February 20, 2010 11:21 PM

Haiti Kids With Baptists Weren't Orphans

(AP)  There is not one orphan among the 33 children that a U.S. Baptist group tried to take from Haiti in a do-it-yourself rescue mission following a devastating earthquake, The Associated Press has determined.

In a visit Saturday to the rubble-riddled Citron slum where 13 of the children lived, parents who gave their children away confirmed that each one of the youngsters had living parents.

Their testimony echoed that of parents in the mountain town of Callabas, outside the capital of Port-au-Prince, who told the AP on Feb. 3 that desperation and blind faith led them to hand over 20 children to the religious Americans who promised them a better life.

Now the Citron parents worry they may never see their children again.

Complete Coverage: Devastation in Haiti

One mother who gave up all four of her children, including a 3-month-old, is locked in a trance-like state but sometimes erupts into fits of hysteria.

She and other parents said they relinquished their children to the U.S. missionaries because they were promised safekeeping across the border in a newly established orphanage in the Dominican Republic.

Their stories contradict the missionaries' still-jailed leader, Laura Silsby, who told the AP the day after her arrest that the children were either orphans or came from distant relatives.

"She should have told the truth," said Jean Alex Viellard, a 25-year-old law student from Citron who otherwise expressed admiration for the missionaries.

He took them cookies, candies and oranges during their nearly three weeks of detention before eight of the 10 were released Wednesday on their own recognizance and flew home to the United States.

Silsby, who has told the AP she is 47 although other sources give her age as 40, and her assistant, Charisa Coulter, 24, remain jailed as the investigating judge interviews officials at the orphanages the two visited prior to the devastating Jan. 12 quake. They are set to appear in court again Tuesday.

As they left the jail and boarded a U.S. Embassy van, the freed Baptists waved and thanked Viellard, who later called them "great people who were doing good for Haiti."

The Americans, most from an Idaho church group, were charged with child kidnapping for trying to remove the children without the proper documents to the neighboring Dominican Republic in the post-quake chaos.

Silsby had been working since last summer to create an orphanage. After the quake, she hastily organized a self-styled "rescue mission," enlisting missionaries from Idaho, Texas and Kansas.

She was led to Citron by Pastor Jean Sainvil, an Atlanta, Georgia-based Haitian minister who recruited the 13 children in the slum. Sainvil had been a frequent visitor to the neighborhood of unpaved streets and simple cement homes even before more than half of the houses collapsed in the quake.

"The pastor said that with all the bodies decomposing in the rubble there were going to be epidemics, and the kids were going to get sick," said Regilus Chesnel, a 39-year-old stone mason.

Chesnel's wife, 33-year-old Bertho Magonie, said her husband persuaded her to give away their children - ages 12, 7, 3, and 1 - and a 10-year-old nephew living with them because their house had collapsed and the kids were sick.

"They were vomiting. They had fevers, diarrhea and headaches," she said, leaning against the wall of the grimy two-room hovel the couple shares.

In a telephone interview from the United States on Saturday, Sainvil confirmed the Chesnels' story. He said a collapsed building adjacent to where the children lived held six or seven corpses.

He said he first met Silsby on Jan. 27 in the town of Ouanaminthe on the Haiti-Dominican border and agreed to help her collect children for a 150-bed orphanage the Americans were establishing near the beach resort of Cabarete in the Dominican Republic.

Sainvil, a former orphan who says his nondenominational Haiti Sharing Jesus Ministry has 25 churches in the countryside, said the two agreed to meet again in Port-au-Prince on Feb. 13 to get more children.

The day after he met Silsby, Sainvil collected the 13 children from Citron. A day after that, the missionaries' bus was halted at the Dominican border and they were arrested. Sainvil, meanwhile, became sick with vomiting and diarrhea and decided to fly back to the U.S. on a military transport plane, he said.

He denied leaving out of fear he might be arrested.

"I wasn't doing anything wrong," he said.

Sainvil said what Silsby was doing did not constitute adoption "because the parents had the right to go visit their children or take them back when their situation changed."

The pastor said his deeds are often misunderstood by people in the developed worked who don't realize that more than half of the 380,000 children in Haiti's orphanages are not orphans. Many have parents who - even before the quake - were simply unable to care for them.

The problem is that some of the "orphans" end up as sex slaves or are given jobs doing housework in exchange for food and shelter - and sometimes school. It is precisely because of that problem that, after the quake, Haiti's government banned all adoptions except those approved before the disaster.

Sainvil said he went to Citron for children because he knew people there were desperate: He had been sleeping under tarps with them. Food was barely trickling in, medical care was just becoming available and hundreds of decomposing bodies were buried beneath the neighborhood's collapsed homes.

Under one of the blue tarps sheltering the Chesnels' homeless neighbors, 27-year-old Maletid Desilien lay Saturday on a bed of two soiled rugs. Only her eyes peered out from under a bedsheet.

"She has been like that ever since someone told her she will never get the kids back," said her husband, Dieulifanne Desilien, who works in a T-shirt factory.

That was eight days ago. Most of the time she lies catatonic, he said, warning a reporter not to go near because she periodically has fits.

"She would get up, take her clothes off and run around pulling her hair out," Desilien, 40, said of his wife. "She would jump up from sleep and say, 'Bring me my kids."'

He said she only calms down and is able to sleep after speaking by phone with her children, who are at an orphanage in the capital run by the Austrian-based SOS Children's Villages charity.

The day they arrived, orphanage officials said, the Desiliens' 3-month-old daughter, Koestey, was so dehydrated she had to be hospitalized. The other children are ages 7, 6 and 4. Their father - but not their mother - has visited them.

Desilien said a police commander has assured him that he will get the children back. The Social Welfare ministry, however, has yet to decide whether some or all of the 33 children will be returned to their parents.

"My wife is sick so I have to find a way to get the children back," Seselien said.

© 2010 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Add a Comment See all 28 Comments
by KeithDrippingSprings February 26, 2010 9:25 PM EST
Fundamentalist anything are dangerous, Christian, Muslim, Sikh, Hindu, it really doesn't matter. All of them are going to be really pissed off when they get to Heaven and we are all there.

Life would be better all over the world if the fundamentalist would all go to their final reward that they are always talking about.
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by lbinx February 22, 2010 10:54 AM EST
It is very common in Haiti for destitute families to give their children over to others to care for them. (Google "Restaveks" to read about this.) Unfortunately, the Restavek children are sometimes treated poorly, but remember the words "destitute parents." And remember a horrendous earthquake with no food or shelter available.

Also remember that Haitians constantly try to leave the country. Ideally they would all move to the USA but the Dominican Republic is a favorite escape also. Short of leaving, the next best plan is to have their children adopted out of Haiti. It is a horrible place. I have been there twice.

The orphanage in DR was actually started in the fall of 2009 though yet uncompleted. Allowing American Christians to give hope to their children seems normal in the Haitian culture.

Also note that many, many American Christians have traveled to Haiti over the years and built schools, orphanages, water wells, agricultural endeavors, medical attention, hospitals, etc. Most of this effort has been accomplished with donated funds from Christian churches and Christians individuals who give their own time and money freely. The Haitians are a grateful, intelligent and fun people who understand and appreciate American Christians better than some Americans do.

Although these particular American Christians may not have followed procedures in this case, given the turmoil at that time, I believe their intentions were honorable and in the best interest of the children and their parents.

It is amazing that Americans who are enjoying the best country in the world, use every opportunity to pounce on those who are trying to help the people in Haiti and even invoke blind and baseless accusations of kidnapping, money grubbing and even drug dealing to bolster their own prejudices against the Christian community. It is great that Christians continue to help regardless of criticism from others and the tainted sensationalism of the news media.
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by jankebenzone February 22, 2010 2:02 PM EST
Very thoughtfull post, atheists of course, will attack your observations because of their lack of values,hope, and purpose. Misery begets misery
by tbird6740 February 21, 2010 2:51 PM EST
We've already heard that these kids weren't really orphans! Is CBS just trying to rehash the same information so they can keep posting what would appear to be "new" articles? What needs to thoroughly looked into next is what Laura Silsby had originally planned to do in opening up an "orphange" in Kuna, ID. If SOME reporter could get to the bottom of THAT, there would be a whole slew of answers uncovered. Never mind that Eric Evans said he never spoke to anyone from the Wall Street Journal. That quote about Sislby's "multi-million dollar" complex in Kuna came from SOMEWHERE! The connection between HER and someone else who would be familiar with operating a money-making "christian" children's home, like Lester Roloff, Mack Ford, and Jack Patterson (who is actually going to trial next month in AL) is THERE! How come no one is looking for it?
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by TVO1CITW February 22, 2010 8:36 AM EST
I would add that they need to find out why parents were so ready to give thier kids up so soon after the earthquake. It must have been pretty bad before, too. The government of Haiti doesn't have high marks and no one is really reporting that either.

The Lester Roloff "Christian" children home is one that I am very familiar with. The concept laid out to restructure these kids life was right and I personally know 3 kids that were better for it. It was almost military, like some of the TV shows that claim that they change kids, too. They just didn't cuss and scream at the kids. They were not rich and Roloff lived very meger, too. With any organization, there were those who did not meet the standard and some of the ways they did things caused questions. The government tried to force Roloff to implement their failed programs and he refused and went to jail. His concept was not perfect and very legalist, however, many found sucess. Not every program works, that's why most prisoners cannot be reformed.
by formrusmcsgt February 21, 2010 1:23 PM EST
by sheplover February 21, 2010 11:43 AM EST
Some evangelicals think its their responsibility to "save" as many people as they can...
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Maybe because they're programmed every Sunday that such is the case?
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by formrusmcsgt February 21, 2010 1:22 PM EST
by linfinster February 21, 2010 11:03 AM EST
People of God...loss of reality.
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Those who profess beliefs in invisible beings and invisible places are fugitives from reality....
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by sheplover February 21, 2010 11:43 AM EST
Some evangelicals think its their responsibility to "save" as many people as they can...people in need are the easiest target. They did n't care about the parents, they cared about getting as many kids away from "voodoo"...I don't think it was trafficing, just stupid evangelicals making fools out of themselves.
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by Farver4girls February 21, 2010 11:31 AM EST
The children should be returned to their parents because Laura Silsby lied to them. Laura took advantage of these unfortunate parents during their time of need.
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by linfinster February 21, 2010 11:03 AM EST
What a crazy story!! People of God, questions of motive, stories of need and greed, loss of reality.
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by kbbpll February 21, 2010 10:59 AM EST
What happened to their first "lawyer", who is wanted in El Salvador for human trafficking and whose wife is in jail there?

Silsby is a scammer looking to milk the charity racket. Her role model is probably the Feed the Children organization. Do a lot of research before making donations to any of these groups.
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by babooph February 21, 2010 9:03 AM EST
Delusional ,seems to be a legal excuse in the code Napoleon....
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