ART CREATION FOUNDATION FOR CHILDREN
FONDASYON ATISANAL POU TIMOUN
Jacmel, Haiti

ARTS - EDUCATION - SCHOOL - FOOD - HEALTH CARE - LOVE - SECURITY

 

 




THE AMAZING STORY OF HOW 9 ACFFC YOUTH BECAME A PART OF EDMONTON FRINGE 2011
"once upon a time ..."

The Edmonton Journal
© Copyright

Kids' arts fan flickering hope in Haiti

Trip to Fringe over a year in making for young troupe

Photograph by: Ed Kaiser, The Journal, Edmonton Journal

Festival Preview - Kidopolis
Where: 104th Street, between 85th and 86th Avenues
When: 9: 30 a.m. to 5 p.m. weekdays; 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. weekends during Fringe
ACFFC will be leading workshops and staging performances throughout the Fringe. Check the schedule at fringetheatreadventures.ca for times.

That Djecilia Jean Baptiste and her brother Jeff are performing at this week's Fringe Festival is a little like pumpkin soup. Back home in Haiti, pumpkin soup is said to bring good luck. "The soup is magic," explains Georges Metellus, with a chuckle. In Jacmel, the siblings still live in a tent, 19 months after a massive earthquake destroyed their home and devastated the country. Last Monday, the brother and sister, along with seven other youths from the non-profit Art Creation Foundation for Children (ACFFC), boarded an airplane for the first time and arrived in Edmonton, where they're acting, singing and dancing as part of KidsFringe. "This is a nice country," says Djecilia, in a mix of Creole and French, as Metellus helps translate. "It's clean and Haiti is different. Haiti is dirty and my mother doesn't have a house and we stay in a tent."

Metellus, Edmonton author Patti McIntosh and Mike Ford, director of operations for Fringe Theatre Adventures, have been working to get the ACFFC troupe here for more than a year. Plans to bring the kids to last year's Fringe fell through. The trip, financed by the Edmonton Arts Council's TransAlta festival city grant program, finally became a reality three weeks ago. "We were definitely crossing our fingers," says McIntosh, who has travelled to Haiti twice to work with the youngsters and prepare for the show. "But it can be done. Here we are."

At the Fringe, the young artists act out traditional Haitian folk tales - including one about two lost children who are brought back to life by pumpkin soup. Their hour-long show was developed with the help of Edmonton playwright and author Tololwa Mollel and Edmonton Public Library writer-in-residence Marty Chan. The group is also leading workshops and selling some of its artwork outside the festival's main box office.

"We love Canada a lot," says Jameson Jeanty, 11. "It seems like everybody knows everybody and it seems like people live like a family here." The kids look at everything with wonder, marvelling at how there's so much space.

ACFFC, founded in 2000, provides about 100 disadvantaged children in Jacmel with an education, three meals a day, health care and an opportunity to nurture their love of art. "This is something that can help them become a responsible person of tomorrow," Metellus says. "If tourists come, they can make art, sell art and keep their family alive. They won't have to let their kids do the same thing as they did before - going on the street asking people for money."

McIntosh reached out to the ACFFC after the earthquake, moved to do something for the thousands who lost everything. At last year's Fringe, she and partner Tara Langlois produced Theo in the Spotlight: A Concert for Haiti, which incorporated some of the children's artwork. "I kinda couldn't get over it," McIntosh says of her first visit to Haiti last year. "The magnitude of the earthquake and just how fragile things are ... I think the living conditions are shocking."

Part of the reason that the ACFFC is here, however, is to highlight some of the good things going on in the stricken nation. "I think that people will be really impressed by the energy and enthusiasm of these kids, and I think they will be blown away by what good artists they are,"says McIntosh. "People should be open to the good news in Haiti and the good news that can come out of these circumstances. I think people are resilient and definitely talented." For their part, the kids are excited to take the stage and share a little bit of Haitian culture with Edmontonians.

"We are very proud that we have been chosen to be part of this festival," says 16-year-old Michou Joussaint. "We're going to have fun on the stage and we hope that everybody enjoys it, because we're going to do our best to please everybody."

jfong@edmontonjournal.com

 

Haitian students bring vibrant art, stories to Edmonton Fringe Festival

By JOSH WINGROVE
August 14, 2011

Nine students from earthquake-devastated Jacmel to perform folk tales in French language


Actors Renel Beneche (left) and Djecilia Jean Baptiste perform in a demonstration of the play they are acting in for the Edmonton Fringe Festival Aug. 11, 2011.

it was at school one afternoon early last year that young Djecilia Jean Baptiste felt the walls start to shake. "I heard other houses come down," the 13-year-old says, eyes fixed downward. "And I didn't know what was happening."

The earthquake in Haiti killed more than 300,000 people and devastated the girl's hometown of Jacmel. The school stood, but Djecilia's family home did not, like thousands of others across the country reduced to rubble. Since that day, she and her twin brother have been spending their days in class, studying the arts, and their nights living in a tent with four other siblings and their mother.

This month, however, has been different. What began as a plan to display the school's artwork at the Edmonton Fringe Festival became, at the request of the foundation that runs the school, a chance for students to share the art and storytelling of Jacmel first-hand in Canada. "They said, 'It's really great the artwork can come up - can the kids come up, too?'" says Patti McIntosh, an Edmonton writer who stumbled on Djecilia's school, the Art Creation Foundation for Children, by Googling "children's art work Haiti."

The invite, if funding could be found, was a no-brainer, Fringe executive director Julian Mayne said. "It took about two seconds to realize it was a fantastic idea," he said.

Fringe officials travelled to Haiti two months ago to help ACFFC school students, many of whom were once street children, develop two Haitian folk tales, each performed entirely in French and by the children. With the help of a local grant, officials then flew nine students and a chaperone to Edmonton to stage them once again.

"Without the foundation, I won't be here," young Djecilia said at the Fringe site, a digital camera dangling from her wrist.

It was the children's first plane ride, and upon arrival they were in awe of the long summer days in the prairies - not to mention the 24-hour electricity.

The trip, however, was a tall order. Few had any family members with passports or documents, much less their own. It was only after months of work - and what Ms. McIntosh calls a "leap of faith" by two local agencies that offered a grant - that the kids' visit was secured.

"It's kind of an exceptional, once-in-a-lifetime thing," Ms. McIntosh says. "I think there's something that resonates when you hear they want to be artists. They want to be international artists."

The Fringe began last Friday and runs until next weekend. During their two-week stay in Edmonton, the students will perform their plays and sell hundreds of tiny papier-mâché birds and bowls, each hand-made and painted, to raise funds for the school. Tourism - and the wares tourists buy - are major industries in Jacmel. The children view the arts as a livelihood.

And it already is their livelihood: their creations are sold and help form the base of funding for the foundation, started by an American. The Jean Baptiste twins say they like all types of visual art, but both have prominent roles in the folk tales. The school and art are an opportunity in a region with widespread hardship. One child told Ms. McIntosh he'd spend his life in the arts "because then he could eat and have babies."

The school offers at-risk children opportunity they hardly would have had otherwise, says chaperone and ACFFC executive director Georges Metellus. They get education, regular meals and shelter during the day. "Our program is to find poor kids, poor families, street kids, and have them with us, to live the life of a real kid," he says.

Their paintings and sculptures are vibrant, filled with colour and depicting their own lives - Mr. Metellus, for instance, is featured in paintings. American friends urged him to get out of Haiti after the earthquake; he wouldn't leave his job. The Edmonton trip, he hopes, is the first of many for the young artists of Jacmel. "If we can take them around the world, we'll do that. This is a big experience," Mr. Metellus says. "We had a prayer - 'thank you, God, because I didn't expect to visit another country in my life.' So, thank you."

Judy Hoffman

As a founder of Art Creation Foundation For Children, I am so very proud of what these children have accomplished. It is all about them and the fine and caring Haitian staff in Jacmel. For these children to travel on an airplane to a foreign land is beyond my wildest dreams. My dream is that all of our children will eventually have passports and be able to travel. My dream is that there will be more than one trip to Edmonton. My dream also is that we are able to raise enough funds to purchase land and build an arts complex in Haiti in lieu of working out of a rented building in which we are bursting at the seams. Larger building means more children can join our unique program. Please see our website, www.acffc.org and help us to make a difference in the lives of these children and their families. The children at ACFFC, the staff and the families and neighbors of the children and staff mean that we are directly impacting close to 1000 people in Jacmel - that means food, clean water, help with housing, microloans for small businesses to families, etc. If you google Jacmel Project at The Globe and Mail, you will see other articles about ACFFC and these youth and images they took which were also published. Special thanks to the folks at Fringe. Special thanks also to the folks at Rio Terrace Elementary School who found ACFFC unrelated to the Fringe initiative and had a party for the Edmonton9 upon their arrival. Thank you to all.

 

HOME


 
>