The Truth About Haiti

Posted by truthtalklive on 28 January, 2010
This post was filed in Uncategorized and has

Robby Dilmore The Christian Car Guy Hosts THE TRUTH ABOUT HAITI

Today on Truth Talk Live.. Live From Haiti J. L. Williams Pres. of Internation Missions

impacthaiti-earthquake

The devastation being suffered by the people of Haiti over the last few days due to the massive earthquake there is beyond imagination. Impact of Hope International is ready to assist in every way we can, but we need your help.

DonateNowPlease donate now!

On today’s edition of Truthtalk Live, guest-host Robby Dilmore (aka) “The Christian Car Guy” welcomes Pastor Ignace Augustin.

pastorandfamily

Connecting in Haiti Live Via Skype :Pastor Ignace will give us an update from a Christin Pastor on The Ground in Haiti

It may seem hard to believe, but Pastor Ignace (seen here with with his family) was once caught up in voodoo worship and witchcraft himself.  Pastor Ignace came face to face with gospel  and was not only radically changed, the Lord opened a door for him to go to bible college in the U.S.

After graduation, he returned to Haiti and founded Bethanie Evangelical Mission. Today the mission supports an orphange, medical clinic, bible school and is also involved in radio ministry,  well-digging and reaching the Haitian people with the gospel.

“The new normal” World Magazine writer Jamie Dean Joins us on Truth Talk Live at the Bottom of the hour

HAITI | As life and death continue their morbid mingling, relief groups forge ahead to help | Jamie Dean

Associated Press/Photo by Gerald Herbert

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti—All around the growing piles of dangerous rubble and the squalor of rotting trash in the streets of their capital city, Haitians are living the new normal: In the shadow of a collapsed house, a woman gives a young man a haircut. On the outskirts of a park-turned-tent-city for thousands of displaced people near downtown, a little boy flies a kite made from string and a piece of trash. And near another squalid camp, reeking of trash and human waste, and filled with thousands of homeless people in the city’s central plaza—the Champs de Mars—a man sells basic supplies: small cans of deodorant and cooking oil.

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