
Four months on from the earthquake these children are now living in tents in a temporary camp in Leogane, Haiti. All of them lost friends and family in the disaster. But every day they can forget some of their worries and play with friends at our “espas timoun” (child-friendly space). Watch the films they’ve made of their lives…
Sarah Jacobs, Head of News, Save the Children
I run the news team at Save the Children. We’re responsible for getting news journalists to report on injustices and issues children across the world are facing – issues that reporters might never uncover without crucial information and tip-offs from Save the Children.
When the earthquake first hit Haiti, our press office team worked 24 hours a day to get as much coverage of the disaster – focusing on children – out in the media as we could. Our emergency response team were fantastic, finding time to do interviews from camps where they were helping to set up mobile health clinics, create safe places for children and distribute shelter supplies.
There was huge global interest – journalists from across the world wanted to know first-hand how the country was coping with such a devastating crisis.
But then it went quiet. Journalists went home, TV cameras turned elsewhere. They left tens of thousands of children and their parents trying to cope with the grief of having lost friends, family and their homes, and trying to get back to some sort of normal life.
We wanted the world to hear about what was happening for children in Haiti throughout the year – not just when journalists were there. And we wanted to understand what children were going through from their own perspective – as they wanted us to hear it.
The children we are working with in Haiti are amazing. They have been brave enough to speak openly and honestly about what they have experienced and how they are feeling. They are great story-tellers – during our workshops they both gave me the giggles and made me cry – and their enthusiasm and sense of fun was brilliant to be around.
Before we left, Nenel told us that in making the first film about his life, he was able to talk about the deaths of his siblings for the first time and that he needed to ‘get it out of his head’. That, for me, has already made this project worthwhile.