Wednesday, October 5, 2011

Haiti tent camp replica -- this size often houses a 4-6 person family
Li, Li, Li! presents a Haiti tent replica at the Atlantic Antic 2011 street festival in downtown Brooklyn on October 2, 2011 -- more than 600,000 people still live in these conditions with no housing in sight for the majority.
 
To view more photos from this day, go to www.facebook.com/LiLiLiRead.
 
For more on Li, Li, Li! go to www.LiLiLiRead.org 

Tuesday, May 24, 2011

Li, Li, Li! deplores violent and destructive evictions at tent camps




May 24, 2011
Contact: Michelle Karshan
Email: LiLiLiHaiti@gmail.com

Li, Li, Li! Read, a storybook reading out loud program serving more than 3,000 children monthly in Haiti's tent campsdeplores the forced & violent evictions carried out on May 23, 2011 at various tent camps occupied by hundreds of families since the earthquake.

The manner in which these evictions were planned and conducted further victimized children already suffering from post-traumatic stress and loss since the earthquake. The heartbreaking photo, taken by journalists of Bri Kouri, shows two children searching amongst the destruction for their belongings or families. The Haitian government through its municipal authorities and its national police unnecessarily and viciously totally destroyed all of the belongings of these families.

We make note that Haiti is in its heavy rainy season and entering into the hurricane season, and that there is no safe or affordable housing available as an alternative to the tent camps.

We thank Let Haiti Live and Bri Kouri for their vigilant coverage and mobilization on behalf of these families.

We ask the government of Haiti to respect the United Nations guidelines on the treatment of Internally Displaced Persons as well as the UNICEF guidelines with respect to the treatment of children more specifically.

We remind the authorities, and the international community, that a nation absent of respect for its citizens and of the rule of law and in violation of international standards on human rights cannot advance democratically nor modernize.

Again, Li, Li, Li! points out that Haiti’s future greatly depends on how its children are treated today.


See set of photos taken by Bri Kouri yesterday including one of children in their destroyed camp. http://www.flickr.com/photos/gaetantguevara/5752024138/in/set-72157626664487129/

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See TransAfrica: http://lethaitilive.org/2011/05/24/homeless-haitian-earthquake-victims-violently-evicted-from-tent-camps-in-midst-of-rainy-season/

Thursday, December 30, 2010

BACK TO THE Li, Li, Li! WEBSITE

Click here to go to the Li, Li, Li! Read website

Li, Li, Li! 2010 Accomplishments & 2011 Goals

Click here to go back to the Li, Li, Li, Website

CHECK BACK SOON FOR 
OUR UPDATED LIST OF ACCOMPLISHMENTS 
INCLUDING OUR WORK IN 2012

Some of our sustainable activities and accomplishments in 2010 included:

  • Training readers, creating training seminars for staff at transitional centers, and camp council committee members, on how to read out loud to children;
  • Creating questions specific to each book to help children develop listening and analytical skills;
  • Writing a Li, Li, Li! storybook for children in the U.S. and Haiti;
  • Creating a child-directed cholera flyer and briefing sessions;
  • Partnering with grassroots and other organizations to collaborate and share resources;
  • Assisting camp committees in securing necessary resources such as medical care, water, tents, etc.;
  • Educating and sensitizing the public via press releases and media on the plight of children living in the camps;
  • Creating a series of feedback forms and reports used for analysis & evaluation of our program;
  • Partnering with elementary schools throughout the United States where students have donated books, art, and poems;
  • Making presentations to children and schools in the United States about Li, Li, Li! and Haiti.

Goals for 2011 include:

  • Creating a Creole language manual teaching Reading Out Loud to Children skills with a suggested list of appropriate books;
  • Continuing to work on our Li, Li, Li! children’s book and publish it for wide distribution;
  • Greater incorporation of the Creole alphabet in the Li, Li, Li! reading session and the introduction of activity sheets that teach literacy and development of cognitive skills;
  • Employing a part-time health layperson to work on strengthening our cholera education and resource component;
  • Developing better and more efficient access to cholera related resources for camps;
  • Continuing to participate and monitor centers where we have trained their staff to read out loud to monitor and strengthen success and continuity;
  • Expanding our puppet making and creation of art to accompany books;
  • Incorporating more art, writing, and music activities that are literature or literacy centered;
  • Continuing to partner with schools in the United States and bring information about Haiti and Li, Li, Li! to students and their families.

Friday, December 10, 2010

Li, Li, Li! visits Public School 143 in Brooklyn, New York


@ 2010 Connie Walsh
Caitlin Karshan reads Li, Li, Li! story book to children at PS 154, Brooklyn
 For more information and photos see http://www.lililiread.org/p/links.html

Monday, November 1, 2010

Eight Days, A Story of Haiti by Edwidge Danticat (Li, Li, Li! Advisory Board member)


New book by Li, Li, Li! Advisory Board member, Edwidge Danticat


Eight Days
A Story of Haiti
by Edwidge Danticat
Pictures by Alix Delinois

Hope comes alive in this heartfelt and deeply resonating story.
 
While Junior is trapped for 8 days beneath his collapsed house after an earthquake, he uses his imagination for comfort. Drawing on beautiful, everyday-life memories, Junior paints a sparkling picture of Haiti for each of those days - flying kites with his best friend or racing his sister around St. Marc's Square?helping him through the tragedy until he is finally rescued.
 
Love and hope dance across each page - granting us a way to talk about resilience as a family, a classroom, or a friend.

Mali Under the Night Sky by Youme Landowne (Li, Li, Li! Advisory Board member)


New book by Li, Li, Li! Advisory Board member, Youme Landowne

MALI UNDER THE NIGHT SKY

A Lao Story of Home

by Youme Landowne
illustrated by Youme Landowne

Youme tells the true story of artist Mali Jai Dee, whose family was forced by civil war to flee Laos when she was five. Mali’s story reveals the strength of family and culture to carry a child through unthinkable hardship.

Mali Under the Night Sky is the true story of Laotian-American artist Malichansouk Kouanchao, whose family was forced by civil war to flee Laos when she was five. Before the war began, Mali lived an idyllic life in a community where she felt safe and was much loved. She loved to sit in front of her house and ask everyone who passed by, “Where are you going?” She herself went everywhere too—climbing on the flowering trees, catching tiny fish in a rice field, looking for pale bamboo shoots in the dark forest. She loved the time she spent with her family, napping in the hot afternoons, making feasts and coming together on special days to celebrate. But the coming war caused her family to flee to another country and a life that was less than ideal. What did she carry with her? She carried her memories. And they in turn carried her across the world, sharing where she is from and all that she loves with the people she meets.

Youme Landowne is an energetic and joyful painter, book artist and activist who thrives in the context of public art. Youme has lived in and learned from the U.S., Kenya, Japan, Laos, Haiti and Cuba. In all of these places, she has worked with communities and individuals to make art that honors personal and cultural wisdom, creating community murals, illustrating tiny books, and teaching poetry in the schools.