New York City is home to one of the largest Haitian communities outside of Haiti — more than 140,000 individuals — the vast majority of whom live in Brooklyn and Queens. As we continue to learn of the hundreds of thousands of people killed, injured and displaced as a result of the earthquake that devastated Port au Prince on January 12, 2010, it is apparent that the impact of this catastrophe extends well beyond Haiti’s shores, penetrating into one or our City’s most vibrant and under-resourced communities. Addressing the immediate and long-term needs of New York City’s Haitian communities will be an immense task.
The Brooklyn Community Foundation and United Way of New York City have established the NYC Haitian Community Hope & Healing Fund to address the short and long-term needs of individuals, families and communities in the New York City area affected by the earthquake in Haiti. The Fund provides financial support and critical resources to local nonprofit organizations that are attuned to the needs of their neighborhoods; it focuses on strengthening these organizations so that they can most effectively serve the anticipated increased number of people who need assistance with immigration, grief and trauma, job training, housing, English language acquisition and more over the coming months and years.
The Hope & Healing Fund will support: