Learning Her Stories – Expanding Our Consciousnesses
March 04, 2010
Marie Carmèle Rose-Anne Auguste – Haiti
March is Women’s History Month, and it is an excellent time to remind us of the need to expand our consciousness as humans by learning some of her stories – about individuals who have helped to shape our collective realities, our connected futures, and the future of our global community.
Because of the recent earthquake in Haiti, the world’s response for Haitian relief, and the growing awareness of the need to rebuild Haiti’s infrastructure, it seems an appropriate time to learn more about some of the women of Haiti and their stories.
Thus, I became interested in learning more about her stories in Haiti. There are so many remarkable women and men to learn about, and I could not help but wonder why I did not know more about their stories and how their stories connect with our stories before now.
I was particularly touched by the story of Rose-Anne Auguste. From the reports about her, Rose-Anne Auguste was born in November 1963 in Jeremie. She studied at Port-au Prince’s Lucien College and earned her baccalaureate degree in 1984, and in 1988, she earned her nursing diploma from the National School of Nursing. The more I learned about Ms. Auguste, the more I compared her life to what was happening in my life in the 1980’s—it was evident that we were worlds apart in much more than geography.
Rose-Anne Auguste’s career seems to have included working in a number of non-governmental agencies in Haiti. What appears to be different in her life from most of our lives is that she lived through a military coup in 1991 and is reported to have risked her safety to rescue patients from the State University Hospital and keep the hospital operating.
In the Reebok Human Rights Programs website, they state that the State University Hospital was Haiti’s only trauma facility, and this facility was shut down sometime during the coup. The website states, “ a nurse and a human rights activist named Rose-Anne Auguste took an axe, broke the door, and reopened the hospital. She convinced a number of physicians and nurses to work with her and acted as de facto hospital director for several days until she was removed by the military. But that didn’t deter her commitment to providing health care for poverty stricken Haitians.” *
In 1992, Rose-Anne Auguste founded the Women’s Health Clinic, in association with Partners in Health Organization. My daughter, Madelyn, was about three years old then, and I was working at Edinboro University in Pennsylvania—separated by geography and an awareness of their stories and some of their struggles in Haiti. In 1994, Rose Ann Auguste was awarded the Reebok Human Rights Award; it is reported that she donated this award to support destitute women in Haiti. Today, Rose-Anne Auguste is reported to live in Canada.
What touches me about the story of Rose-Anne Auguste is her courage in face of personal danger and her persistent attempts to improve health care and to eliminate human rights abuses in Haiti. During her acts of courage, Rose-Anne Auguste was a young woman. Getting to know her story helps to underscore our global connectedness. There are reported to be about half a million Haitian Americans in the United States of America. There are many more stories we need to know! Think what learning these stories could mean to my 20 year old daughter and her generation!
*http://www.reebok.com/Static/global/initiatives/rights/awards/recipients/auguste.html
Tags: Haiti , healthcare , human rights , Rose-Anne Auguste
COMMENTS
P R E V I O U S P O S T S
- President's Blog - April 2013 - CU Transforming to Produce A Quality Education for the 21st Century
- President's Blog - March 2013 - Our Daughters and The Broadening of The Talented Tenth
- President's Blog--January 2013--Our Collective Action is Required
- President's Blog - February 2013 - Helping Others Reach Their Potential
- Thoughts for a Really New Year
- HBCUs – A Village of Choice for Some
- Cheyney University – 175 Years of Access, Opportunity, and Excellence
- A Fork in the Road ...
- The Unleveled Playing Field
- 100 Black Men: Fathers and Husbands Working for A Better Tomorrow
A R C H I V E
- April 2013
- March 2013
- February 2013
- January 2013
- December 2012
- November 2012
- September 2012
- August 2012
- July 2012
- June 2012
- May 2012
- April 2012
- March 2012
- February 2012
- January 2012
- December 2011
- November 2011
- September 2011
- August 2011
- June 2011
- May 2011
- April 2011
- March 2011
- February 2011
- January 2011
- December 2010
- November 2010
- October 2010
- September 2010
- August 2010
- July 2010
- June 2010
- May 2010
- April 2010
- March 2010
- February 2010
- January 2010
- November 2009
- October 2009
- September 2009
B L O G S B Y T A G
175th, 21st century, 21st Century graduates, access, achievement gap, alumni, athletic hall of fame, athletics hall of fame, BBBS, Bennett College for Women, Big Brothers and Big Sisters, Bill Cosby, black history, black males, blog, Bond Hill, budget cuts, butterfly effect, Call Me MISTER, centers of excellence, Cheyney University of Pennsylvania, City Year, college, college board, commencement, cost of higher education, education, education challenges, education crisis, educational enterprise, excellence, fall, featured, Gaston Caperton, giving back, global citizens, graduating seniors, Haiti, hall of fame, Harrisburg, healthcare, heroines, homecoming, homecoming 2010, human rights, Humphrey Scholars, Humphrey’s Hall, Inaugural Speech, intellectual capital, James Dumpson, Keystone Honors Program, legacy, legacy breakfast, life long learning, Mayor Nutter, Michael Nutter, Michelle Howard-Vital, Michelle R. Howard-Vital, minority males, NEED, negro educational emergency drive, opportunity, pathways to excellence, president, President, President Barak Obama, President Michelle R. Howard-Vital, President's blog, President's Blog, renovations, residence hall, retirement, Rose-Anne Auguste, scholarships, social media, strategic plan, student engagement activities, student organizations, study abroad, Sylvester Pace, teachers, thanksgiving, The Bond, The Pact, The Talented Tenth, The Three Doctors, transformation, transition, university college, Vital, Vivian Stringer, W.E.B.Dubois, We Beat The Streets, welcome, women history month, youth


