of Education is working to bring this program to other school communities. > > The earthquake damaged or destroyed approximately 90 percent of the schools in the Port-au-Prince area and 40 percent in surrounding areas. Before the earthquake, less than half of school-aged children attended school in Haiti, and only 20% of primary age students were enrolled in public schools. > > > > St. Pierre Tent City and College: Since the earthquake, the Episcopal Church’s Relief and Development division has provided shelter, medical care and food to displaced Haitians. > > According to the Church, Haiti is the largest and fastest-growing diocese in the Episcopal Church. There are more than 100,000 Episcopalians in Haiti with more than 115 Episcopal churches, congregations and communities of faith. Before the earthquake, the diocese ran 254 schools along with medical clinics, a well respected philharmonic orchestra and children’s choir, and various development programs. Haiti is 55 percent Roman Catholic, 28 percent Protestant, and Vodou practiced widely . > Jacqueline Charles > Caribbean Correspondent > Miami Herald > Office 305-376-2616 > Twitter.com/JacquieCharles >
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