Haiti
– January 20 2020
Trafficked after the Haiti earthquake – A child’s story
Ludginie Jovin may never fully understand her parents’ trust in the strangers who led her away as a frightened child. Sadly, the chaos that followed the 2010 Haiti earthquake created an opportunity for those without the best interests of children at heart.
Ludginie Jovin was only 12 years old when the Haiti earthquake struck 10 years ago—leaving her city in ruins and Haiti’s society in chaos.
When a group of people from the United States offered to take her abroad for a better life, her parents agreed.
“I remember it as if it happened today,” says Ludginie, now 21. “I left my home with strangers who said they were taking me to the U.S. My parents agreed that I leave, since they had lost everything in the earthquake and had no money to support me.”
To be given up so easily was traumatizing, Ludginie says. “They handed me over with no guarantee that they would ever see me again. I have often thought about the ease with which my parents were willing to believe in these strangers’ motives.”
The group also attempted to smuggle 32 other young boys and girls out of the country and into the Dominican Republic. They were intercepted at the border, and all the children came to live with an SOS family at our SOS Children's Village in Port-au-Prince Santo. But not before a frightening ordeal where police stopped their bus and took them to the police station.
Ludginie remembers being held in a juvenile facility for two days before welfare authorities arranged for her to move to SOS Children’s Villages Haiti. She was cared for by her SOS mother, Rachelle, for two months while SOS worked to reunite her with her grandparents. Her parents, now separated, have their own lives apart from her, she says.
“When I arrived [at the SOS Children's Village] I was frightened and stressed because I didn’t know what was happening to me,” recalls Ludginie. “I did not sleep the first night I arrived. But I remain very grateful to my SOS mother Rachelle. She reassured me until my fears faded away.”
After a few days, Ludginie began to settle in to her new home and make friends. She keeps in touch with many young people she met there, who she still calls “my brothers and sisters.”
She also recalls some of the counseling activities that helped her, and the other children, recover from the trauma of the quake and being separated from their parents.
Her childhood experiences have left her resolved to never repeat her parents’ mistakes. “This taught me that I have to prepare before I have children of my own,” she said. “I have to be able to provide for a child, to avoid what happened to me 10 years ago.”
The chaos in the aftermath of the January 2010 Haiti earthquake created an opportunity for unscrupulous individuals to exploit the most vulnerable. The number of desperate parents who were convinced to let their children leave with strangers after the earthquake is “the saddest lesson of this catastrophe,” says Celigny Darius, National Director of SOS Children’s Villages in Haiti.
SOS played a key role in protecting children from being trafficked out of Haiti into the Dominican Republic in the immediate aftermath of the disaster. In the months and years since, we have reunited children with their families, rebuilt schools, and helped families and communities recover from the tragedy.
Learn more about our work in Haiti