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Lost
WARNING: Some of the photographs that follow contain extremely graphic content.
To witness the aftermath of the earthquake in Haiti is to be lost inside a waking nightmare.
Unclaimed dead lie on streets outside the wall of the main cemetery.
Buried
Most Haitians have always lived in a society constructed along a narrow ledge on a precipice above the abyss. The rich existed on the plateau above them, unseen in their black-windowed Land Cruisers. A man takes refuge behind a Dumpster outside a hospital. He has been refused entry to the hospital because the workers consider him mentally unstable.
Past and Present
Those with next to nothing suddenly have even less. They continue to endure - their history, a crescendo of privation and hardship, matched by strength, pride and dignity. Their nation was born in the conquest of slavery; it has been shaped by poverty, struggle and faith. In a makeshift tent city in the main square of the capital, a statue of Henri Christoph, a leader of the Haitian war of independence, stands in the background, overlooking a displaced girl finishing her bowl of food.
Escape
Thousands have fled the ruins of Port-au-Prince. Some of these displaced people have left by overcrowded bus, some by foot, and others by dump truck.
Faith
An old woman prays with rosary beads near the national cathedral in ruins, with an international aid helicopter in the background on its way to the airport.
Survival
Looting has been prevalent in the destroyed city center of Port-au-Prince.
Nations United
The earth shrugged, Haiti collapsed, and the world responded. Epic catastrophe was met with epic generosity, without benefit of untapped oil reserves or geopolitical gain. The U.N. is here in force, but the real united nations are the small NGOs from every corner of the planet that just showed up, flying by the seat of their pants. Los Angeles County Fire and Rescue, in silhouette, stand atop a collapsed building, searching for someone who still might be alive. No one was found at the site.
Pallbearers
The Haitians are not just sitting back with their hands out. They're doing a lot of the heavy lifting - so humble in nature as to seem invisible. Priests attend the funeral of the Archbishop of Port-au-Prince, who was killed in the earthquake.
Congregation
Mourners grieve at the funeral of the Archbishop of Port-au-Prince. Eighty percent of the country is Roman Catholic.
Compassion
An earthquake is an act of nature. Tens of thousands die in a few minutes. Who is to blame? Regime change is not an option. How can anger be directed at the earth itself? Compassion is the ultimate motivation in a natural catastrophe. The challenge is to maintain it for the long haul and not allow it to die with the headlines. In the Médecins Sans Frontières Hospital in Cite Soleil, medical staff care for the injured. Patients were moved outside because of a severe aftershock, with many amputees in outdoor tents.
Improvised Hygiene
A woman bathes herself in a makeshift camp in the central square next to a statue of Jean-Jacques Dessalines, a leader of the Haitian war of independence.
Force of Nature
Haitians have forged history with a capital H. Slaves rose up to vanquish one of Europe's mightiest empires. Earthquakes reveal the power within the earth itself - but the spirit of the Haitian people is also a force of nature. Virtually all the symbols of political power in a country synonymous with corruption have been erased. A statue honoring Fabre Geffard, a Haitian leader in the mid-19th century, stands amid a downtown in ruins. According to the inscription on the statue, he was the "restorer of the republic."
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