Haiti: Worship Services Continue Amid Political Violence

Miami, Florida, USA | 25.02.2004 | ANN/APD | International

While there are news reports that rebels in Haiti threaten to overtake the capital city of Port-of-Prince, Seventh-day Adventist members continue to worship.

With a membership of more than 260,000 adult baptized Adventists, Pastor Israel Leito, president of the church in Inter-America, said although communication in some areas has been scarce, he is in touch with church leaders in Haiti.

"There are no casualties among members, and our properties have been spared thus far," said Leito. "Communication with the rebel-held territory is impossible, therefore we don't know much of what is happening in Gonaives."

Pierre Caporal, youth director for the church in Haiti, reported that at the church's Inter-American regional offices, in spite of the difficult situation in Gonaives where the church's Northwest Adventist Mission office is located, employees are making their way into the office to ensure there is a presence.

Churches throughout the country are holding services during the daytime on Sabbaths only, and Sunday and Wednesday evening services have been cancelled, particularly in Gonaives and Cap-Haitien, which are the most politically violent cities right now, Leito said.

The church's university, hospital, and radio station in Port-au-Prince are all walled in and away from the center of the city and continue to run as usual, according to Leito.

"We pray that the Lord will continue to protect them," he said. "We'll continue to monitor the situation in Haiti."

Plagued by political crisis for years, Haiti is located in the western one-third of the island of Hispaniola in the Caribbean, west of the Dominican Republic, and has a population of more than 7.5 million. [Editor: Libna Stevens for ANN/APD]

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