Kay Tita partners with MUCE, Magic City Innovation District, and Impact Hub Port-au-Prince
for a day of celebration to support the restructuring of Haiti for a brighter future as we remember the 10th anniversary of the earthquake in Haiti in 2010.
$1 of every beverage sold will benefit Kay Tita, a sustainable community resource organization that cultivates partnerships, raises capital and facilitates impact investing opportunities in Port-au-prince.
Inspired by true events, LALO’S HOUSE, follows the relentless courage of Manouchka, a 14-year-old Haitian girl, and her 5-year-old sister, Phara, who are abducted and thrown into an underground prostitution network that is posing as a Catholic orphanage. Forced to grow up prematurely, Manouchka must fight to save Phara and escape.
Run Time: 26 minutes
High in mountains of Haiti in one of the last remaining forests two families struggling to survive, one is family of birds on the brink of extinction and one is a family of farmers struggling to feed their children. Haitian Biologist Anderson Jean tells a poetic story of this rural community’s resilience and their connection to the bird called the Diablotin (Black-Capped Petrel) that chooses this country and this community as it’s home.
This film was made for the community of Boukan Chat, Haiti and first screened in that community in Creole.
Run Time : 9 minutes
Kay Tita partners with The Vera Project, Konbit Cafe, Breach Barista Collective and 100 For Haiti to remember the community and the people affected by the 2010 Earthquake. Kay Tita has curated a series of Haitian films guaranteed to leave a mark on our hearts and to keep Haiti and the communities always on our minds. The series is paired by two first responders, David (Kay Tita Executive Director) and Greg (100 For Haiti )
Come early and enjoy, Haitian Coffee and Pastries served by the team at Konbit Cafe ( Kay Tita’s first community cafe a space dedicated to supporting the work they are fostering throughout Port-au-Prince)
Inspired by true events, LALO’S HOUSE, follows the relentless courage of Manouchka, a 14-year-old Haitian girl, and her 5-year-old sister, Phara, who are abducted and thrown into an underground prostitution network that is posing as a Catholic orphanage. Forced to grow up prematurely, Manouchka must fight to save Phara and escape.
Run Time: 26 minutes
Why would 5 & 8-year-old Haitian children climb to a remote cave to pledge their allegiance to a baby bird called “the little devil”? After years of hard work, the rural Haitian community of Boukan Chat has adopted the Diablotin (Black-Capped Petrel) as a symbol of their resilience. In partnership with humanitarians, conservationist, biologists, educators, filmmakers, and soccer players this community produces an annual festival in honor of the bird on the brink of extinction that lives alongside them. The celebration includes a difficult climb for next Haitian farmers (5-8 years old) to meet the next Diablotin chic’s in annual sign of solidarity
Run Time : 9minutes
High in mountains of Haiti in one of the last remaining forests two families struggling to survive, one is family of birds on the brink of extinction and one is a family of farmers struggling to feed their children. Haitian Biologist Anderson Jean tells a poetic story of this rural community’s resilience and their connection to the bird called the Diablotin (Black-Capped Petrel) that chooses this country and this community as it’s home.
This film was made for the community of Boukan Chat, Haiti and first screened in that community in Creole.
Run Time : 9 minutes
Follow David Pierre-Louis, a mission-driven, Haitian-American entrepreneur based out of Seattle, WA as he journeys to find his mother in Haiti after the devastating 7.0 magnitude earthquake of January 12, 2010. While immersed in the ruins, he fights to fill the gaps left by the Haitian government & various NGOs.
A TALK BACK WITH MARK GOODNOW & DAVID PIERRE-LOUIS
Run Time: 50 minutes
An intimate conversation with David Pierre-Louis, Executive Director of Kay Tita and Greg Bennick of One Hundred For Haiti.
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One Hundred For Haiti creates and supports long-term social development and human rights programs related to water safety, roof construction, feeding the hungry, and sexual assault prevention in rural Haiti. We are driven by the requests and needs of the people we serve.
High in mountains of Haiti in one of the last remaining forests two families struggling to survive, one is family of birds on the brink of extinction and one is a family of farmers struggling to feed their children. Haitian Biologist Anderson Jean tells a poetic story of this rural community’s resilience and their connection to the bird called the Diablotin (Black-Capped Petrel) that chooses this country and this community as it’s home. This film was made for the community of Boukan Chat, Haiti and first screened in that community in Creole.
Run Time : 9 minutes
Inspired by true events, LALO’S HOUSE, follows the relentless courage of Manouchka, a 14-year-old Haitian girl, and her 5-year-old sister, Phara, who are abducted and thrown into an underground prostitution network that is posing as a Catholic orphanage. Forced to grow up prematurely, Manouchka must fight to save Phara and escape.
Run Time: 26 minutes
Follow David Pierre-Louis, a mission-driven, Haitian-American entrepreneur based out of Seattle, WA as he journeys to find his mother in Haiti after the devastating 7.0 magnitude earthquake of January 12, 2010. While immersed in the ruins, he fights to fill the gaps left by the Haitian government & various NGOs.
Run Time: 50 minutes
A magnitude-7.0 earthquake that struck Haiti on the afternoon of January 12, 2010, was one more disaster in a country that had suffered from decades of political, economic, and social setbacks and inequalities.
With approximately 3 million people affected, this earthquake was the most devastating natural disaster ever experienced in Haiti, the poorest country in the Western Hemisphere. Roughly 250,000 lives were lost and 300,000 people were injured. About 1.5 million individuals were forced to live in makeshift internally displaced person camps. As a result, the country faced the greatest humanitarian need in its history.