This report comes from Sr. Pat Dillon, RJM, a Quixote Center partner in Gros Morne, Haiti.
In April 2024 we began a last-minute effort to salvage some of the delicious, nutritious mangoes which are the main cash crop of Gros Morne. It is from the mangoes which ripen from April to August that small-scale growers earn the money to buy food for their families, send their children to school and pay for health care. However, this was the second year in a row that the growers could not sell to the exporters, who are their main buyers, due to the extreme insecurity in Haiti and cancellation of their export contract with the USDA.
The Notre Dame de la Chandeleur parish Caritas asked the Quixote Center, which was working on having the export contract renewed, to find funds to buy the local mangoes and donate them for school children. The amazing response to Quixote fund raising made it possible to buy and distribute just under 20,000 dozen (230,000 mangos). Everyone involved played an important role, and we send a huge thank you from our parish and from the growers, truck drivers, and happy eaters. Note: local truck drivers have been severely impacted because gangs have blocked the national road system.
Because the time was so short, the parish used the mango sale system that was in place for exporting. We used the donated exporter's local facility for collecting, washing and sending off the mangoes. Then the Gonaives affiliate of the Haitian Religious Conference oversaw the distribution with the pickup point principally at the Viatorian's school, CIC.