Author: Kathleen Chaykowski

  • FACE AIDS, Stanford raise $50k for Haiti

    With the help of several hundred Stanford students, FACE AIDS has reached its $50,000 fundraising goal for Haiti relief efforts, the group said yesterday.

    The Stanford-founded group hit $50,000 late Friday night. Sterling Stamos, a Menlo Park-based investment firm, matched the goal, resulting in a total donation of $100,000 to Partners in Health, an international organization that provides medical care in Haiti, Rwanda and other nations.

    The partnership between FACE AIDS and Partners in Health was formalized with the launch of an ASSU fundraising Web site last week.

    FACE AIDS launched the Haiti fundraising initiative on Jan. 16 in response to the magnitude 7.0 earthquake that devastated the country four days earlier. The $50,000 goal was reached in fewer than seven days, with a total of 970 people donating $51,099.82 to the FACE AIDS account on the ASSU Haiti Web page.

    “I was ecstatic,” said FACE AIDS Executive Director Julie Veroff ’07. “I couldn’t believe we met the goal so quickly. I really like that it was such a community-wide effort.”

    Patricia Arty ’10, FACE AIDS development director, believes that the success of the fundraising goal can be attributed to students’ attitudes and the participation of the ASSU.

    “The ASSU efforts were extraordinary, especially in matching FACE AIDS with a beneficiary,” Arty said. “Doubling the money and having a deadline was a great way to get people to donate now, and not put it off and forget about it.”

    The ASSU fundraising effort has raised more than $2,600 since the $50,000 goal was reached last Friday. Stanford affiliates continue to donate on the ASSU site.

    “The response from the Stanford community has been tremendous,” said ASSU President David Gobaud, a coterminal student in computer science. “The money keeps coming in.”

    Brandon Jackson ‘12, one student who donated to the FACE AIDS effort, remembers watching news coverage of the Haiti quake in a hotel room when he was traveling with the Stanford men’s basketball team two weeks ago. An interview with a survivor left an impression on him.

    “Hearing a survivor speak made me think about how blessed we are at Stanford,” Jackson said. “We need to remember that even a little bit makes a big difference.”

    The nationwide college fundraising challenge Stanford joined has raised more than $250,000, including FACE AIDS matching funds, with 25 colleges pitching in since the site was launched last Sunday.

  • Groups gather for Haiti Focus

    About 30 Stanford students, administrators and staff gathered in the Black Community Services Center (BCSC) on Friday for the first Caribbean Student Association (CSA) Haiti Focus Group.
    The Focus Group was a brainstorming session on how to best organize relief efforts within the Stanford community and Silicon Valley area, but also to provide support for students who were personally affected by the disaster. Many of the students present were Haitian or had family living in Haiti.
    “I’m from Puerto Rico, and I’ve been seeing this image and thinking, ‘This could have been my island,’” said Gabriela Spencer ’11, who led the CSA event. “This is very relevant to Stanford students because it could have been the Bay Area<\p>–<\p>it’s hard for students to see that.”
    Leaders from all corners of the Stanford campus, including representatives from FACE AIDS, Sigma Gamma Rho, the HAAS Center, administrators, the Stanford News Service and Stanford Libraries, also attended the event.
    “CSA doesn’t have the answers,” Spencer said. “But we’re here to get ideas.”
    Attendees gathered in a large circle and soon learned that many students had very personal connections to the disaster.
    “I have family who are displaced,” said Faradia Pierre ’12, a first generation Haitian American. “Some of their homes are still standing, but they’re afraid to go in because they might collapse. Right now a lot of people are living outside of their homes on the street.”
    The event concentrated on developing strategies to move forward. Attendees pitched ideas for raising funds and providing aid.
    Some of the ideas included putting on a benefit concert with a recommended donation, setting up collection boxes similar to those used by UNICEF in student dorms, donating meals through the Stanford meal plan and finding companies in Silicon Valley to match Stanford donations.
    “People need daily necessities right now,” Pierre said. “Everything about daily life is completely destroyed. Schools are destroyed; students are not going to school.”
    Other ideas included an internship or abroad program specifically targeted to reconstruction in Haiti, a campus-wide collection of clothing, goods and baby supplies, creating a Haitian exhibit in Old Union and showing a Haitian documentary at Aquarius Theater in Palo Alto to raise awareness.
    One theme of the event was to think beyond the fiscal resources at Stanford.
    “It’s important to think about the capital at Stanford,” said Jan Barker-Alexander, director of BCSC. “But there is something else to think about in terms of what Stanford has to offer, which is intellectual capital.”
    Alexander offered Harvard and MIT as examples of educational communities that have succeeded in bringing intellectual resources to previous disaster areas, particularly the involvement of their architecture and policy programs in New Orleans.
    “We are the future<\p>–<\p>future policy makers and doctors,” Pierre said. “With our successes, we are benefitting other people in the end.”
    Many branches from around the Stanford campus are launching their own projects in response to the crisis.
    According to Sally Dickson, associate vice provost for student affairs, students at the Stanford Law School are collaborating on a Haitian immigration project.
    Stanford alums have also mobilized to address the crisis. Luke Beckman ’09 and Josh Nesbit ’09, currently stationed in Haiti, have been working in the technology and strategic planning division of Innovative Support to Emergencies, Diseases and Disasters (InSTEDD), an international, non-profit humanitarian organization, to facilitate the organization of aid and reconstruction on the ground.
    As a national response liaison, Beckman has been coordinating efforts between the U.S. State Department, the U.S. Military, the Haitian government, mapping agencies, technology companies, the United Nations and other NGOs.
    “My job is to support all of these different networks by keeping everyone in the loop,” he said.
    Beckman’s team is currently working on creating a texting hotline, a “shortcut” for Haitians so they can report problems and communicate with a network of thousands of volunteers.
    “We had a big win yesterday,” he said. “The top five Haitian officials didn’t have phones, and President Obama wanted to talk to them<\p>.<\p>.<\p>.<\p>through collaboration, we got phones to them and now they’re on the phone with President Obama,” he said.
    Conditions for Beckman’s team have been nothing short of difficult. The island lacks enough water, security and most imaginable resources.
    “If you can imagine it, it’s probably an issue,” he said.
    “Most of us on the team have had four hours of sleep in two days,” he added. “We’re running on adrenaline now.”
    Beckman specifically noted the country’s lack of infrastructure as a major setback to administering aid. The airstrip in the capital of Port-au-Prince was destroyed, and most roads are not navigable, which can make it impossible to transport people and supplies.
    “Seventy percent of the buildings in Port-au-Prince have been destroyed,” he said. “And thousands of people were in those buildings or under them.”
    Although Beckman thinks that chaos will prevail in Haiti for the time being, he is hopeful for the gains to be made during reconstruction. Missing person databases have been created, new medical centers are being formed and sources have collaborated in sharing map imagery.
    “The Haitians I know personally have suffered under a lot of things for a lot of time,” he said. “And they’re still here, and they’re still kicking. They’re a resilient culture.”

    About 30 Stanford students, administrators and staff gathered in the Black Community Services Center (BCSC) on Friday for the first Caribbean Student Association (CSA) Haiti Focus Group.

    The Focus Group was a brainstorming session on how to best organize relief efforts within the Stanford community and Silicon Valley area, but also to provide support for students who were personally affected by the disaster. Many of the students present were Haitian or had family living in Haiti.

    “I’m from Puerto Rico, and I’ve been seeing this image and thinking, ‘This could have been my island,’” said Gabriela Spencer ’11, who led the CSA event. “This is very relevant to Stanford students because it could have been the Bay Area–it’s hard for students to see that.”

    Leaders from all corners of the Stanford campus, including representatives from FACE AIDS, Sigma Gamma Rho, the HAAS Center, administrators, the Stanford News Service and Stanford Libraries, also attended the event.

    “CSA doesn’t have the answers,” Spencer said. “But we’re here to get ideas.”

    Attendees gathered in a large circle and soon learned that many students had very personal connections to the disaster.

    “I have family who are displaced,” said Faradia Pierre ’12, a first generation Haitian American. “Some of their homes are still standing, but they’re afraid to go in because they might collapse. Right now a lot of people are living outside of their homes on the street.”

    The event concentrated on developing strategies to move forward. Attendees pitched ideas for raising funds and providing aid.

    Some of the ideas included putting on a benefit concert with a recommended donation, setting up collection boxes similar to those used by UNICEF in student dorms, donating meals through the Stanford meal plan and finding companies in Silicon Valley to match Stanford donations.

    “People need daily necessities right now,” Pierre said. “Everything about daily life is completely destroyed. Schools are destroyed; students are not going to school.”

    Other ideas included an internship or abroad program specifically targeted to reconstruction in Haiti, a campus-wide collection of clothing, goods and baby supplies, creating a Haitian exhibit in Old Union and showing a Haitian documentary at Aquarius Theater in Palo Alto to raise awareness.

    One theme of the event was to think beyond the fiscal resources at Stanford.

    “It’s important to think about the capital at Stanford,” said Jan Barker-Alexander, director of BCSC. “But there is something else to think about in terms of what Stanford has to offer, which is intellectual capital.”

    Alexander offered Harvard and MIT as examples of educational communities that have succeeded in bringing intellectual resources to previous disaster areas, particularly the involvement of their architecture and policy programs in New Orleans.

    “We are the future–future policy makers and doctors,” Pierre said. “With our successes, we are benefitting other people in the end.”

    Many branches from around the Stanford campus are launching their own projects in response to the crisis.

    According to Sally Dickson, associate vice provost for student affairs, students at the Stanford Law School are collaborating on a Haitian immigration project.

    Stanford alums have also mobilized to address the crisis. Luke Beckman ’09 and Josh Nesbit ’09, currently stationed in Haiti, have been working in the technology and strategic planning division of Innovative Support to Emergencies, Diseases and Disasters (InSTEDD), an international, non-profit humanitarian organization, to facilitate the organization of aid and reconstruction on the ground.

    As a national response liaison, Beckman has been coordinating efforts between the U.S. State Department, the U.S. Military, the Haitian government, mapping agencies, technology companies, the United Nations and other NGOs.

    “My job is to support all of these different networks by keeping everyone in the loop,” he said.

    Beckman’s team is currently working on creating a texting hotline, a “shortcut” for Haitians so they can report problems and communicate with a network of thousands of volunteers.

    “We had a big win yesterday,” he said. “The top five Haitian officials didn’t have phones, and President Obama wanted to talk to them…through collaboration, we got phones to them and now they’re on the phone with President Obama,” he said.

    Conditions for Beckman’s team have been nothing short of difficult. The island lacks enough water, security and most imaginable resources.

    “If you can imagine it, it’s probably an issue,” he said.

    “Most of us on the team have had four hours of sleep in two days,” he added. “We’re running on adrenaline now.”

    Beckman specifically noted the country’s lack of infrastructure as a major setback to administering aid. The airstrip in the capital of Port-au-Prince was destroyed, and most roads are not navigable, which can make it impossible to transport people and supplies.

    “Seventy percent of the buildings in Port-au-Prince have been destroyed,” he said. “And thousands of people were in those buildings or under them.”

    Although Beckman thinks that chaos will prevail in Haiti for the time being, he is hopeful for the gains to be made during reconstruction. Missing person databases have been created, new medical centers are being formed and sources have collaborated in sharing map imagery.

    “The Haitians I know personally have suffered under a lot of things for a lot of time,” he said. “And they’re still here, and they’re still kicking. They’re a resilient culture.”