Haiti Film - Watch “The Road to Fondwa” and Donate:

Haiti Film - Watch “The Road to Fondwa” and Donate:


UPDATE 01/22: Direct from Fr. Joseph, a list of urgently needed supplies and services in Fondwa.

UPDATE 01/19: Urgent Need for the Association of Peasants Fondwa (please click to read a direct message from Fr. Joseph sent Tuesday 1/19 at 9am.)

In response to the tragic earthquake Haiti has suffered, we are contributing 100% of the proceeds from Road To Fondwa sales to Haiti earthquake relief efforts in the area of Fondwa, Haiti.

Since we began working on The Road to Fondwa more than 3 years ago, we have had 3 core goals:

1. To spread the word about Fondwa’s alternative vision for sustainable development;
2. To present a realistic view of Haiti;
3. To increase collaboration with and financial support for the people of Fondwa, and Haiti in general.

To purchase a film and support Haiti relief efforts, please click here.

Consider picking up a pack of 10 or more DVDs/CDs to share with friends or to re-sell as a fundraiser for Haiti relief. For purchases of 10 or more units we are selling them at our own cost (break-even) in order to make this option as accessible as possible. See: bulk purchasing to learn more.

Screenings: Help to raise funding and awareness for Haiti by screening The Road to Fondwa at your school, church, business, book club, etc. We are building a map of screenings around the world, let’s fill it up! Click here for specific instructions on how to set up a successful screening!

Once you’ve seen the film, we would love to hear what you think via Twitter (@roadtofondwa), e-mail, or facebook!

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Reactions to The Road to Fondwa (add your own in the comments below):

“Finally, a documentary that shows Haiti’s potential and the potential within us all. As a Haitian it made me proud, and as a human being it made me want to dance!”

- Carine Fabius
Owner, Galerie Lakaye Haitian Art Gallery, Los Angeles, CA.

“The Road to Fondwa is a wonderful movie that transports viewers along several intersecting routes– a jarring road to awareness of Haiti’s harrowing poverty and of the heavy burden of US responsibility for creating it; an uplifting path to appreciation of Haiti’s heroic history and indomitable spirit of resilience and resistance; and an inspiring runway to action in solidarity with Haitians’ determined efforts to build a road to a better future for all.”

- Andrew Marx
Director of Communications
Partners in Health

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Stand With Haiti

Please also consider donating directly to Partners in Health (PIH), an organization very worthy of your financial contributions - they are leading the medical response throughout Haiti (the “donate now” button above goes directly to them).

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{ 6 comments… read them below or add one }

Adam Starr January 15, 2010 at 12:12 pm

The Road to Fondwa is an astounding triumph for any documentarian, especially the young team of first time filmmakers behind Fondwa. The film is both inspiring and informative, beautifully photographed, paced, and worth watching again with family and friends. You can’t consider yourself a global citizen if you fail to learn about and help other members of your larger community. Watching the The Road to Fondwa is one such avenue to that empowerment.

Ray Torres January 16, 2010 at 1:27 pm

Thanks, Justin. I want to show this at my church. For update on Fondwa check out http://www.piphaiti.org

Tjebbe van Tijen January 16, 2010 at 3:49 pm

Just tried to look at your Road to Fondwa documentary… on vimeo… als half way there were many technical problems… could have been the traffic (that would be a good sign)… but maybe it is a technical problem…. can you check it? it start when the lady tells about her work on the market…. digital blocks fill the screen, sound stutters , later the complete sound falls out…

I like to post a small description of your video as I liked your approach to show the back country…. as another focus than the bidonville misery…

I prefer the vimeo format over the Youtube… as your movie needs the high resolution

Ryan @ Red Cross in DC January 18, 2010 at 7:48 pm

GREAT EVENT tonight (1-18-10) in Washington DC. Thanks for putting it on. Your all great people.

Holly Cotter January 20, 2010 at 5:14 pm

I just finished watching this video, and reading the letter update from Fr. Joseph, and it has brought tears to my eyes.

The hope, the dedication, the vision, and the time all those people put into making things better… and then to have it taken away overnight. Getting to know those people thru the video has made this tragedy even more real to me. And, I’m left with a sense of sadness at what has been lost, endless awe of the strength and dedication shown by the people in the film, and a heart full of hope that things will be rebuilt even better than before.

Thank you for sharing the Haitian situation in such a loving way, and for showing all of us that there is ALWAYS a way each individual can make a difference.

Sarah February 6, 2010 at 10:45 am

Thank you for this beautiful ticket to Haiti. Past the images that bombard our television screen, this documentary filled me with a true sense of HOPE.
I am currently teaching a course called Contemporary Global Literature at a high school in Connecticut, and in studying Danticat and “the butterfly’s way”, an anthology of Haitian authors, I was trying to find a documentary to give my students a visual of Haiti. The Road to Fondwa has been an invigorating expereince. This documentary has not only made the recent tragedies more real, but has given me new hope in the human spirit. Although Haiti is a nation that has struggled and will continue to struggle, the people, the landscape, the history; all of these things give me a reason to keep my head high for the future. Through this documentary, hope has been rekindled. Fondwa and its people are a model for not only Haiti but for our global community.

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