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 safe, productive and self-sufficient environment, through health care, education and development programs, for children and their families severely affected by extreme poverty, disease, and hunger in the United States and the Caribbean.

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Guzman_Twins__baby_on_left_has_AIDS_.jpgSince 2003, the Batey Relief Alliance, through its regional arm inside the Dominican Republic, the BRA Dominicana, delivered permanent health and HIV/AIDS care and social services inside the bateyes of the Dominican Republic through its 30-foot, fully-equipped mobile clinic (stationed at batey Cojobal) and a network of community-based health promoters. BRA’s health services are highly concentrated in the province of Monte Plata – but also expand into the border areas of Haiti through various local partner non-government organizations (NGOs) and government agencies.

Batey (ba-tay) is the Taino Indian word used in pre-Columbus era for a village attached to sugar cane plantations. The Dominican Republic continues to use the term into the 21st century as State-owned rural sugar plantations designed to house Haitian migrant sugar cane cutters and their descendents. Today, most of the Dominican’s sugar mills have been closed leaving tens of thousands in the batey(es) unemployed and in horrific living conditions. There is often no water, latrines, electricity or garbage collection. Access to healthy food, medicine, medical care, and employment is extremely limited, while malnutrition and disease are rampant. People in the bateyes must bear the additional burden of discrimination and fear of deportation to Haiti—a result of the deep-seated anti-Haitianism that has persisted in the Dominican Republic for years. Generations of Dominican children born of undocumented Haitian parents are prohibited by the State from obtaining a birth certificate making it difficult to attend school. The marginalization coupled with extreme poverty makes it difficult, if not impossible, for batey residents to access health services outside of their communities.

Haiti and the Dominican Republic combined account for more than 75% of all HIV cases in the Caribbean region – and the second highest to sub-Saharan Africa. Migration on the island of Hispaniola between Haiti and the Dominican is highly politicized and often under regulated. The people living in the bateyes are among the most affected by HIV/AIDS in the Western Hemisphere. A recent study found that 8.8%, or approximately 1 in 11, of women in the bateyes are HIV-positive, as compared to a prevalence of 1.25% among low-income women in the Dominican Republic. This has already had a devastating impact on these communities, leaving behind orphans who may or may not be infected, as well as unstable family units.

The issues surrounding HIV/AIDS in the bateyes are complex; they are impacted by social-economic and political structures such as unemployment, migration, discrimination, stigma, and gender inequality that require solutions that reach beyond the boundaries of health care. BRA’s insight into the broader, structural issues, along with its humanitarian mission to provide health care as well as social services inside the bateyes, underlies its HIV/AIDS intervention.

BRA’s community-based approach to health and HIV care starts with organizing and training 127 volunteer health promoters who work in over 32 batey communities. The promoters, who are members of the communities, provide culturally-oriented education and counseling on HIV/AIDS, including prevention of vertical transmission, and health wellness issues – and referrals to BRA’s health services in a community of over 200,000 people. At the mobile clinic, teams of health professionals (foreign volunteers and local providers) deliver primary care, essential medicines, and preventative health services to residents including the special services of optometry, gynecology, and HIV/AIDS and Tuberculosis.

Beginning in 2004, BRA brought additional resources to HIV-positive people in the bateyes. It offers free health care to AIDS patients inside their own communities including treatment for opportunistic infections and HIV counseling and testing at its mobile clinic; facilitates transportation to sites where specialized care, CD4 tests and antiretroviral drugs are available; and assists patients with nutrition and hygiene. The children too receive medical care and medicine, nutrition and clothing, hygiene and dental education and treatment, and toys.

Through a two-year long project funded by USAID/Family Health International, BRA is commissioned, under the “Rainbow” HIV/AIDS prevention program, to identify and provide care to 1,700 people: 100 pregnant women, 200 people living with HIV/AIDS, 1,000 children, orphans and vulnerable individuals, and 400 affected individuals living with HIV patients. The program also teaches about HIV/AIDS prevention and treatment in schools and churches, unite individuals affected by HIV/AIDS through workshops for and home visit to patients and their families, and provide vocational training to people living with HIV/AIDS.

With the support of the Dominican Ministry of Health/DIGECITTS, the William J. Clinton Foundation, and the Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health, BRA will soon be expanding the services available to HIV/AIDS patients at its new health center at batey Cinco Casas. The health center, uniquely positioned to serve the people of the bateyes from inside the communities themselves, will be offering a cadre of medical and psychosocial services especially for HIV/AIDS including, for the first time to batey AIDS sufferers, antiretroviral treatment.

BRA has already made great strides in providing batey-based solutions to address the health and HIV/AIDS care needs of these marginalized communities. In order to continue serving this population, BRA necessitates continued awareness and support for its mission. For more information about BRA’s HIV/AIDS program inside the bateyes, visit www.bateyrelief.org.

By Morgan Chessia & Chitra Akileswaran
Graduates of Brown University
BRA’s volunteers on HIV/AIDS matters – 2006-2007
BRA’s Mobile Health Clinic
Batey Cojobal, Province of Monte Plata
© Batey Relief Alliance 2006

Child in the batey.gif
The Overseas Child Sponsorship (OCS) is a program designed by the Batey Relief Alliance (BRA) to provide concerned individuals with the opportunity to help improve basic living conditions for children affected by disease, poverty or hunger in the Caribbean. Jhensi Duran, in the picture, is only two years old and already underwent last year a life-saving open heart surgery. He and hundreds of other children need your help.

The children of the batey
More than 200,000 people of African descent languish inside the bateyes of the Dominican Republic in precarious conditions without access to adequate shelter, nutrition, sanitation facilities – electricity, running water, education or medical care. These rural communities known as bateyes are isolated sugar cane plantations labor enclaves set up to house Haitian migrant cane cutting workers. Today most of the Dominican Republic’s sugar mills have been closed leaving thousands unemployed and in horrific living conditions. Extreme poverty, discrimination or fear of deportation often prevents the population from freely participating in the Dominican mainstream society. Most no longer have links to Haiti.

The situation inside those bateyes is a humanitarian crisis of a unique proportion as generations of Dominican children born of undocumented Haitians are prohibited from obtaining a birth certificate making it difficult to attend school or access health services. At a young age, malnutrition, parasitic ailments, diarrhea, and other preventable diseases plague many Dominican and Haitian children. Others are left abandoned or orphaned as their parents are infected by or have succumbed to HIV/AIDS. Many children struggle daily just to survive as shoe shiners, windshield wiperers or beggars. Without alternative support, these children are prone to remain permanently in this vicious cycle of poverty.

The sponsorship and its benefits
Your sponsorship provides a chance for the batey children to achieve their desired potential, live with dignity, and participate fully in their own communities. Being a sponsor affords you the unique opportunity to save a child while knowing that you are contributing to his/her future.

Through a sponsorship commitment of just $29 a month, you can give a batey child hope by helping with life-enhancing benefits such as food, clothing, medical care, and the opportunity to become literate. Your sponsored child will also be encouraged by the knowledge that someone really cares. BRA is a 501c3 organization, and the cost of your sponsorship is IRS-approved tax-deductible.

A nurturing relationship
BRA promotes and coordinates letters and photos exchanged between sponsors and the children benefiting from sponsor support. This relationship of hope and encouragement is nurtured by sponsors receiving personal communications from the children, as they love to hear from caring people like you. When necessary, your letter will be translated at the BRA project serving your sponsored child. Periodically, BRA will arrange visits to the bateyes so you can personally meet your sponsored child.

Project organization
The Batey Relief Alliance’s regional arm in the Dominican Republic, BRA Dominicana, is the organization on the ground to identify and serve the beneficiaries, coordinate correspondence, and to ensure a lasting relationship between the children and their sponsors. We encourage you to contact BRA and learn how you can become a sponsor. Ulrick Gaillard, Batey Relief Alliance, P.O. Box 300565, Brooklyn, N.Y. 11230. Tel, 917.627.5026, Email, childsponsor@bateyrelief.org. Visit us at www.bateyrelief.org.

Equal opportunity
The BRA’s Child Sponsorship Program addresses the socio-economic needs of all children living in the Dominican Republic’s bateyes regardless of race, sex, creed, national origin, religion or legal status.

OVERSEAS CHILD SPONSORSHIP
Sponsorship Registration Form

Please copy/detach and return
===============================================================================
Sponsorship Information
Type of friend you want to sponsor:
[ ] male [ ] female
[ ] infant 5 to 6
[ ] child 6 to 12
[ ] teenager 12 to 18

Sponsor Information
Full name: ________________________________________________________________________________

Mailing Address:___________________________________________________________________________

City:__________________________________________State:______ZIP:_____________________________

Dayphone:_______________________________Email:____________________________________________

Comments
__________________________________________________________________________________________

__________________________________________________________________________________________

__________________________________________________________________________________________

__________________________________________________________________________________________

Forms of Payment
I wish to pay by [ ] check or [ ] money order: [ ] $348 for one year [ ] $174 per six months. Enclosed is my tax-deductible check or money order payable to Batey Relief Alliance.

Payment
Please mail out your payment payable to Batey Relief Alliance, P.O. Box 300565, Brooklyn, N.Y. 11230. All payments are considered gifts to BRA and are therefore IRS-approved tax-deductible.

BRA will not share with, rent or sell your personal information to any outside source. BRA understands that the privacy of your personal information is important to you. We adhere to confidentiality standards to protect your personal information. Your personal information is maintained by BRA only to provide you with services you have requested.

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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.
Max Enriquez Urena, No. 80
Edificio Enca, Suite 302
Sector Piantini, Santo Domingo
Republica Dominicana
809.540.4947 Phone
809.540.0786 Fax

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