The Batey Relief Alliance
The Batey Relief Alliance (BRA) is a non-profit, non-political, humanitarian aid entity uniting grassroots groups, faith-based organizations, government agencies, and the international community in a strategic partnership to help create a productive and self-sufficient environment, through health care and development programs, for children and their families severely affected by poverty, disease, and hunger in the Caribbean.

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Dr. Paul Nacier joins BRA’s board membership

At an annual board meeting of the Batey Relief Alliance held on December 27, 2003, Dr. Paul Nacier, a member of the Association of Haitian Physicians Abroad (AMHE), was voted in as the organization’s newest board member. “Dr. Nacier demonstrates great commitment to the mission of the BRA and the plight of thousands in the bateyes,” said Carol King, President of the Batey Relief Alliance.

Dr. Nacier’s first rapport with the BRA took place about two years ago when he set up a joint health care mission for members of the AMHE with the BRA. Since then, Dr. Nacier has helped recruit each year more than 17 health care providers from the AMHE to provide short-term care during missions to the bateyes. “I am honored to work with Dr. Nacier who shows great concern for the needs of the batey population,” said Dr. Raymond Thertulien, Medical Director of the Batey Relief Alliance.

Dr. Nacier will serve as a liaison for the BRA with the AMHE, and assist in the recruitment of volunteer health care providers and fundraising.

BRA adds ambulance into its Humanitarian Health Care System

As part of its humanitarian health care invention in the bateyes of the Dominican Republic, BRA has secured an ambulance to provide emergency transport services to the impoverished population.

The donation of the ambulance was arranged by the Wallkill Valley Rotary Club in New Jersey — a donation from the Mountain Creek Ski Resort. “The ambulance will be stationed in the bateyes to provide free services to the impoverished in case of an emergency,” said Ulrick Gaillard, Executive Director of the BRA. “Each year, too many people lose their lives senselessly in the bateyes simply because there is no emergency transportation system established to rush them into a nearby hospital. The ambulance will help save lives,” added Gaillard.

The ambulance will also be providing emergency services to the rest of the province of Monte Plata wherever needs are warranted. “Even though the ambulance is retired, it is still in good shape. The engine is fine,” said Alexis Horvarth, co-chair of the Rotary’s Ambulance Project Committee. “At first, the Rotary wanted to send the ambulance to Brazil, but there was so much red tape to get trough, it didn’t work out,” Horvath said. But then, John Rovetto, Rotary President, met Ulrick Gaillard of the Batey Relief Alliance.

According to Ulrick Gaillard, the ambulance will be shipped with the assistance of Food for the Poor from a Newark port in New Jersey to the Dominican Republic where the country’s Ministry of Health will grant BRA customs cleareance to get the vehicle out.

The Ambulance project will involves the participation of the local Rotary Club of Arroyo Hondo in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic.

BRA restores the vision of a little boy.
Read the story of Alexi DeLeon.

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During one of the BRA’s Blindness Prevention mission trips in the bateyes in 2001, I was called by one of our onsite volunteer optometrists showing me an eight-year old child with a rare eye disease that required special eyeglasses and high cost treatment. His family was too poor to afford both in the Dominican Republic. As a result, Alexi was raised with limited vision and could not do the normal things other children do. The doctors offered BRA help by diagnosign Alexi’s eyes and providing preliminary treatment — and to custom-make the eyeglasses free for the child in New Hampshire. The child was practically blind. According to Sarah Hudson, the doctor who treated him, “only the glasses could bring back his normal vision.” Three months later, Dr. Hudson called and told me the greatest news, that she was able to make two special glasses. She then shipped them to us in New York to take to Alexi in the batey La Hagua in the Province of Monte Plata. One month later, I traveled to the batey where the mission took place and started to locate the child. I only had one photograph of him when he was being diagnosed. After asking several people, finally I was directed to his small shack where he lived with his grandmother. Both his father and mother had died. I told his grandmother who I was and she bursted into tears when I explained to her what I had in my hands — two pairs of glasses for Alexi. She shouted, calling the entire community to witness the miracle that was about to happen — that her grand child is about to receive the gift of life, his vision back. Men, women and children all stood by watching in suspense me handing one of the pairs to the child to fit in his eyes. Hesistatingly, Alexi put them onto his eyes and said, “I Can See!, I Can See!, I Can See!…look at me, I Can See!” He started to run uncontrollably, grabbed a small ball and threw it at another kid. The who community was in joy to see that one of their children will now be able to play, read and write. “We too were happy that our eye care intervention made a difference,” said Ulrick Gaillard, BRA’s Executive Director.

THE PROGRAM: Thanks to generous grants from the Riverside Church in New York, the Federal Association Order of Malta, Lions Clubs International, the New Jersey Lions EyeGlass Recycling Center and the Sisters of Charity of Leavenworth, BRA is now restoring and protecting vision for hundreds of impoverished residents in the bateyes through its Blindness Prevention Program.

The program entails training local health promoters and teachers to do eye basic screenings on children and adults. Detected cases of basic eye problems are referred each week to our volunteer optometrists who performs other tests or prescribes eye glasses. Sunglasses are also donated to patients. Cases of cataracts or glaucoma that require surgeries are referred to volunteer ophthalmologists to perform the surgeries. Many children and adults in the bateyes and other urban living sectors are rapidly losing their eye sights due to poor diet, unprotected exposures to sun glare or diseases. Caract is now the leading cause of blindness in the Domincan Republic. Most people living in the bateyes cannot afford a pair of eye glasses or treatment because of poverty. As a result, generations of these individuals will lose their chance of going to school, learning new professional skills or becoming productive for their families and communities. BRA’s Blindness Prevention Program helps reverse that possibility by providing permanent care through its Mobile Health Clinic and eye care missions.

The BRA’s Blidness Prevention Project is also supported in donated medicines, eyeglasses, sunglasses and equipment by the Alcon Laboratories, Catholic Medical Mission Board and New Jersey Eyeglass Recycling Center.

Your support is too critically needed as it will help a child see so that he/she can play and learn like other children. We also need volunteer ophthalmologists and optometrists to perform eye surgeries and to provide care. For a donation or volunteer opportunity, please contact Ulrick Gaillard at bateyrelief@mindspring.com or (917) 627-5026.

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United States
Batey Relief Alliance, Inc.
P.O. Box 300565
Brooklyn, N.Y.
11230-5656 USA
Tel: (917) 627-5026

Dominican Republic & Haiti
BRA Dominicana, Inc.
Avenida Winston Churchill
No. 71
Edificio Lama, Suite 212
Piantini, Santo Domingo
Republica Dominicana
Tel: (809) 540-4947
Fax: (809) 540-0786

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