Archbishop of Port-au-Prince: ‘There is real danger of civil war in Haiti’

 

Haitian police officers deploy in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, on March 9, 2024. / Credit: CLARENS SIFFROY/AFP via Getty Images

ACI Prensa Staff, Mar 11, 2024 / 16:20 pm (CNA).

The archbishop of Port-au-Prince and president of the Haitian Bishops’ Conference, Max Leroy Mésidor, shared his perspective on the difficult situation facing his country and the pastoral work of the Church in the midst of violence, kidnappings, and chaos.

“Yes, there is a real danger of civil war breaking out in the country. The armed gangs act like an organized army. They are very well equipped and very well armed. The police cannot keep up with them,” Mésidor told Aid to the Church in Need in a March 6 interview.

The archbishop noted that in some regions, even his own, “there are groups of citizens who try to stand up to the gangs. So there are often clashes between these groups and the gangs, and also between the police and the gangs.”

Haiti, a nation that has struggled with instability for years, is now facing what some describe as a “low-intensity civil war.” On March 3, the Haitian government declared a 72-hour state of emergency after armed gangs stormed the national prison in Port-au-Prince.

The violence has spread throughout the country, especially in the administrative districts of Ouest, Centre, and Artibonite. The prelate pointed out that “there are no safe areas” since “gangs operate almost everywhere, making it extremely difficult to move, especially outside the capital.”

The Church has not been spared the violence. Mésidor lamented the numerous kidnappings of priests and men and women religious: “In 2021 the first priests and religious were kidnapped. In this year, 2024, there were six nuns in January, six nuns and one priest in February, and another priest on March 1.”

According to Mésidor, the “dictatorship of kidnapping” is a reality that is spreading like “a plague.” However, despite the dangers, he said, it “must be fought,” and the Church will remain firm in its mission and “will not abandon our brothers and sisters.”

When asked about the challenges he faces in his episcopal ministry, the archbishop responded: “It’s really very difficult… daily life consists of suffering, violence, gunfights, poverty, and deprivation,” adding that his pastoral work is very restricted by the situation: “I cannot visit two-thirds of my diocese because the roads are blocked.”

“I have not been to the cathedral for two years,” the archbishop lamented.  “Once, while I was in my office, there was a lot of gunfire and I had to stay there for four hours before I could get out to celebrate Mass. Bullets struck my office window. The last celebration I was able to do in the cathedral was the chrism Mass.”

The people, however, are living their faith in these circumstances and despite these circumstances. “Perhaps there was gunfire in the neighborhood the night before. But the next day, even at 6 o’clock in the morning, the church is full. There are people who go and visit the sick, in spite of the danger.”

Mésidor stressed that the most important thing “is that the Church continues to bring people together despite all the difficulties.”

“We try to rekindle their hope, to get them to organize themselves and not sink into resignation,” he said. “Whenever possible, the Church continues its mission. But it’s not easy. The motto is: One day at a time.”

This story was first published by ACI Prensa, CNA’s Spanish-language news partner. It has been translated and adapted by CNA.


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7 Comments

  1. Please pray for Haiti. It’s always portrayed in the news through its tragedies and brokenness but it’s an amazing place with beautiful people that deserve much better.

    • ABSOLUTELY.

      It’s weird, though, how they can’t catch a break from any disaster. Remember when being Hatian was a “risk factor” for AIDS? Then the earthquakes, the hurricanes, and the human violence. It’s hard to believe a “civil war” would look much different from what’s been happening there since the 1980s.

      In fact, it’s hard not to suspect Haiti is under a curse. Unsurprisingly, there is an Internet theory that it IS, due to the original revolutionaries invoking Voodoo spirits. I suppose I should concede that a demonic counterpart to the “consecration of Russia” might be possible, but I doubt it would have any more visible effect than Russia’s consecration. (Pray for the CONVERSION of Russia — and of Ukraine, America, Haiti, the UK, Ireland, France, etc. There is no nation not in need of a good conversion, even Vatican City State.) Also, Haiti’s woes go back long before its first revolution. The earthquakes and hurricanes are nothing new; slavery on Haiti was especially brutal (with George Washington threatening to sell runaway slaves down to Haiti); and before that, the natives appear to have been cannibals.

  2. Years ago, I worked with a man from Haiti. He worked hard, was pleasant to everyone and liked by everyone, employees and customers. My experience with Haitians is very limited, but if most of Haiti could be like this man Pierre, Haiti could be a good place.

  3. Haiti was, is and will always be a failed state. The only sensible and moral policy for a government of a neighboring country is to prevent the chaos, squalor and disfunction from spreading to inside its own borders. The US government, of course, takes just the opposite approach. Poor, unskilled, uneducated, lazy and frequently violent Haitians are pouring into America and the steady stream will likely soon be turning into a tidal wave. Just to be clear, the sole responsibility of the US government to protect its own citizens from the horrors and savagery that define Haitian society.

  4. The burning question is how the beautiful people from amazing Haiti will get along with the equally superb Palestinian refugees that the Israeli government will be shipping here shortly. Those would be the Palestinians who are still alive after Netanyahu has finished with them.

    • We have Palestinians locally and they’re hardworking people. So are the Lebanese.
      A number of folks are also descendants of earlier Haitian refugees.
      It’s America and it’s all good.
      🙂

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