Friday, June 17, 2016


Good day Saints,
I just need a minute to explain the purpose and need for you to give and support the Kingdom Work in Haiti. I know you are seeing us asking you to support Haiti. It's because according to the scriptures, we don't have, because we don't ask. James 4:2
Although we are asking, it's not benefiting the missionaries. We pay our own expense. By getting sponsors, family involvement, making it happen ourselves, etc.
This is the role we need you to help us with~
Help us with shipping cost, help us with custom fees, help us with feeding the hungry and help us put money in the congregations/ministers hand. And GOD works through your heart and pricks it to help support this much needed work.
Haiti is at our back door. And they are knocking, will you answer?
All contributions are tax deductible.
We accept PaylPay donations~sendmeministry@gmail.com
or you can mail, making the payment payable to:
Compassion Haitian Leaders, PO Box 23047, Charlotte, NC 28227

For Your Information~
Please know that
your donations are tax deductable.

Haiti Food Security & Nutrition Fact Sheet (2016)
Food insecurity is a long-standing challenge in Haiti. Even before the 2010 earthquake, Haiti suffered from one of the heaviest burdens of hunger and malnutrition in the Western Hemisphere: 40 percent of households were undernourished and 30 percent of children suffered from chronic malnutrition. The earthquake not only aggravated existing difficulties, it lessened the government’s ability to manage the situation. In the six years since the earthquake, Haiti has made progress but still ranks “alarming” in the 2015 Global Hunger Index. For example, the 2012 Demographic and Health Survey showed that, between 2005-2006 and 2012, stunted children under five years of age decreased from 23.8 to 21.9 percent; wasting decreased from 9.1 to 5.1 percent; and underweight children decreased from 22.2 to 11.4 percent. Still, roughly 50 percent of Haiti’s population is undernourished, which has been exacerbated by the longstanding drought and El NiƱo, leaving 1.5 million Haitians at risk of food insecurity. Haiti cannot achieve economic growth and national stability if food security is not addressed.

“An increasing number of Haitians are at risk of being driven deeper into poverty and hunger as Haiti faces its worst food crisis in 15 years, the United Nations World Food Program said…” (Miami Herald, Feb 2016). Haiti’s children are the most vulnerable. Today, there are 3.8 million children that are under the age of 15, and at this rate, Haiti will lose a whole generation of its people.