u/Chemical-Walrus-4846

▲ 3 r/haiti

Since TPS is a huge topic right now. Here’s my take. When I first heard about the Biden Humanitarian Parole Program and they said two years, I already knew what was going to happen. Most Haitians were not going back. When Haiti got Temporary Protected Status after the 2010 earthquake, the whole point was in the name, temporary. The U.S. saw a country destroyed by a disaster and gave Haitians already in the country a chance to stay and work.

And let’s be honest, many people came here with no plan of returning. They sold land, sold cars, packed up their whole lives, and moved to the U.S. for a fresh start. Once you do all that, what exactly are you going back to? I get why people made that choice. Haiti is hard. People want peace, stability, and opportunity. Anyone in that position would want better for themselves and their family.

But look at it from the other side for one second. If you let a friend stay at your house for a few days because they’re going through a rough time, and when those few days are up they tell you they’re not leaving, how would you feel? You’d feel taken advantage of. Next time, you’d think twice before helping someone else.

Countries think the same way.

That’s why these programs get cut, rules get tighter, and the next Haitian who wants to come legally has a harder path. Sometimes we focus so much on why people stay, we ignore how staying affects everyone else after. I saw someone on social media make a good point, which was “Alot of Haitians in the US don’t want Haiti to get better because that heightens the chances of TPS getting cut off” and i wholeheartedly agree

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u/Chemical-Walrus-4846 — 9 days ago
▲ 2 r/haiti

I’ve been thinking a lot about Cayemite Island lately after watching a youtube video ( https://youtu.be/mwUa3EN7W4I?si=lGL09fw7WnZPNcv9 ) and honestly, I feel like places like this should be where Haiti starts.

From what I’ve seen, around 21,000 people live there. A lot of homes are small shacks. School pretty much stops around 6th grade unless kids leave for the mainland. No hospital. No steady electricity. Limited clean water. Most people fish, trade, and do what they need to do to survive.

And I keep asking myself, why not pick one place and fully rebuild it the right way?

I’m talking about going all in and making Cayemite a model for what Haiti could look like.

Build strong homes, real homes, with plumbing, bathrooms, solar power, clean running water, and streets with lights. Build schools from preschool through high school, plus trade schools so kids graduate with actual skills like carpentry, plumbing, electrical work, boat repair, nursing, hospitality, and business.

Build a real clinic or small hospital so people are not dying over things that should be treatable. Have emergency boats ready for transport to the mainland if needed.

Set up fish processing centers, cold storage, and docks so fishermen earn real money and stop losing product. Start farms, greenhouses, poultry, bakeries, repair shops, restaurants, guesthouses, ferry jobs, construction jobs, sanitation jobs, and even remote work centers with internet so people have options.

Plant trees. Clean beaches. Protect the water. Build parks and public spaces. Make people proud of where they live.

Most important, make sure every adult has work. If you want a job, there’s work for you, building homes, maintaining roads, fishing, farming, teaching, healthcare, tourism, trades, business, whatever fits.

Then once Cayemite is thriving, use that blueprint in other places across Haiti.

I feel like Haiti keeps trying to solve everything at once, and nothing sticks. What if we focused hard on one place, made it beautiful, safe, clean, and successful, then copied that model.

One success story changes how Haitians think. Changes how the diaspora invests. Changes how the world looks at Haiti.

Am I crazy for thinking like this, or does this make sense? a project like this would cost between 250-350M which i think is doable considering they just asked the PM to sign for a $250M budget for the election, which he refused

u/Chemical-Walrus-4846 — 17 days ago
▲ 16 r/haiti

I like seeing how the story around Haiti has started to shift online. Since African influencers visited and Ariana won the “House of challenge” competition, more pages have popped up showing the beauty, culture, and daily life people rarely see. Haitians online have also pushed back hard against pages built around only posting violence and chaos. You feel a change in what gets shared, and in how people respond.

I got back from Haiti a week ago, and my trip was amazing. I saw people visiting the North, the South, and even parts of Port-au-Prince like Pétion-Ville, and many, including myself said they felt safe and had a great experience.

This shift matters because perception shapes tourism, investment, and pride. If more people keep sharing a fuller picture of Haiti, pressure grows for leaders to improve roads, clean public spaces, and build on momentum.

What do you think, will officials notice this change and respond? And if the image of Haiti keeps improving, would you visit

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u/Chemical-Walrus-4846 — 17 days ago