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A man drove past a burning barricade during a protest against Haitian Prime Minister Ariel Henry’s government and insecurity in Port-au-Prince March 1.
A man drove past a burning barricade during a protest against Haitian Prime Minister Ariel Henry’s government and insecurity in Port-au-Prince March 1.
Photo Credit: Ralph Tedy Erol | Reuters

As Haiti descends into more chaos, priests vow to stay and minister to the people

As Haiti spirals into further violence and chaos, Catholic clergy there are reportedly remaining in place to serve the populace.

“Where can we go? We have to stay in the midst of the people,” Haitian native Father Eugène Almonor, an Oblate of Mary Immaculate and chaplain of the Archdiocese of Philadelphia’s Haitian Catholic Community, said regarding his order’s determination to stay in Haiti. “It is our mission to be with them and to try to support them, to accompany them.”

On March 4, armed gangs attempted to seize control of Haiti’s Toussaint Louverture Airport in Port-au-Prince, Haiti’s capital. The move was believed to be an effort by gangs to oust Prime Minister Ariel Henry, who had traveled to Guyana and then Kenya, with troops from the latter nation set to be deployed as part of a United Nations’ peacekeeping mission. Both domestic and international flights were reported to be suspended.

Residents who fled violence gathered to receive meals at a school being used for shelter as Haiti’s government declared a state of emergency amid violence in Port-au-Prince March 4.
Photo Credits: Ralph Tedy Erol | Reuters
The day prior, Haitian officials declared a 72-hour state of emergency following the mass jailbreak of more than 5,000 inmates from two facilities. The inmates had been freed by gangs attacking a number of state institutions.

The U.S. Embassy urged its citizens to leave Haiti as soon as possible and canceled consular appointments through March 6, announcing March 3 that “conditions may not allow the U.S. Embassy to admit persons” during that span.

Father Almonor said that he had confirmed his own family, including his father and “other members … especially my friends in my congregation” — who have several mission sites in Haiti — are so far “OK.”

“But the situation is so bad,” he admitted. “Everywhere in the capital city, (there is) shooting. … It used to be really in certain sections and now it’s kind of the whole city.”

Father Thomas Hagan, an Oblate of St. Francis de Sales who has lived and worked in Port-au-Prince since 1997, said in a March 3 livestreamed Mass that “probably in all the years I’ve been in Haiti, I don’t think it’s ever been as bad as it is right now.

“All the streets are blocked,” Father Hagan said, adding he had just learned of the attempts to seize the airport.

Father Hagan said that gangs are “threatening all sorts of people” and “even want to kidnap me … but I don’t think that’ll happen.

“The only thing I worry about (with) kidnapping me is that they won’t ask for much … they could only ask for $25 or something,” he said.

He offered the liturgy for a former regular attendee named David, who “two weeks ago … was kidnapped and murdered.”

Also killed was one of the teachers for the priest’s nonprofit Hands Together, which provides educational, pastoral and humanitarian development to Haiti’s largest and poorest slum, Cité Soleil. Father Hagan said that a number of Haiti’s police force have been killed, and “not only killed, but (their bodies) desecrated.”

“The number of people being killed and tortured, it’s … horrible,” he said.

Haiti has endured multiple, sustained crises such as political instability, natural disasters, foreign intervention and international debt.

In July 2021, Haitian President Jovenel Moïse was assassinated; in April 2023, the head of the U.N. office in Haiti warned the nation was sliding into “a catastrophic spiral of violence.”

“We cannot continue (like this),” Father Almonor said. “Now is the time to stop. Because we want to live in serenity and peace.”

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