He had a dream to reforest Haiti, then Hurricane Matthew hit
But then Hurricane Matthew tore through the rare patch of green in this heavily deforested nation, wiping out as much as 70 percent of Pierre's forest with 140-mph winds.
"This is destruction, pure destruction," an emotional Pierre, 71, said standing atop a rocky cliff, surveying the desiccated limbs and exposed roots littering the ground. "When you have 25-year-old mahogany trees, it is not something that can be built back in a year."
The now-toppled trees were supposed to help Pierre, a retired agriculture specialist at the
This storm has not only sped up deforestation, it has set us back significantly. Haiti Environment Minister
Now, he joins the tens of thousands of farmers, homeowners, investors and other dreamers who fell victim to Matthew's wrath. In this remote southwestern corner of Haiti, no one was spared. Gone are the agricultural fields that provided a livelihood for small farmers in the still inaccessible remote inlands. Gone, too, is the terracotta-red covering of the centuries-old Cathédrale Saint-Louis Roi de
"Can you imagine one day visiting
Nearly three weeks since Matthew knocked out 80 percent of the electrical network in
Few residents of Jérémie, the capital of the Grand' Anse, have received aid even as convoys roll into town. It's become survival of the fittest as residents use influence and clout to get rations of rice and vegetable oil. Ongoing rain has only added to the misery.
In poverty-stricken
"I loved the trees. My daughters will tell you, 'Dad is always with his trees,'" said Pierre, the father of four girls. "Now I don't know what I'll do."
While Jérémie is often cited as the city of poets by intellectuals, the
The techniques had helped create 17 percent tree cover in
The storm, he said, destroyed between 8 and 10 percent of the trees in Grand' Anse.
This is a department with a lot of potential. Agriculture can flourish again. Agronomist
Pierre, a trained agronomist, knows all too well about
The Grand' Anse needs a development plan, he said. "This is a department with a lot of potential. Agriculture can flourish again."
Pierre's forest sits on 15 acres that his father,
"He used it used for the education of his kids," Pierre, one of seven children, said proudly. "The trees were everything."
Mother Nature has taken more from Pierre than his trees in recent years. His sister,
Pierre planted his first tree, a mahogany, on
He did so not for the timber, which can fetch as much as
"These were precious trees," he said. "I knew nobody was going to cut them for charcoal and they were long-term."
Stopping mid-way up the cliff, the sound of dry leaves being crushed under his feet, he pointed out the spot where he was born and then the storm-damaged concrete house in the distance that he had helped his father build.
He wondered what to do next.
"I will not complain. But at my age, I am not inspired to start planting again."
Pierre spent 33 years at the
"A lot of people are really thinking of returning, and are buying land to take their retirement here," Pierre said about Jérémie's flourishing diaspora in
Before Matthew, the Grand' Anse region was struggling to catch up with the rest of
Its main city of Jérémie generally had only six hours of electricity a day. And despite a recent development push, a 57-mile road connecting Jérémie to the port city of Les Cayes in the south remains unfinished after 10 years. Still, proud Jérémiens like Pierre and
There was a plan to rehabilitate Jérémie's French-colonial wood-frame homes with their balconies and arched verandas, and the 19th century coffee warehouses. Pressure also had been building to do something about the city's entrance, now made uglier as missing vegetation revealed hidden shacks and an emerging slum.
"With the aftermath of Matthew, everything is back in the drawers," said Chavenet, who had been preparing to embark on a new seaside real estate and tourism venture showcasing the region's environmental potential when the hurricane hit
Just before the storm, newly elected Jérémie Mayor
And politics continue to influence aid. The presidential elections, postponed from
"The situation has never been good for Jérémie," Pierre said. "This is a city with no infrastructure, one that has never had any ... and where deforestation is progressing."
But before Matthew, he said, "there was hope. People like me and others were returning."
The fallen trees are only part of his hurricane losses.
After the storm, as he stepped through the door of his home, he was at a loss for words. The multi-level white house overlooking the port of Jérémie that he had named
"Que vais-je faire avec cette maison?" he said in French, asking himself what to do with the storm-damaged house as he saw the sky through the gaping wooden rafters that had been covered with metal sheeting. The windows were all blown out. Four of eight solar panels had been blown away by Matthew.
"I wanted to modernize things," he said, proudly.
The home had four bedrooms, four full bathrooms and two half baths. He'd invested more than
"I do not know what I am going to do. I'm a very old man. I'm still thinking."
As he spoke, it started to rain, flooding his hardwood floors.
He'd started building the house two years ago, pouring his heart and savings into the cornerstone of his dream. On the three-acre property, he had planned to build a bed-and-breakfast so that returning diaspora and visitors could witness the transformation of Jérémie that he hoped to help lead.
"I don't think I will be pursuing that dream, but at the same time, I don't want to quit," he said. "I don't know yet."
As he grapples with whether to rebuild, his thoughts also turn to what's happening outside of his walls. Many Haitians in the area are being forced to fend for themselves and aid agencies that don't know the area are acting without needed guidance.
He worries that the Grand' Anse is going backward in time to 1954, the year that Hurricane Hazel hit
"My dad always told me that is when misery started to fall on the family, after Hazel," he said. "And now, over 60 years later, this is the same thing."
___
(c)2016 Miami Herald
Visit Miami Herald at www.miamiherald.com
Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.
Premium Hikes, Coverage Limits Frustrate Health Insurance Shoppers
Advisor News
Annuity News
Health/Employee Benefits News
Life Insurance News