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11 March 2010

March 15th, FIAF Benefit Concert for Haiti

Thank you FIAF!

Since the earthquake in Haiti on January 12th, French Institute Alliance Francaise (FIAF) has mobilized their membership and raised 57 thousand dollars to benefit Ciné Institute!

From the students and staff of Ciné Institute we want to send a heartfelt thank you to everyone who donated and encourage you to join us at FIAF's upcoming Benefit Concert for Haiti.

Benefit Concert for Haiti
Featuring Angelique Kidjo, Yannick Noah, Emeline Michel, BélO, Mino Cinelu, and Surprise Special Guests
Monday, March 15, 2010 at 8pm

Florence Gould Hall

FIAF and the Cultural Services of the French Embassy cordially invite you to a unique benefit concert for Haiti.

Performers include Grammy award-winning musician Angelique Kidjo, French superstar Yannick Noah, esteemed Haitian vocalist Emeline Michel, up-and-coming Haitian singer-songwriter BélO, and French multi-instrumentalist and singer Mino Cinelu.

All proceeds benefit Ciné Institute in Jacmel, Haiti and the French American Cultural Exchange foundation’s French Heritage Language Program.

Purchase Tickets Online Here >>

Posted in How You Are Helping, News, Recovery and Reportage | No Comments »

9 March 2010

CI All Girl Film Crew Invited to follow Michaelle Jean


photo: CI ‘All Girl Crew’ with Michaelle Jean

Ciné Institute was invited by the Governor General of Canada, the Jacmel-born Michaelle Jean, to accompany her and film her visit to Jacmel for International Women’s Day.


photo: Ciné Institute ‘All Girl Crew’. Keziah, Marie Andre, Djuny and Jocelyne.

The Cine Students decided it should be an all-girl crew, which Michaelle Jean loved. Paula Hyppolite was interviewed about women’s issues in Haiti, Jocelyne Firmin about violence in the tent camps, and Keziah Jean about her experience meeting Michaelle Jean.

Paula Hyppolite was interviewed by CBC TV

photo: Paula Hyppolite
The interviews were done for CBC radio and AIR Canada.

Posted in News, Press, Recovery and Reportage | 1 Comment »

5 March 2010

“Handicap”

By: Enette Gregoire

Posted in Recovery and Reportage, Video | 1 Comment »

5 March 2010

NYTimes Report on Jacmel Carnival Produced with CI Support

New York Times video report on this year’s silent carnival march in Jacmel. Produced with the help of Ciné Institute.

Click here to view on nytimes.com >>

Posted in News, Press, Recovery and Reportage | No Comments »

4 March 2010

New Tang Dynasty TV Report on CI Student Work in NYC

Click here to watch the report and read the article on ntdtv.com >>

Posted in News, Press, Recovery and Reportage | No Comments »

24 February 2010

Time Video: ‘Reviving Jacmel: Haiti’s Cultural Capital’

Paula Hyppolite of Ciné Institute interviewed by Time Online.
Photos, footage and archival materials provided by Ciné Institute.

Posted in News, Press, Recovery and Reportage | No Comments »

23 February 2010

Haitian film students share video of earthquake aftermath at college visit

Wednesday, February 17, 2010
BY ALLISON PRIES
The Bergen Record

MAHWAH – Four film students from Haiti’s Cine Institute shared footage at Ramapo College on Wednesday of Jacmel, their home city, captured during and after the earthquake in a presentation.

The sometimes shaky videos showed stunned people milling in the street surrounded by fallen buildings. Motorbikes zoom, horns honking, through the streets. Three people help a gray-haired man crawl out from a collapsed building. Another man stands dead — pinned at the shoulder between two massive sections of a building.

The students’ videos have aired all over the world on news programs, bringing to light the suffering in Jacmel, located two hours from Port-au-Prince.

Read full article on northjersey.com here >>

Posted in News, Press, Recovery and Reportage | No Comments »

22 February 2010

Students at Work in Jacmel

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Posted in News, Photos, Recovery and Reportage | No Comments »

17 February 2010

A Survivor’s Story by Laura Wagner

I came to Haiti to research. Six months later, I lay under the rubble of a house, my friend crushed to death nearby

By Laura Wagner

I was sitting barefoot on my bed, catching up on ethnographic field notes, when the earthquake hit. As a child of the San Francisco area, I was underwhelmed at first. “An earthquake. This is unexpected,” I thought. But then the shaking grew stronger. I had never felt such a loss of control, not only of my body but also of my surroundings, as though the world that contained me were being crumpled.

I braced myself in a doorway between the hallway and the kitchen, trying to hold on to the frame, and then a cloud of darkness and cement dust swallowed everything as the house collapsed. I was surprised to die in this way, but not afraid. And then I was surprised not to be dead after all. I was trapped, neither lying down nor sitting, with my left arm crushed between the planks of the shattered doorway and my legs pinned under the collapsed roof. Somewhere, outside, I heard people screaming, praying and singing. It was reassuring. It meant the world hadn’t ended.

I want you to know that, before the earthquake, things in Haiti were normal. Outside Haiti, people only hear the worst — tales that are cherry-picked, tales that are exaggerated, tales that are lies. I want you to understand that there was poverty and oppression and injustice in Port-au-Prince, but there was also banality. There were teenage girls who sang along hilariously with the love ballads of Marco Antonio Solís, despite not speaking Spanish. There were men who searched in vain for odd jobs by day and told never-ending Bouki and Ti Malis stories and riddles as the sun went down and rain began to fall on the banana leaves. There were young women who painted their toenails rose for church every Sunday, and stern middle-aged women who wouldn’t let me leave the house without admonishing me to iron my skirt and comb my hair. There were young students who washed their uniforms and white socks every evening by hand, rhythmically working the detergent into a noisy foam. There were great water trucks that passed through the streets several times a day, inexplicably playing a squealing, mechanical version of the theme from “Titanic,” which we all learned to ignore the same way we tuned out the overzealous and confused roosters that crowed at 3 a.m. There were families who finished each day no further ahead than they had begun it and then, at night, sat on the floor and intently followed the Mexican telenovelas dubbed into French. Their eyes trained on fantastic visions of alternate worlds in which roles become reversed and the righteous are rewarded, dreaming ahead into a future that might, against all odds, hold promise. I need to tell you these things, not just so that you know, but also so I don’t forget.

I think I was under the rubble for about two hours. Buried somewhere in what had been the kitchen, a mobile phone had been left to charge, and now it kept ringing. The ringtone was sentimental, the chorus of a pop love song. There was something sticky and warm on my shirt. I thought it was sòs pwa, a Haitian bean soup eaten over rice, which we’d had for lunch. I thought it was funny, that sòs pwa was leaking out of the overturned refrigerator and all over me. I thought, “When I get out, I will have to tell Melise about this.” Melise was the woman who lived and worked in the house. I spent a large part of every day with her and her family — gossiping and joking, polishing the furniture with vegetable oil, cooking over charcoal and eating pounded breadfruit with our hands. She said my hands were soft. Her palms were so hard and calloused from a lifetime of household work that she could lift a hot pot with her bare hands. She called me her third daughter.. I thought Melise would laugh to see me drenched in her sòs pwa from the bottom hem of my shirt up through my bra. It took me some time to figure out that what I thought was sòs pwa was actually my blood. I wrung it out of my shirt with my free right hand. I couldn’t tell where it was coming from.

Melise did not make it out of the house. She died, we assume, at the moment of collapse. According to others, who told me later, she cried out, “Letènel, oh letènel!” and that was all. (The word is Creole for the French “l’Eternal,” a cry out to God.) “She had been folding laundry on the second floor — the floor that crumbled onto the first floor, where I was pinned, thinking wildly of sòs pwa. Melise worked and lived in that house for 15 years. She dreamed of one day having her own home and being free. She talked about it all the time. She died in the wreckage of a place she did not consider her home.

I want to write everything down – those mundane remembrances of how life was before — because as time passes I am afraid that people will become fossilized, that their lives and identities will begin to be knowable only through the facts of their deaths. My field notes are buried in that collapsed house. Those notes are an artifact, a record of a lost time, stories about people when they were just people — living, ordinary people who told dirty jokes, talked one-on-one to God, blamed a fart on the cat, and made their way through a life that was grinding but not without joy or humor, or normality. I don’t want my friends to be canonized.

I had been in Port-au-Prince for a total of six months, conducting research on household workers and human rights. As a young American woman not affiliated with any of the large organizations that dominate the Haitian landscape, I was overwhelmed every day by the fierce generosity of Haitians. People who had little were eager to share their food, their homes, their time, their lives. Now I’m cobbling together this narrative — these nonconsecutive remembrances — in surreal and far-removed settings: first a hospital bed in South Miami, then a Cinnabon-scented airport terminal, now a large public university during basketball season. I can’t do anything for those same people who gave of themselves so naturally and unflinchingly. My friends, who for months insisted on sharing whatever food they had made, even if I had already eaten, promising me “just a little rice” but invariably giving more. My friends, who walked me to the taptap stop nearly every day.

Now that the first journalistic burst has ended, now that the celebrity telethons have wrapped, the stories you hear are of “looters” and “criminals” set loose on a post-apocalyptic wasteland. This is the same story that has always been told about Haiti, for more than 200 years, since the slaves had the temerity to not want to be slaves anymore. This is the same trope of savagery that has been used to strip Haiti and Haitians of legitimacy since the Revolution. But at the moment of the quake, even as the city and, for all we knew, the government collapsed, Haitian society did not fall into Hobbesian anarchy. This stands in contradiction both to what is being shown on the news right now, and everything we assume about societies in moments of breakdown.

In the aftermath of the earthquake, there was great personal kindness and sacrifice, grace and humanity in the midst of natural and institutional chaos and rupture. My friend Frenel, who worked cleaning and maintaining the house, appeared within minutes to look for survivors. He created a passage through the still-falling debris using only a flashlight and a small hammer — the kind you would use to nail a picture to a wall. Completely trapped, the nerves in my left arm damaged, I could not help him save me. He told me, calmly, “Pray, Lolo, you must pray,” as he broke up the cement and pulled it out, piece by piece, to free me. Once I was out, he gave me the sandals off his own feet. As I write this, I am still wearing them. At the United Nations compound, where Frenel ultimately guided and left me, everyone sat together on the cracked asphalt, bleeding and dazed, holding hands and praying as the aftershocks came. A little boy who had arrived alone trembled on my lap. Another family huddled under the same metallic emergency blanket with us. Their child looked at me, warily — a foreigner, covered in blood and dusted white with cement powder. His grandmother told him, “Ou mèt chita. Li malad, menm jan avek nou.” You can sit. She’s sick, too, just like us.

Social scientists who study catastrophes say there are no natural disasters. In every calamity, it is inevitably the poor who suffer more, die more, and will continue to suffer and die after the cameras turn their gaze elsewhere. Do not be deceived by claims that everyone was affected equally — fault lines are social as well as geological. After all, I am here, with my white skin and my U.S. citizenship, listening to birds outside the window in the gray-brown of a North Carolina winter, while the people who welcomed me into their lives are still in Port-au-Prince, within the wreckage, several of them still not accounted for.

As I sat waiting to be flown out, trying to convince myself that I was just another injured person using up scant food and resources, a non-Haitian man whom I presumed worked for the U.N. approached me. “Can you do me a favor?” he asked. “Could you write something down?” I nodded, and he handed me a pen and paper. “Tear the paper in half, and on the first half write ‘unidentified local female’ in block letters.. Then on the second piece of paper write the same thing.” I looked up. There were bodies loaded into the back of a pickup truck. The woman’s floral print dress was showing and her feet were hanging out. There were not enough sheets and blankets for the living patients, never mind enough to adequately wrap the dead. The U.N. guy looked at me and sort of smiled as I numbly tore the paper and wrote. “After all, you need something to do. All the bars are closed,” he said.

I stared at the bodies on the truck, and I hated him. I did not know which, if any, of my friends had survived. I imagined the people I love — Marlène, one of my best friends, or Damilove, the mother of my goddaughter – wrapped up in some scrap of cloth with their feet hanging out and some asshole tagging them with a half-piece of scrap paper that says they are anonymous, without history, unknown.
I am telling you two things that seem contradictory: that people in Haiti are suffering horribly, and that Haitians are not sufferers in some preordained way. What I mean is that suffering is not some intrinsic aspect of Haitian existence, it is not something to get used to. The dead were once human beings with complex lives, and those in agony were not always victims.

In Haiti I was treated with incredible warmth and generosity by people who have been criminalized, condemned, dehumanized and abstractly pitied. They helped me in small, significant ways for the six months I was there, and in extraordinary ways in the hours after the quake. Now I cannot help them. I cannot do anything useful for them from here, except to employ the only strategy that was available to us all when we were buried in collapsed houses, listening to the frantic stirrings of life aboveground: to shout and shout until someone responds.

Laura Wagner is a Ph.D. candidate in anthropology at the University of North Carolina Chapel Hill, who was living and conducting research in Port-au-Prince.

Posted in Eyewitness Accounts, Recovery and Reportage | 4 Comments »

17 February 2010

CI work on “We Are the World” featured: Huffington Post

We Are The World, “Nou Se Mond La”

Last week the new “We Are the World” video, dedicated to Haiti, aired during the Opening Ceremony of the Winter Olympics, and I’m really proud to have been a part of the experience. A key component of the project is a group of Haitian students from the Cine Institute, a film school in Jacmel, a city on the southern coast of Haiti. Jacmel, like so much of Haiti, was devastated, and the Institute was not spared. Luckily, none of the students were seriously injured, and they started filming immediately, turning their cameras toward the aftermath, documenting the wreckage and the relief effort. David Belle, the Cine Institute’s director, rushed to Jacmel to check on his students, and on the way, he was contacted by his friend and colleague Paul Haggis, who asked him to coordinate his students into traveling to Los Angeles to experience the video up close. Ten students arrived at the recording session a few days later, with cameras in hand to record the ‘making of’ the video, but were surprised to learn that they would also became part of the chorus, and part of the video.

Read More on Huffington Post >>

Posted in News, Press, Recovery and Reportage | No Comments »

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RECENT POSTS
  • March 15th, FIAF Benefit Concert for Haiti
  • CI All Girl Film Crew Invited to follow Michaelle Jean
  • “Handicap”
  • NYTimes Report on Jacmel Carnival Produced with CI Support
  • New Tang Dynasty TV Report on CI Student Work in NYC
ARCHIVES
  • ►2009
    • ►April
      • Photographer wins Pulitzer for Haiti images
      • FIAF World Nomads series celebrates Haiti.
      • Hollywood Delegation Closes 1st Semester
    • ►May
      • Celebration of Ciné Institute Jacmel at FIAF
      • Haïti Optimiste II at the Bubble Lounge NYC
    • ►June
      • Ciné Lekòl, une porte ouverte sur le cinéma!
      • Ciné Institute in Süddeutsche Zeitung
    • ►July
      • Minustah Video Report in Jwet Pou Ou
      • Ciné Institute Partners to Produce Ayiti Ayiti
      • Ciné Institute in the News
      • Haiti Featured in Travel Weekly Magazine
      • AFP Report: "Haiti: aspiring capital of Caribbean cinema"
      • Ciné Institute in Filmmaker Magazine
    • ►August
      • Haiti Featured in Condé Nast Traveler Magazine
      • Ciné Institute Featured in Ticket Magazine
    • ►September
      • Haiti Featured on surfcaribe.com
      • Ciné Institute featured in "Rebelle Haiti" Magazine
    • ►October
      • Haiti Featured in 100 Eyes Photography Magazine
    • ►November
      • Leading Nigerian Filmmaker Tunde Kelani Helps Haitian Youth Build Local Industry Based On Nollywood
  • ▼2010
    • ►January
      • Actor Jimmy Jean-Louis Honored with Key to Miami-Dade County
      • JACMEL SEVERELY DAMAGED IN EARTHQUAKE
      • The Victims in Jacmel: Keziah Jean Reports From the Field
      • Eyewitness report of destruction in Port Au Prince from Ciné Institute director David Belle
      • New Eyewitness Video from Ciné Institute Student in Jacmel : by Fritzner Simeus (translation coming soon)
      • Ciné Institute Students Eyewitness Reports from Jacmel
      • Student Eyewitness Account: Joel Pierre Louis
      • Urgent Appeal for Medical Help in Jacmel - (From Danielle Saint-Lot with Vital Voices)
      • "The Victims in Jacmel" by Keziah Jean
      • Ciné Institute Students Reporting from Jacmel
      • "After the Earthquake" by Fritzner Simeus
      • CI Students courageous coverage featured on Salon.Com
      • URGENT NEED FOR BGAN INMARSAT IN JACMEL
      • Ciné Institute featured in AOL news report
      • "Priere" - A video prayer by Manasse Cesar
      • CI Student, Rose-Laure Charles, Missing
      • New Eyewitness Accounts From Students
      • Ciné Institute Director David Belle reports from Port-au-Prince:
      • "Force Marie Jacmel" by Olivier Divers
      • Molly Crabapple uses art and Twitter to raise money for Ciné Institute!
      • "Les Handicaps" by Vadim Janvier
      • Rose Laure Charles Found!!!
      • "École Efondre"
      • Jacmel City Officials Speak about Earthquake Toll
      • "Report from Pinchinat" by Lesly Decembre
      • "Ecole Crasse"
      • Ciné Institute Student Effort
      • Pinchinat: Report by Keziah Jean
      • First Shipment of Aid Arriving in Jacmel: Report by Bayard
      • "Avion Ki Pote Manje" Keziah Jean
      • 6.0 AFTERSHOCK TREMOR HITS JACMEL HAITI
      • David Belle Quoted on New York Times Website
      • Ciné Institute Featured on PBS Newshour
      • Jan.15 UN Meeting by Thibaud
      • Ciné Institute Featured on CNN: Soledad O'Brien
      • Two More Aftershocks in Jacmel
      • A Compilation of this week's footage by Ciné Institute
      • Grit TV continues to Broadcast Ciné Institute Reports
      • CI Featured on Sundance Blog: Sunfiltered
      • CI Featured on The Guardian Film Blog
      • Western Union resumes service in Jacmel
      • CI on WNYC's Brian Leher Show Jan.19
      • Open Letter from Paul Haggis now in Port au Prince
      • A Message of Solidarity from Kids in Poland
      • Bklyn Film Pros Load Shipping Container, Destination Jacmel
      • Andrew Bigosinski Reports from Jacmel
      • "The Students" by Keziah Jean and Macdala Prevot
      • Open Letter from Nathalie Brunet
      • "Medsen Fey" Holistic Doctor by Macdala Prevot
      • Jacmel Carnival Artisans' Loss
      • "Le Jour du Seisme" The Day of the Earthquake
      • Protests Over Food Shortages in Jacmel Jan.22
      • CI Students Helping at St. Michel Hospital
      • "Les Manifestants du Christ"
      • The River
    • ►February
      • Slideshow: Earthquake Aftermath in Jacmel
      • Stories of Heroes by Vadim Janvier
      • Help Has Finally Arrived in Jacmel
      • CI featured on Le Monde Diplomatique Blog
      • Friends of Ciné Institute Fundraiser in NYC
      • Preval Mask
      • A Day in the Life of Ciné Institute
      • 'We are the World 25 for Haiti' Premiere Tonight on NBC
      • MTV News: 'We Are The World' Director Celebrates Premiere With Haitian Film Students
      • Trezo "Jou a Rive" Music Video
      • "We Are the World 25 For Haiti" Official Video
      • CI work on "We Are the World" featured: Huffington Post
      • A Survivor's Story by Laura Wagner
      • Students at Work in Jacmel
      • Haitian film students share video of earthquake aftermath at college visit
      • Time Video: 'Reviving Jacmel: Haiti's Cultural Capital'
    • ►March
      • New Tang Dynasty TV Report on CI Student Work in NYC
      • NYTimes Report on Jacmel Carnival Produced with CI Support
      • "Handicap"
      • CI All Girl Film Crew Invited to follow Michaelle Jean
      • March 15th, FIAF Benefit Concert for Haiti
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