Many area connections to Haiti, many want to help

The impact of the earthquake that hit Haiti  Tuesday, Jan. 12, has  been felt throughout the Tri-state region. Efforts are being made  to help the victims of the quake in any way possible.

The area’s independent boarding schools have many international students and alumni.  

Indian Mountain School (in Lakeville) graduate Richard Morse owns a hotel in Haiti that many journalists are staying at now. Daily “tweets†offer a picture of what’s happening in Haiti with extraordinary immediacy. To see them, go online to twitter.com (you do not need to be a member) and type RAMhaiti into the search bar.

Concerts for Haiti

Two fundraising concerts have been organized by Northwest Corner residents.

Singer/songwriter James Taylor will perform a benefit concert for Haiti at the Mahaiwe Performing Arts Center in Great Barrington on Friday, Jan. 22, at 8 p.m. Proceeds will benefit Partners in Health. The event will be simulcast on WAMC Northeast Public Radio (wamc.org). Kim and James Taylor will match proceeds from all ticket sales. Tickets are $100 (balcony), $200 (orchestra and mezzanine), and $1,000 (golden circle including private post-show reception with the artists).

Tickets are on sale at mahaiwe.org or in person at the box office (14 Castle Street). No phone sales are available for this concert and there is a limit of four tickets per person.

“Our hearts go out to everyone in Haiti,†Taylor said. “We need to do everything we can to help the country recover after this tragic earthquake. I’m grateful to do my part and hope my neighbors here in the Berkshires will join me and be as generous as possible.â€

There will be a benefit concert sponsored by Salisbury Rotary on Sunday, Feb. 7, at Housatonic Valley Regional High School in Falls Village.

David Paton and his band will perform.

Rotary member Inge Dunham of Lakeville said the money will go to Hospital Albert Schweitzer  in the center of Haiti.

“Hospital Albert Schweitzer has been in Haiti for the last 60 years, and that’s an amazing feat because nothing ever lasts terribly long in Haiti,†she said. “The hospital was not affected, not devastated by the earthquake. The moment it happened though, people started flooding in for shelter and medical care, draining the hospital’s resources to its limit.â€

Rotary is “definitely looking for support and contributions,†according to Dunham, who  has been to Haiti on numerous missions.

“I’ve seen places that are now devastated,†she said, naming government buildings and other locales in Port-au-Prince. “Some of them were the most beautiful buildings. It’s unbelievable that they’re gone.â€

Send contributions to Salisbury Rotary Foundation, earmarked HAS, PO Box 287, Salisbury, CT 06068.

The choirs and members of the First United Methodist Church of Torrington will present  Hearts for Haiti on  Thursday, Jan. 28, at the First United Methodist Church in Torrington.  The suggested donation is $10 per person.  All proceeds will go to the United Methodist Committee on Relief; 100 percent of each donation goes directly to the aid of the earthquake victims. For questions or to make a donation, call 860-489-9183.

School fundraisers

Students and faculty at many area schools are raising money and gathering goods to send to Haiti. Millbrook School, for example, is sending funds to the Red Cross and AmeriCares.

The students of Salisbury School are hosting numerous fundraisers including collections and an ice cream sundae fundraiser. Students and faculty members are also being encouraged to text “Haiti†in support of the American Red Cross effort.  

Hotchkiss School students are organizing a number of activities for the coming days. After a concert Friday night students collected nearly $1,500.

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