ANNUAL REPORT 2023

A WORD FROM OUR LEADERSHIP TEAM

Founder & Executive Director, Conor Bohan
& Country Director, Garry Délice

When the first scholarship was given and the idea for HELP was born, over 25 years ago, the concept was simple. Allowing talented students from deeply disadvantaged backgrounds to pursue higher education would break the cycle of poverty and begin to build a critical mass of educated professionals and leaders who could create change in Haiti.   

Out of that simple idea has grown a dynamic program, counting over 300 graduates and currently offering over 200 students the best education, leadership development, and professional training available in Haiti. HELP students’ days are full of learning and community in the classroom, in HELP dorms and, in internships around the country and beyond.   

HELP’s alumni contribution program, “KOREM”, grew out of this focus on community, leadership, and future-building.  When we saw that HELP graduates were earning almost ten times the national average salary(!), we looked for ways to ensure that some of the wealth generated through the program could be re-invested to support more students. Following the first contribution in 2015, KOREM slowly gathered steam: total donations eventually reached $100,000 and then $200,000 and now approach $300,000; alumni began fully sponsoring students in 2019 (now six!); and in 2023, the first of those KOREM-sponsored students graduated, her entire university education funded by HELP students who had gone before her. We like to say that KOREM turns beneficiaries into benefactors in a few short years.  

And so, with your support, HELP has grown to encompass so much more than a scholarship, yet the idea is still simple: giving talented young people access to higher education creates countless opportunities for themselves, their families, their communities, and their country.  Thanks to you, promising students who just a few years ago could barely afford a bus fare, let alone tuition, are now opening doors for others like them, empowered by a HELP education and the faith you place in them.   

KOREM recipient and contributor Wilnise Meus (computer science ’23) puts it best when she says, “KOREM is a beacon of light, a chain of mutual support and success where each supported student becomes an inspiration and encouragement. My gratitude to this community is infinite.”   

Read on to learn more about what KOREM’s virtuous circle is doing for students and graduates alike.  

Yours in that same gratitude,  
Conor & Garry

OUR WORK

The Haitian Education & Leadership Program (HELP) provides needs-based university scholarships to high achieving students in Haiti, building a community of professionals and leaders who contribute to a more just society.

For over 25 years, our programs have been changing the stats for Haiti’s students. From enrollment to graduation, and even long-term economic impacts to their communities, our students consistently reach higher and achieve more.

THE NEXT GENERATION: ALUMNI-SPONSORED STUDENTS

  • “August 16th, 2019. I will never forget,” beams Wilnise, recalling the day she received her HELP acceptance letter. A pensive pause follows, Gonaïves’ barking dogs and evening traffic filling the video conference line. Wilnise, in her momentary silence, seems to reflect on the long history of personal trials that preceded that sublime moment: her father’s passing when she was five; she and her three siblings surviving on their mother’s $50-dollar-a-month salary at a school cafeteria; the dark day when, returning from school, she was shot in her right arm, caught in the crossfire of a conflict between two men. She had walked the rest of the way to her home in Cité Soleil and waited for her mother to return from work. Wilnise nods and the line crackles. “Yes,” she continues, reflecting on her acceptance letter, “I was really happy to see that my dream would be realized.”  

    Four years on from that day, Wilnise holds a BS in Computer Science and a job in IT management. She also holds a special distinction among her peers: she is the first graduate whose studies were funded entirely by her HELP predecessors through the alumni giving program entitled “KOREM,” derived from the Créole expression “Kore’m map Kore’w,” or “Support me and I will support you.” Born in 2010, this program sees all incoming HELP students sign a contract by which they commit to contribute 10 percent of their gross income to HELP for at least 8 years on the labor market. Since the first contribution in 2015, the program has generated over $270,000 for HELP.  

    To Wilnise, though, this impressive number does not convey the alumni giving program’s true value: “One dollar given by a graduate is worth much more than just one dollar. It’s a concrete testimony of the solidarity within the alumni community.” Like all graduates, Wilnise was allowed a three-month grace period from her first paycheck before beginning her contributions to HELP. She is quick to set the record straight, however: “I didn’t even wait,” she explains proudly. “I wanted to start my contributions immediately.” Furthermore, Wilnise tripled her required donation amount, returning 30% of her monthly salary to HELP.   

    Wilnise’s contributions will enable her successors to benefit from the same HELP programs that have enabled her to graduate and thrive in her first job as IT Manager at Lidé, a young women’s development and empowerment program in Gonaïves. She oversees Lidé’s day-to-day IT operations, including IT security and helps to build the IT curriculum and infrastructure for Lidé’s participants. “HELP played a key role in preparing me for my career,” Wilnise says. “The internships and projects put my theoretical knowledge into practice, effectively preparing me for the professional world now.” Wilnise’s preparedness is evident not only in the knowledge with which she discusses her work, but also in the glowing reviews of her colleagues. “HELP graduates do extraordinary work. One can see Wilnise’s expertise in everything she does,” says Wilnise’s supervisor Adonai Laguerre.   

    At the heart of Wilnise’s performance on the job are a tenacious work ethic and boundless enthusiasm for her field: “I love everything about data,” she proclaims. With hallmark HELP endeavor, Wilnise has undertaken her own initiatives outside of work to advance her knowledge in computer science. In addition to her full-time job, she is pursuing a master’s degree in information technology from California-based University of the People, which she attends remotely on a merit scholarship, and she follows additional online courses through the DataCamp educational platform. 

    In December 2023, Wilnise returned from Gonaives to Port-au-Prince for her graduation ceremony alongside 34 of her peers. In the afterglow of the ceremony, Wilnise, donning HELP’s vibrant green cap and gown, took stock. “Before HELP, I was a little girl with only a dream, but I didn’t know how or when or where I would realize it. But now I can see that I can face anything that life throws my way.”  

    As Wilnise turns her attention again to the future, she imagines not only the possibilities illuminated by her HELP predecessors through their alumni contributions, but also the opportunities she can illuminate for the next generation of HELP students: “The alumni giving program is a beacon of light. It creates a chain of mutual support and success where each supported student becomes a source of inspiration and encouragement. My gratitude to this community is infinite. I will strive to perpetuate its spirit in my career and beyond.” 

  • Jephté

    Jephté is one of six scholars fully supported by HELP’s alumni contribution program. Studying economics, Jephté hopes to work in agricultural enterprises, helping boost employment and food security at the same time. “I, myself, have experienced hunger, and I can tell you, it is not an easy thing,” he says.

  • Youveline

    Dynamic and engaged, Youveline is in her third year studying industrial engineering. Her values of hard work and dedication have led her to maintain a merit scholarship from the age of eight through high school, and into college with HELP where she is now supported by the contributions of HELP Alumni!

“Thank you is not enough to say to HELP and its donors. I guarantee you that your support is not in vain; the quality of people that HELP offers to society proves that. I feel privileged to have been able to count on you to help us make an impact in Haiti.”  

- Jean Benito Anty (finance ’23)

Our Donors

Thanks to our generous donors HELP’s students and programs are thriving. Incredible supporters like you - hailing from all over the world - are making sure that HELP is able to co-create a better future for the students and citizens of Haiti. 

Before HELP, I was a little girl with only a dream, but I didn’t know how or when or where I would realize it. Now I see that I can face anything that life throws my way… My gratitude to this community is infinite. I will strive to perpetuate its spirit in my career and beyond.”

– Wilnise Meus (computer science ’23)

FINANCIALS

We are pleased to present HELP’s audited 2022 financial statement. HELP’s fiscal year runs from August to July.

 

HELP drastically changed the course of my life.  HELP allowed me to do three things: study education at university, start a community teacher training project, and build the foundations of a fulfilling career.

– Bessy Jeudilus (education ’23)

Special Thanks to Our Board Of Directors

  • Roger Célestin

    PRESIDENT

  • Rev. Dr. Rick Barger

    VICE PRESIDENT

  • Derek Jean-Baptiste

    TREASURER

  • Sandra Anojulu

    SECRETARY

  • Dan McDonough Jr.

    DIRECTOR

  • Helen Bodian

    DIRECTOR

  • Marc Alain Boucicault

    DIRECTOR

  • Karl Fils-Aimé

    DIRECTOR

& The Haiti Advisory Board

  • Monet Goode

  • Stephan Coles

  • Darline Alexis

  • Carel Pedre

  • Danielle Saint Lot

  • Winifred Ulysse

  • Nathalie Brunet

  • Kesner Pharel