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Citizen Bytes tag:www.cbc.ca,2010-08-05:/news/citizenbytes//244 2011-02-13T23:59:51Z Movable Type Enterprise 4.37 Egypt's new day: Pacinthe Mattar shares her feelings about the country's uprising tag:www.cbc.ca,2011:/news/citizenbytes//244.114185 2011-02-12T20:30:56Z 2011-02-13T23:59:51Z Your Voice  

Pacinthe_bio.JPGBio: Pacinthe Mattar is an associate producer with CBC Radio One's As It Happens. She was born in Alexandria, Egypt, and moved to North York, Ont., when she was three. She left again seven years later to travel to Saudi Arabia, completed high school in Dubai and returned to Canada for her undergraduate and master's degrees. Pacinthe still has family members in Cairo and Alexandria. She contacted the CBCNews.ca community team on Feb. 11, 2011, to discuss what Egypt's democratic uprising meant to her.

My story: People often ask me where home is, and I say Egypt. "Really?" they say, "But you speak English so well." So I explain that I'm an Egyptian who's never lived in Egypt -- I was born in the northern city of Alexandria, but moved away at a very young age. (I also tell them that although it may be hard for them to believe, there are Egyptians who speak "good" English.)

Like many Egyptians who live abroad, I grew up thinking Egypt was just a place I would go to visit family for the summer, but never to live. It just wasn't good enough -- the quality of life, quality of education, right down to the air quality. Never good enough. My parents recognized this and made sure my brother, sister and I got the best of the best around the world. We grew up taking piano lessons and in French immersion schools in North York, horse riding in Dubai, swimming competitively in Saudi Arabia, with trips to Switzerland, Tanzania and Disney World every now and then.

Egypt, or Om El Donya, a term of endearment for Egypt that means "Mother of the World," was a place I would go only for the summer -- to lounge around white sandy beaches, and to visit aunts, uncles, cousins and grandparents who loved us and missed us and wished for nothing more than for us to stay, but who also told us we were lucky we lived abroad (barra), growing up around foreigners, (agaanib).

When I was young, I'd tell them that I'd be back to "fix" Egypt when I was older. I had this feeling that I, along with other Egyptians who grew up abroad, could come back one day and make Egypt better. But the older I got, and with every trip to Egypt, it hit me that it would be impossible to change Egypt. It felt rotten to the core. What could I change? Even if all the Egyptians in the world went back to Egypt to "fix it," what could we do? The answer was: nothing.

But today changes everything.

Today, Egyptians proved that they could, in fact, "fix it." Today, I'm the one who finds myself wishing I was not barra but in Om El Donya. I find myself proud -- prouder than I've ever been of being Egyptian. I find myself thinking that moving back to Egypt can actually be a reality now.

I know so many Egyptians who, like me, adopted Canada, the U.S., or the U.K. as their home because we could never really go home. But today, I feel like I -- like we -- might finally be able to go home. 


Related links:

Egypt protests: Stories from the ground

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Pacinthe_bio.JPGBio: Pacinthe Mattar is an associate producer with CBC Radio One's As It Happens. She was born in Alexandria, Egypt, and moved to North York, Ont., when she was three. She left again seven years later to travel to Saudi Arabia, completed high school in Dubai and returned to Canada for her undergraduate and master's degrees. Pacinthe still has family members in Cairo and Alexandria. She contacted the CBCNews.ca community team on Feb. 11, 2011, to discuss what Egypt's democratic uprising meant to her.

My story: People often ask me where home is, and I say Egypt. "Really?" they say, "But you speak English so well." So I explain that I'm an Egyptian who's never lived in Egypt -- I was born in the northern city of Alexandria, but moved away at a very young age. (I also tell them that although it may be hard for them to believe, there are Egyptians who speak "good" English.)

Like many Egyptians who live abroad, I grew up thinking Egypt was just a place I would go to visit family for the summer, but never to live. It just wasn't good enough -- the quality of life, quality of education, right down to the air quality. Never good enough. My parents recognized this and made sure my brother, sister and I got the best of the best around the world. We grew up taking piano lessons and in French immersion schools in North York, horse riding in Dubai, swimming competitively in Saudi Arabia, with trips to Switzerland, Tanzania and Disney World every now and then.

Egypt, or Om El Donya, a term of endearment for Egypt that means "Mother of the World," was a place I would go only for the summer -- to lounge around white sandy beaches, and to visit aunts, uncles, cousins and grandparents who loved us and missed us and wished for nothing more than for us to stay, but who also told us we were lucky we lived abroad (barra), growing up around foreigners, (agaanib).

When I was young, I'd tell them that I'd be back to "fix" Egypt when I was older. I had this feeling that I, along with other Egyptians who grew up abroad, could come back one day and make Egypt better. But the older I got, and with every trip to Egypt, it hit me that it would be impossible to change Egypt. It felt rotten to the core. What could I change? Even if all the Egyptians in the world went back to Egypt to "fix it," what could we do? The answer was: nothing.

But today changes everything.

Today, Egyptians proved that they could, in fact, "fix it." Today, I'm the one who finds myself wishing I was not barra but in Om El Donya. I find myself proud -- prouder than I've ever been of being Egyptian. I find myself thinking that moving back to Egypt can actually be a reality now.

I know so many Egyptians who, like me, adopted Canada, the U.S., or the U.K. as their home because we could never really go home. But today, I feel like I -- like we -- might finally be able to go home. 


Related links:

Egypt protests: Stories from the ground

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Change in Egypt: Sarah Attia talks about taking her kids to the protests tag:www.cbc.ca,2011:/news/citizenbytes//244.114183 2011-02-12T19:23:53Z 2011-03-11T18:32:01Z Sarah Attia's husband, Khaled, lifts their five-year-old son Abdelrahman up above the crowds of protesters in Tahrir Square. (Submitted by Sarah Attia)Bio: Sarah Attia is a Canadian-Egyptian mother who was born and raised in Toronto and has a master's degree... Your Voice cb-sarah-100_0390.jpgSarah Attia's husband, Khaled, lifts their five-year-old son Abdelrahman up above the crowds of protesters in Tahrir Square. (Submitted by Sarah Attia)

Bio: Sarah Attia is a Canadian-Egyptian mother who was born and raised in Toronto and has a master's degree in chemical engineering from the University of Toronto. She has been living in Egypt for the past six years and works as a teacher and administrator at the Mokatam International School in Cairo. After braving the crowds in Tahrir Square on Feb. 9, she sent the CBCNews.ca community team an email describing what it was like to take her three young children to the protests.

My story: Today, armed with two strollers and a diaper bag, my husband and I took our three kids -- aged one, two and a half, and five -- to Tahrir Square. We were quite the sight amidst the thousands of protesters who smiled to the kids as they waved their Egyptian flags that we purchased on our way in. We were welcomed by everyone and more than 30 people asked to take the kids' pictures and gave them dates and other goodies.

As we stood with the thousands of protesters chanting the slogans against the regime, I was uplifted by the unity and peacefulness of the people in the square. I felt truly content and safe amongst these people whom I had never met before. I could not believe that this was the same spot and the same people that had witnessed bloodshed just a few days ago. At that moment, I decided that I wanted to continue to raise my children in Egypt if these were the men and women that they would grow to be.

Many in Egypt would be completely shocked to hear that I took an infant, toddler and preschooler to Tahrir, but I am truly happy that they witnessed this honourable revolution and saw the exact spot that the brave men and women had stood just days before, defending their rights and freedoms. Similarly, I wanted the world to see that Tahrir Square was not a place of fear, but a place of peace, tranquility and hope.

We are home now and the kids are still chanting the songs that they heard today. Even Fatema, who does not speak yet, is waving her fist as her siblings chant. Abdelrahman drew a large Egyptian flag as soon as we got home and said he would take it to Tahrir tomorrow. And Amena, before going to bed, said: "Bokra haruh tany li masr" ("Tomorrow I will go again to Egypt.")

God willing, in 20 years, in a brighter Egypt, I will tell my children the story of Tahrir Square and the trip we took, and they will tell their children of how they were part of bringing freedom to Egypt.

I urge all to remain patient and steadfast and to join the call for change in whatever way they can -- for the sake of all our children.

Related links:

Egypt protests: Stories from the ground


]]> cb-sarah-100_0390.jpgSarah Attia's husband, Khaled, lifts their five-year-old son Abdelrahman up above the crowds of protesters in Tahrir Square. (Submitted by Sarah Attia)

Bio: Sarah Attia is a Canadian-Egyptian mother who was born and raised in Toronto and has a master's degree in chemical engineering from the University of Toronto. She has been living in Egypt for the past six years and works as a teacher and administrator at the Mokatam International School in Cairo. After braving the crowds in Tahrir Square on Feb. 9, she sent the CBCNews.ca community team an email describing what it was like to take her three young children to the protests.

My story: Today, armed with two strollers and a diaper bag, my husband and I took our three kids -- aged one, two and a half, and five -- to Tahrir Square. We were quite the sight amidst the thousands of protesters who smiled to the kids as they waved their Egyptian flags that we purchased on our way in. We were welcomed by everyone and more than 30 people asked to take the kids' pictures and gave them dates and other goodies.

As we stood with the thousands of protesters chanting the slogans against the regime, I was uplifted by the unity and peacefulness of the people in the square. I felt truly content and safe amongst these people whom I had never met before. I could not believe that this was the same spot and the same people that had witnessed bloodshed just a few days ago. At that moment, I decided that I wanted to continue to raise my children in Egypt if these were the men and women that they would grow to be.

Many in Egypt would be completely shocked to hear that I took an infant, toddler and preschooler to Tahrir, but I am truly happy that they witnessed this honourable revolution and saw the exact spot that the brave men and women had stood just days before, defending their rights and freedoms. Similarly, I wanted the world to see that Tahrir Square was not a place of fear, but a place of peace, tranquility and hope.

We are home now and the kids are still chanting the songs that they heard today. Even Fatema, who does not speak yet, is waving her fist as her siblings chant. Abdelrahman drew a large Egyptian flag as soon as we got home and said he would take it to Tahrir tomorrow. And Amena, before going to bed, said: "Bokra haruh tany li masr" ("Tomorrow I will go again to Egypt.")

God willing, in 20 years, in a brighter Egypt, I will tell my children the story of Tahrir Square and the trip we took, and they will tell their children of how they were part of bringing freedom to Egypt.

I urge all to remain patient and steadfast and to join the call for change in whatever way they can -- for the sake of all our children.

Related links:

Egypt protests: Stories from the ground


]]>
Egypt protests: Jason Stewart shares his experiences tag:www.cbc.ca,2011:/news/citizenbytes//244.112739 2011-02-06T21:39:07Z 2011-02-13T23:35:34Z Tourists make their way to a terminal to attempt to leave Egypt, at Cairo airport, Egypt, Wednesday, Feb.2, 2011. The U.S. began evacuating nonessential government personnel and their families Wednesday, while crowds piled up at Cairo's airport as more than... Your Voice leaving-cairo.jpg
Tourists make their way to a terminal to attempt to leave Egypt, at Cairo airport, Egypt, Wednesday, Feb.2, 2011. The U.S. began evacuating nonessential government personnel and their families Wednesday, while crowds piled up at Cairo's airport as more than 8,000 people played the odds in hopes of securing a seat aboard a commercial airline that would allow them to escape the chaos engulfing Egypt. (Victoria Hazou/ Associated Press)

Bio: Jason Stewart is a Canadian who has been working as a Grade 4 language arts teacher at Misr Language Schools in Cairo, Egypt. In a phone interview with CBCNews.ca, Jason described his experiences as he, his wife and daughter attempted to catch a flight out of Cairo on Jan. 29.

**This interview has been edited for length

My Story:

We had been keeping a close eye on developments in Egypt for a while. After the bombing of a church in Alexandria and the shootings of some Coptic Christians on a train, I had thought that there would be a problem between the Christians and Muslims. As it turns out, it's a political thing.

Jan. 25 is known as Police Day in Egypt, a holiday to celebrate the men in uniform. The police in Egypt had become a symbol of oppression and corruption. After the uprising in Tunisia, the Egyptian people felt emboldened enough to try to make a change of their own.

I have Egyptian friends -- they all felt like [the protests were] going to be just a one- or two-day thing. They didn't think it would be as big as it turned out to be. I think everyone is surprised at the scale of it. Everyone was caught off guard.

At the beginning, it was mostly younger people without jobs taking part, which is why they thought it was just going to blow over -- they thought it was just a student thing.

Something about these protests spoke to people, and I understand where it's coming from, because in my time there, I saw the level of poverty common in Egypt. When you go to stores, there's an Egyptian price for Egyptian products, and then there's a foreign price for foreign products. The difference between the two is unbelievable.

When the protests began, [my wife] and I talked about what would need to happen before we decided to leave. Then, on Friday, the Internet was cut off. As we turned on CNN, we saw things escalating before our eyes. We watched, more concerned, but still didn't feel the need to evacuate the country.

We saw a headline that changed it all for us: "Delta Airlines is cancelling flights into and out of Cairo tomorrow."
 
Right away, we both turned to each other and said, "That's it, we have to get out." At that point, we were actually past the curfew time, so we decided that as soon as the curfew was up, we were going to leave right away.

As luck would have it, one of our neighbours was a taxi driver. [I asked] if he could take us to the airport the next morning, and he agreed.
 
When we got to the airport there were almost no tickets left. Desperation was setting in.

I passed a guard some money and said, "I need a ticket." He nodded, pocketed the bribe and pointed me to another counter. And sure enough, it worked. 

If we didn't have any cash, we would have been stuck. Credit cards weren't working and neither were ATMs. Some of our friends in Egypt were not able to withdraw money from their bank accounts a day earlier. It really put people in a dire situation.

I can't describe the relief I felt as that plane took off with my family safely by my side. The rest of my story consists of mysteriously cancelled tickets in London, misplaced baggage in Toronto and a bag not arriving in Rochester but, as annoying as those might be, I don't care. My family is safe and there are lots of people stuck in the airport in Cairo or sealed inside their homes, living in fear. I can't complain at all.

In the West, we sometimes have this perspective of people in the Middle East being violent or prone to that sort of thing. But they're really fighting for the freedoms we take for granted.

I would hate for people to have this sense of, "Oh that's just the way they are there ... they get upset and fight and kill each other," when it's absolutely not the truth.

I don't think Mubarak will step down. I think it has become an ego thing with him now -- he doesn't want to be deposed. Not because it's the right thing for his country, but because it's right for him. The Egyptian people are not going to accept him anymore, and I guess it really comes down to what the army does. If the army finally says, "That's it, Mubarak must go," then he'll go. If they just stand around and don't get involved -- like they have been -- I think this conflict is going to go on for a long time.

Related:

Egypt: Stories from the ground


]]> leaving-cairo.jpg
Tourists make their way to a terminal to attempt to leave Egypt, at Cairo airport, Egypt, Wednesday, Feb.2, 2011. The U.S. began evacuating nonessential government personnel and their families Wednesday, while crowds piled up at Cairo's airport as more than 8,000 people played the odds in hopes of securing a seat aboard a commercial airline that would allow them to escape the chaos engulfing Egypt. (Victoria Hazou/ Associated Press)

Bio: Jason Stewart is a Canadian who has been working as a Grade 4 language arts teacher at Misr Language Schools in Cairo, Egypt. In a phone interview with CBCNews.ca, Jason described his experiences as he, his wife and daughter attempted to catch a flight out of Cairo on Jan. 29.

**This interview has been edited for length

My Story:

We had been keeping a close eye on developments in Egypt for a while. After the bombing of a church in Alexandria and the shootings of some Coptic Christians on a train, I had thought that there would be a problem between the Christians and Muslims. As it turns out, it's a political thing.

Jan. 25 is known as Police Day in Egypt, a holiday to celebrate the men in uniform. The police in Egypt had become a symbol of oppression and corruption. After the uprising in Tunisia, the Egyptian people felt emboldened enough to try to make a change of their own.

I have Egyptian friends -- they all felt like [the protests were] going to be just a one- or two-day thing. They didn't think it would be as big as it turned out to be. I think everyone is surprised at the scale of it. Everyone was caught off guard.

At the beginning, it was mostly younger people without jobs taking part, which is why they thought it was just going to blow over -- they thought it was just a student thing.

Something about these protests spoke to people, and I understand where it's coming from, because in my time there, I saw the level of poverty common in Egypt. When you go to stores, there's an Egyptian price for Egyptian products, and then there's a foreign price for foreign products. The difference between the two is unbelievable.

When the protests began, [my wife] and I talked about what would need to happen before we decided to leave. Then, on Friday, the Internet was cut off. As we turned on CNN, we saw things escalating before our eyes. We watched, more concerned, but still didn't feel the need to evacuate the country.

We saw a headline that changed it all for us: "Delta Airlines is cancelling flights into and out of Cairo tomorrow."
 
Right away, we both turned to each other and said, "That's it, we have to get out." At that point, we were actually past the curfew time, so we decided that as soon as the curfew was up, we were going to leave right away.

As luck would have it, one of our neighbours was a taxi driver. [I asked] if he could take us to the airport the next morning, and he agreed.
 
When we got to the airport there were almost no tickets left. Desperation was setting in.

I passed a guard some money and said, "I need a ticket." He nodded, pocketed the bribe and pointed me to another counter. And sure enough, it worked. 

If we didn't have any cash, we would have been stuck. Credit cards weren't working and neither were ATMs. Some of our friends in Egypt were not able to withdraw money from their bank accounts a day earlier. It really put people in a dire situation.

I can't describe the relief I felt as that plane took off with my family safely by my side. The rest of my story consists of mysteriously cancelled tickets in London, misplaced baggage in Toronto and a bag not arriving in Rochester but, as annoying as those might be, I don't care. My family is safe and there are lots of people stuck in the airport in Cairo or sealed inside their homes, living in fear. I can't complain at all.

In the West, we sometimes have this perspective of people in the Middle East being violent or prone to that sort of thing. But they're really fighting for the freedoms we take for granted.

I would hate for people to have this sense of, "Oh that's just the way they are there ... they get upset and fight and kill each other," when it's absolutely not the truth.

I don't think Mubarak will step down. I think it has become an ego thing with him now -- he doesn't want to be deposed. Not because it's the right thing for his country, but because it's right for him. The Egyptian people are not going to accept him anymore, and I guess it really comes down to what the army does. If the army finally says, "That's it, Mubarak must go," then he'll go. If they just stand around and don't get involved -- like they have been -- I think this conflict is going to go on for a long time.

If you are watching the protests yourself, let us know what you see, but please do not put yourself at risk to capture these reports.

Your photos and video may be used on-air and in articles as part of CBC News Network's coverage. Here's how you can get in touch with us to help tell this story.

Related:

Egypt: Stories from the ground

]]>
Egypt protests: Mohammed Nour Eldin shares his experiences tag:www.cbc.ca,2011:/news/citizenbytes//244.111209 2011-01-29T21:09:10Z 2011-02-13T23:37:11Z Egyptians surround burned Bab Sharq police station in Alexandria, Egypt, Friday, Jan.28, 2011. Hundreds of anti-government protesters have returned to Cairo's central Tahrir Square and other cities, chanting slogans against Hosni Mubarak . (Ahmed Mohammed/ Associated Press)Bio: Mohammed Nour Eldin... Your Voice citizenbyte-top-image.jpg
Egyptians surround burned Bab Sharq police station in Alexandria, Egypt, Friday, Jan.28, 2011. Hundreds of anti-government protesters have returned to Cairo's central Tahrir Square and other cities, chanting slogans against Hosni Mubarak . (Ahmed Mohammed/ Associated Press)

Bio: Mohammed Nour Eldin is a network engineer in Cairo, and agreed to give his account of the Egyptian protests in a phone interview with CBCNews.ca.

*Note: This interview has been edited for length.

My Story: We basically went to the dark ages here: All cellphones are down, no messaging, no internet service. Yesterday night they blocked texting. Shortly after that, they blocked BlackBerry service and then the internet went down around 12:30 a.m. At noon, around 12:05, they took all cellphones offline.

Nobody has said anything as to when the service will be back. As for the networks, they told us they were forced by the government to take the service down.

Are you participating in the protests?

After Friday prayers, it all started.

Protests started with about 20 people, and as I passed by, people started coming down from their homes, and the crowd grew larger.

Police were shooting tear gas at us, and it escalated to rubber bullets after that. A little bit later on, police officers went and started throwing rocks at us from the top of a bridge. At one point, they started firing in the air to scare us away.

The National Democratic Party building has been burnt down. The fear is that it's right next to the Egyptian Museum. That's what they're concentrating on right now, trying to put the fire out.

When I'm out protesting, I'm not protesting for myself. I seem to get all my rights perfectly. But, you know, there are a lot of people here that are below the poverty line, and life is hard for them.

As major outlets of communication have been shut off in many parts of the country, keeping connected is no doubt an issue. If you know people in Egypt, affected by these protests, tell us what you are hearing through the grapevine.

If you are watching the protests yourself, let us know what you see, but please do not put yourself at risk to capture these reports.

Related links:

Egypt: Stories from the ground


]]> citizenbyte-top-image.jpg
Egyptians surround burned Bab Sharq police station in Alexandria, Egypt, Friday, Jan.28, 2011. Hundreds of anti-government protesters have returned to Cairo's central Tahrir Square and other cities, chanting slogans against Hosni Mubarak . (Ahmed Mohammed/ Associated Press)

Bio: Mohammed Nour Eldin is a network engineer in Cairo, and agreed to give his account of the Egyptian protests in a phone interview with CBCNews.ca.

*Note: This interview has been edited for length.

My Story: We basically went to the dark ages here: All cellphones are down, no messaging, no internet service. Yesterday night they blocked texting. Shortly after that, they blocked BlackBerry service and then the internet went down around 12:30 a.m. At noon, around 12:05, they took all cellphones offline.

Nobody has said anything as to when the service will be back. As for the networks, they told us they were forced by the government to take the service down.

Are you participating in the protests?

After Friday prayers, it all started.

Protests started with about 20 people, and as I passed by, people started coming down from their homes, and the crowd grew larger.

Police were shooting tear gas at us, and it escalated to rubber bullets after that. A little bit later on, police officers went and started throwing rocks at us from the top of a bridge. At one point, they started firing in the air to scare us away.

The National Democratic Party building has been burnt down. The fear is that it's right next to the Egyptian Museum. That's what they're concentrating on right now, trying to put the fire out.

When I'm out protesting, I'm not protesting for myself. I seem to get all my rights perfectly. But, you know, there are a lot of people here that are below the poverty line, and life is hard for them.

As major outlets of communication have been shut off in many parts of the country, keeping connected is no doubt an issue. If you know people in Egypt, affected by these protests, tell us what you are hearing through the grapevine.

If you are watching the protests yourself, let us know what you see, but please do not put yourself at risk to capture these reports.

Your photos and video may be used on-air and in articles as part of CBC News Network's coverage. Here's how you can get in touch with us and help tell this story.

Related links:

Egypt: Stories from the ground
]]>
Egypt protests: Nour Ahmed shares her experiences tag:www.cbc.ca,2011:/news/citizenbytes//244.110933 2011-01-28T13:33:34Z 2011-02-23T23:55:29Z Anti-government protesters gather at Tahrir Square in downtown Cairo on Jan. 25. (Submitted by Nour Ahmed)Bio: Nour Ahmed, 18, is a second-year Psychology student at the American University in Cairo. Following the protests that took place in Cairo, Egypt, on... Your Voice nourphoto1cropped.jpgAnti-government protesters gather at Tahrir Square in downtown Cairo on Jan. 25. (Submitted by Nour Ahmed)

Bio: Nour Ahmed, 18, is a second-year Psychology student at the American University in Cairo. Following the protests that took place in Cairo, Egypt, on Jan. 25, the CBCNews.ca Community team asked her to share her photos and impressions of what she witnessed during the protest. 

My story: January 25th 2011 is a day that will for a fact have a huge impact on every Egyptian one way or another and on Egypt as a whole.

For anyone who doesn't know, that is the Egyptian National Police day and the day Egyptians, in my opinion, got inspired by the Tunisians, and finally spoke out and took a stand against Mubarak's regime.

I got to Tahrir Square at around 4 pm where the protesters had gathered from all around Cairo and were chanting different slogans mostly against Mubarak and the government as a whole and not using any kind of violence.

I started chanting with them and walking around joining different groups of people and running into lots of familiar faces from various social circles as the protesters were from all ages and social classes.

After an hour or so I started hearing loud noises that sounded like bombings but had no idea where it was coming from and suddenly I found myself surrounded by smoke, and people running all around. [There] were tear bombs, thrown at us by police officers. I could barely open my eyes and found it very hard to breathe. Me and my friend held on to each other while being led towards a clearer area by a kind stranger from the back and when we were almost there another tear bomb was thrown right in front of us, so we changed our direction once again.

After a few minutes I could see clearly again but the sight wasn't as good as before, people were scattered all over the place and no longer together. Some fainted and were being carried to the side of the street, others were coughing and rubbing their eyes vigorously. Soon enough we were all gathered in the same place again, thanks to some young men who kept calling on everyone to hold on and go back and not let them win. I was angrier and more determined to make a change. 

Are you participating in the protests? Do you plan on going on Friday?

The government cut almost all internet and cellphone data service early Friday. Social networking sites like Facebook and Twitter were used to spread information about the protests.

Egypt's four primary internet providers -- Link Egypt, Vodafone/Raya, Telecom Egypt, Etisalat Misr -- all stopped moving data in and out of the country at 12:34 a.m., according to a network security firm monitoring the traffic.

CBCNews.ca is looking for stories, photos and videos, if you've got them. (Please do not put yourself at risk to capture these reports). Your photos and video may be used on-air and in articles as part of CBC News Network's coverage. Here's how you can get in touch when internet access is restored.

sendnews-promo1.jpgPhotos: Upload your photos here, add them to our Flickr group or email them to yournews@cbc.ca.

Videos: Upload video here. Please do not add graphics or music to the clip.

Reports: You can also email your reports from the Egyptian protests to yournews@cbc.ca.


Related links:

Egypt: Stories from the ground


]]> nourphoto1cropped.jpgAnti-government protesters gather at Tahrir Square in downtown Cairo on Jan. 25. (Submitted by Nour Ahmed)

Bio: Nour Ahmed, 18, is a second-year Psychology student at the American University in Cairo. Following the protests that took place in Cairo, Egypt, on Jan. 25, the CBCNews.ca Community team asked her to share her photos and impressions of what she witnessed during the protest. 

My story: January 25th 2011 is a day that will for a fact have a huge impact on every Egyptian one way or another and on Egypt as a whole.

For anyone who doesn't know, that is the Egyptian National Police day and the day Egyptians, in my opinion, got inspired by the Tunisians, and finally spoke out and took a stand against Mubarak's regime.

I got to Tahrir Square at around 4 pm where the protesters had gathered from all around Cairo and were chanting different slogans mostly against Mubarak and the government as a whole and not using any kind of violence.

I started chanting with them and walking around joining different groups of people and running into lots of familiar faces from various social circles as the protesters were from all ages and social classes.

After an hour or so I started hearing loud noises that sounded like bombings but had no idea where it was coming from and suddenly I found myself surrounded by smoke, and people running all around. [There] were tear bombs, thrown at us by police officers. I could barely open my eyes and found it very hard to breathe. Me and my friend held on to each other while being led towards a clearer area by a kind stranger from the back and when we were almost there another tear bomb was thrown right in front of us, so we changed our direction once again.

After a few minutes I could see clearly again but the sight wasn't as good as before, people were scattered all over the place and no longer together. Some fainted and were being carried to the side of the street, others were coughing and rubbing their eyes vigorously. Soon enough we were all gathered in the same place again, thanks to some young men who kept calling on everyone to hold on and go back and not let them win. I was angrier and more determined to make a change. 

Are you participating in the protests? Do you plan on going on Friday?

The government cut almost all internet and cellphone data service early Friday. Social networking sites like Facebook and Twitter were used to spread information about the protests.

Egypt's four primary internet providers -- Link Egypt, Vodafone/Raya, Telecom Egypt, Etisalat Misr -- all stopped moving data in and out of the country at 12:34 a.m., according to a network security firm monitoring the traffic.

CBCNews.ca is looking for stories, photos and videos, if you've got them. (Please do not put yourself at risk to capture these reports). Your photos and video may be used on-air and in articles as part of CBC News Network's coverage. Here's how you can get in touch when internet access is restored.

sendnews-promo1.jpgPhotos: Upload your photos here, add them to our Flickr group or email them to yournews@cbc.ca.

Videos: Upload video here. Please do not add graphics or music to the clip.

Reports: You can also email your reports from the Egyptian protests to yournews@cbc.ca.


Related links:

Egypt: Stories from the ground

]]>
Egypt protests: Drew Storey shares his experiences tag:www.cbc.ca,2011:/news/citizenbytes//244.110876 2011-01-27T21:20:28Z 2011-02-13T23:40:11Z Anti-government protesters scattered after police fired tear gas at them during a demonstration in downtown Cairo on Jan. 25. (Nasser Nasser/Associated Press)Bio: Drew Storey, 25, works and lives in Cairo. Originally from the United States, Storey first arrived in Egypt... Your Voice protester-gas-tear.jpg
Anti-government protesters scattered after police fired tear gas at them during a demonstration in downtown Cairo on Jan. 25. (Nasser Nasser/Associated Press)

Bio: Drew Storey, 25, works and lives in Cairo. Originally from the United States, Storey first arrived in Egypt about four years ago to finish his sociology degree and "unexpectedly fell in love with the place." He now works as an editor at an English language newspaper and plans to live there indefinitely. Storey was at the protests in Cairo's Tahrir Square on Jan. 25 and spoke with the CBCNews.ca community team over the phone about his experiences.

*Note: This interview has been edited for length


My story:  I feel as though what's happening here is what's happening to my home -- I almost cried on Jan. 25.

There are protests here all the time. When [people] were talking about Jan. 25, me and lots of other people were like, "it's just another protest, it'll be broken up in a few hours, it won't be a huge turnout, and it'll just be the people that normally turn up."

It wasn't like that. It was wild.

I was at work [when it started] and went immediately afterward down to the square, especially because I lived right by there. At the time I showed up it was generally quite peaceful. People were spreading around different supplies - blankets, water - and there were several different chants going around. It was a gigantic gathering with thousands there. I'd say maybe five people had megaphones.

But eventually the police started to clamp down. They shot off one round of tear gas. It was very mild, and I think it was intentionally mild to gauge how the protesters would respond.

Then the police started to move their trucks forward and people were screaming, "come, come!" in Arabic. That's not something I've ever seen here. The police here are known to be quite brutal, so that's a testament to what the situation is like.

People started throwing empty water bottles at the truck and the police. At one point I was up at the front with the police in their riot gear and it was really interesting to see the interaction between all these people throwing water bottles and the police trying to decide whether to engage.

I remember ... these two police officers at the end of the group had this look of sympathy, like "please, just calm down." It was the most human I've ever seen a policeman here appealing to a civilian. I thought that was cool to see -- to see that some police are still human at their core and affected by this.

The police started shooting out more tear gas. I heard loud explosions. At first no one really budged. Then the first tear gas canister hit around the centre [of the square] and people started to clear the way.

And then, pretty much, the protesters started to take swings at the officers. They responded with their batons, and before I know it, they're shooting off tear gas left and right. People began lifting blocks - random chipped cement blocks - and slamming them to the ground to get rocks to throw at the police. They were wailing them. I'm sitting in the middle of this and debating whether to pick up a rock. Is this my fight or not? I decided not to. I'm not a politically active person. I've never really been in a protest, much less a serious one.

People were just getting hit left and right. Some [injured protesters] were being carried  by five people as they fought off police hitting them batons. Eventually, [the police] were shooting off too much tear gas. I had brought a ski mask which I used to cover my face ... but it was getting to the point where I couldn't see which way I was going. I rushed to find out how to get out of this square.

I ran home, which was like a block away. There was tear gas all around the streets surrounding the square. I got into my flat and found that I had left the window open. There was actually more tear gas in my flat than on the streets I had been running in.

Are you participating in the protests? Do you plan on going on Friday?

The government cut almost all internet and cellphone data service early Friday. Social networking sites like Facebook and Twitter were used to spread information about the protests.

Egypt's four primary internet providers -- Link Egypt, Vodafone/Raya, Telecom Egypt, Etisalat Misr -- all stopped moving data in and out of the country at 12:34 a.m., according to a network security firm monitoring the traffic.

CBCNews.ca is looking for stories, photos and videos, if you've got them. (Please do not put yourself at risk to capture these reports). Your photos and video may be used on-air and in articles as part of CBC News Network's coverage. Here's how you can get in touch when internet access is restored.

sendnews-promo1.jpgPhotos: Upload your photos here, add them to our Flickr group or email them to yournews@cbc.ca.

Videos: Upload video here. Please do not add graphics or music to the clip.

Reports: You can also email your reports from the Egyptian protests to yournews@cbc.ca.


Related links:

Egypt: Stories from the ground

Egypt protests: A roundup of social media reaction



Corrections and Clarifications

  • An earlier version of this entry stated that Drew Storey arrived in Egypt 18 months ago to finish his sociology degree. In fact, Storey arrived in Egypt to finish his degree four years ago and returned to work and live there 18 months ago after spending time back in the U.S. The entry also stated that Storey had used a gas mask during the protests in Tahrir Square on Jan. 25. In fact, he had brought a cloth ski mask. Jan. 31, 2010 | 9:35 a.m. ET






]]> protester-gas-tear.jpg
Anti-government protesters scattered after police fired tear gas at them during a demonstration in downtown Cairo on Jan. 25. (Nasser Nasser/Associated Press)

Bio: Drew Storey, 25, works and lives in Cairo. Originally from the United States, Storey first arrived in Egypt about four years ago to finish his sociology degree and "unexpectedly fell in love with the place." He now works as an editor at an English language newspaper and plans to live there indefinitely. Storey was at the protests in Cairo's Tahrir Square on Jan. 25 and spoke with the CBCNews.ca community team over the phone about his experiences.

*Note: This interview has been edited for length


My story:  I feel as though what's happening here is what's happening to my home -- I almost cried on Jan. 25.

There are protests here all the time. When [people] were talking about Jan. 25, me and lots of other people were like, "it's just another protest, it'll be broken up in a few hours, it won't be a huge turnout, and it'll just be the people that normally turn up."

It wasn't like that. It was wild.

I was at work [when it started] and went immediately afterward down to the square, especially because I lived right by there. At the time I showed up it was generally quite peaceful. People were spreading around different supplies - blankets, water - and there were several different chants going around. It was a gigantic gathering with thousands there. I'd say maybe five people had megaphones.

But eventually the police started to clamp down. They shot off one round of tear gas. It was very mild, and I think it was intentionally mild to gauge how the protesters would respond.

Then the police started to move their trucks forward and people were screaming, "come, come!" in Arabic. That's not something I've ever seen here. The police here are known to be quite brutal, so that's a testament to what the situation is like.

People started throwing empty water bottles at the truck and the police. At one point I was up at the front with the police in their riot gear and it was really interesting to see the interaction between all these people throwing water bottles and the police trying to decide whether to engage.

I remember ... these two police officers at the end of the group had this look of sympathy, like "please, just calm down." It was the most human I've ever seen a policeman here appealing to a civilian. I thought that was cool to see -- to see that some police are still human at their core and affected by this.

The police started shooting out more tear gas. I heard loud explosions. At first no one really budged. Then the first tear gas canister hit around the centre [of the square] and people started to clear the way.

And then, pretty much, the protesters started to take swings at the officers. They responded with their batons, and before I know it, they're shooting off tear gas left and right. People began lifting blocks - random chipped cement blocks - and slamming them to the ground to get rocks to throw at the police. They were wailing them. I'm sitting in the middle of this and debating whether to pick up a rock. Is this my fight or not? I decided not to. I'm not a politically active person. I've never really been in a protest, much less a serious one.

People were just getting hit left and right. Some [injured protesters] were being carried  by five people as they fought off police hitting them batons. Eventually, [the police] were shooting off too much tear gas. I had brought a ski mask which I used to cover my face ... but it was getting to the point where I couldn't see which way I was going. I rushed to find out how to get out of this square.

I ran home, which was like a block away. There was tear gas all around the streets surrounding the square. I got into my flat and found that I had left the window open. There was actually more tear gas in my flat than on the streets I had been running in.

Are you participating in the protests? Do you plan on going on Friday?

The government cut almost all internet and cellphone data service early Friday. Social networking sites like Facebook and Twitter were used to spread information about the protests.

Egypt's four primary internet providers -- Link Egypt, Vodafone/Raya, Telecom Egypt, Etisalat Misr -- all stopped moving data in and out of the country at 12:34 a.m., according to a network security firm monitoring the traffic.

CBCNews.ca is looking for stories, photos and videos, if you've got them. (Please do not put yourself at risk to capture these reports). Your photos and video may be used on-air and in articles as part of CBC News Network's coverage. Here's how you can get in touch when internet access is restored.

sendnews-promo1.jpgPhotos: Upload your photos here, add them to our Flickr group or email them to yournews@cbc.ca.

Videos: Upload video here. Please do not add graphics or music to the clip.

Reports: You can also email your reports from the Egyptian protests to yournews@cbc.ca.


Related links:

Egypt: Stories from the ground

Egypt protests: A roundup of social media reaction


Corrections and Clarifications

  • An earlier version of this entry stated that Drew Storey arrived in Egypt 18 months ago to finish his sociology degree. In fact, Storey arrived in Egypt to finish his degree four years ago and returned to work and live there 18 months ago after spending time back in the U.S. The entry also stated that Storey had used a gas mask during the protests in Tahrir Square on Jan. 25. In fact, he had brought a cloth ski mask. Jan. 31, 2010 | 9:35 a.m. ET






]]>
Updates from Australia: Arthur Boyer tag:www.cbc.ca,2011:/news/citizenbytes//244.105572 2011-01-21T13:54:59Z 2011-01-21T14:11:26Z An entire suburb is submerged outside Ipswich, west of Brisbane, Australia, Wednesday, Jan. 12, 2011. (Associated Press Photo)Bio: Arthur Boyer was born in Thunder Bay, Ont., and studied journalism at Humber College and Ryerson University before deciding to become a... Your Voice

brisbane-floods.jpg
An entire suburb is submerged outside Ipswich, west of Brisbane, Australia, Wednesday, Jan. 12, 2011. (Associated Press Photo)

arthur-bio.jpgBio: Arthur Boyer was born in Thunder Bay, Ont., and studied journalism at Humber College and Ryerson University before deciding to become a paramedic. He took a working holiday at a hospital in Brisbane, Australia, where he met his wife who was training as a nurse. The couple decided to settle in the Brisbane area. Boyer currently works for an engineering firm that makes water tanks and pontoon boats. He will be contributing updates about the flood to the CBCNews.ca Community.

Submitted Jan. 21 (7 a.m. local time) - " Now comes the post-mortem."
 
It has been over a week since the flood, and Brisbane is almost back to normal.  Some vulnerable areas are still cleaning up, but the attention has moved onto the floods in Victoria. The towns of Dimboola and Kow Swamp are being evacuated. Kow Swamp at least sounds flood-prone, but to see Toowoomba, at the top of the Great Dividing Range, hit by a flash flood seems surreal.

I got my personal message of thanks from the Lord Mayor of Brisbane for volunteering, as did the thousands of other volunteers. In fact, so many volunteered that many were sent home. It was very gratifying to see friendships forged and the community strengthened through this common struggle.

Now comes the post-mortem. A broad-ranging inquiry has been formed and all issues are to be aired, including the role of ministers and political leaders in the development of estates in vulnerable areas. It has also been made clear that everything will not be rebuilt.

Some estates may not be rebuilt and bridges may be moved. The Riverwalk (a boardwalk-like promenade over the river) will certainly be rethought. This structure was washed away completely and threatened to take out crucial bridges. I am sure the flood-migration system established after 1974 will receive approval because it certainly did its job.

Another major issue is flood insurance. Few had it because of the prohibitive costs, so there is talk of either making it compulsory or subsidizing premiums. In an ironic twist from nature, some of the houses whose insurance policies did not include flooding were crushed by fallen trees in a violent thunderstorm two days ago. Now they can claim.  Unfortunately, most will have to resign themselves to the loss of many of their possessions. They survived, though, and for a city of over a million to experience such devastation and lose only one life, is just short of a miracle. For which we are all grateful.

Submitted Jan. 14 (11:30 a.m. local time) - "It looks like I can finally be of some help."

ABC local radio has advised that as of today there are 16 confirmed deaths with 53 still missing, mostly from the Grantham area. They have also advised that half of all homes without power have had it restored and we now have 25,000 remaining without electricity.

It looks like I can finally be of some help. Four large gathering points have been established. Volunteers are to collect there and will then be bused to areas in need. Potential volunteers are to flip a coin: heads show up at 7 a.m., tails at noon. I will be going to McGregor High School at noon today. I am not a regular cheerleader for either politicians or authorities but I must confess they have all done a fine job during this crisis.

Submitted Jan. 14 (6:30 a.m. local time) - "Things will return to normal soon, mate."

The cleanup starts now. Brisbane city council is calling for volunteers and has set up a hotline, so I will be off to help all day today. The effort seems well-managed. Authorities are setting up industrial bins everywhere for disposal and have distributed instructions on what to do when. Roads that are open are being kept clear, and crews are clearing debris.

So far, no bodies have been found in Brisbane. Unfortunately, three looters have been arrested. Some young guys were trying to steal booze from a flooded bottle shop (liquor store). I still have power, but there are about 80,000 without, so I am going to eat a quick breakfast and get out there. My first job is to clear the dead koala from near the house because it is starting to smell. We have a large carpet python that hangs around and gets rid of the vermin, so I don't mind his company. I haven't seen him lately and suspect he has gotten into the attic. Other pythons have been spotted around in the floods.

OK, I'd better call in and see if they need me. Things will return to normal soon, mate. Thanks for listening and wish us well.

Submitted on Jan. 13 (7:30 a.m. local time) -- "I am really impressed by the quality of the people of Brisbane."

Apparently we peaked at 4.4 metres, one metre below the 1974 level. More than 11,000 houses were totally flooded. Believe it or not, the most pressing problem is getting water supplies to flooded areas. There is a shortage of clean drinking water. I am sure this will be readily solved.

I am really impressed by the quality of the people of Brisbane. There was no verified looting. Shops opened their doors and gave away supplies to any who could get to them. When the power went off, several businesses donated all their stock and some evacuation centres had big barbeque cook ups so everyone got a good feed. They have had to ask people to stop donating goods, especially clothes. Generally people heeded warnings and either helped out or got out of the way. Neighbours helped neighbours and only one life was lost in Brisbane as of this update. I remember several snowstorms from my youth in Thunder Bay, and the atmosphere here was much like that -- general good humour and helpfulness. Thaw out a Canuck and you'll find an Aussie.

I suppose there will be shortages in the coming months, as many of the areas supplying foodstuffs have been destroyed, as has some transport infrastructure.

I am back at work and things around here are returning to normal surprisingly fast.  Brisbane will take a bit longer to clean up, as will Ipswich. Toowoomba and some of the hard-hit towns in the Lockyer Valley, like Grantham, will need a lot of rebuilding. I will advise you of anything significant. Other than that I am keeping myself available to help out. Brisbane's Lord Mayor Campbell Newman has said an announcement is pending for those willing to volunteer for cleanup.


Submitted Jan. 13 (5:30 a.m. local time) - "The level is down considerably and flowing away well."

I just got back from our dam. The level is down considerably and flowing away well.  Several water monitors plopped into the water but I didn't see any wallabies. Usually at this time of day I can catch one or two eating our flowers or trimming the lawns. Perhaps they don't like the rain. At least there will be plenty of feed around for them. There are two types of wallabies common to this area: the red-necked and the swamp wallaby.  I'd imagine the latter will be happier now than the former.

Although evacuation centres are still filling, the water has peaked and will remain high for some time [before] easing off through to the weekend. Then we can start the cleanup.

Submitted Jan. 13 (4:45 a.m. local time) - "Just a quick update on the bull shark."


Just a quick update on the bull shark: they are dangerous because they frequent fresh water and are quite aggressive. They are called bull sharks because of their nature, blunt snouts, and habit of butting prey. I am not sure that they do use iodine to tolerate fresh water. I have read that this has something to do with their ability to control urea secretion and special renal/liver functions. Their gills do alter in freshwater.

It is 4:45 a.m. and high tide has passed with the flood peak just below 1974 levels. The frogs kept me awake all last night so I'll have to keep my wits about me as I head in to work and do battle with my arch-enemy, the eastern brown snake. We do have a few of the brown snakes around our house but I haven't seen them lately. One attacked my friend Byron from Thunder Bay, Ont., when he was visiting two years back.

cane-toad.jpg
A cane toad sits inside a plastic bag at a billabong near Darwin, Australia. Animal experts say the recent Queensland floods could lead to a resurgence of cane toads. (David Gray/Reuters)

Submitted Jan. 13 (3:30 a.m. local time) -- "I was just boning up on snakebite first aid."

I suppose this weather will be great for future cane toad populations. We have heaps around our place. There are always two or three squashed on the driveway.

I was just boning up on snakebite first aid. A compression bandage will buy you six hours after you've been bitten by an eastern brown snake. But I would not want to try to get to medical help today. The facilities are all busy and many roads are closed. There was a small chat on local radio by a snake removalist. Apparently they are very busy now, as snakes move to higher ground.

One lady was trying to remove an eastern brown from her pantry. The trick is to stay calm, give the snake an exit and do not threaten it. I'll vouch for that, because the eastern brown has a very broad definition of threatening behaviour. The last one to attack me was irritated by me dropping my pants and sitting on the loo. He was stuck in a corner ... but once riled he had about seven strikes at me. I had to climb onto the cistern to get out of his way. They say a toy box is handy to contain snakes. I suppose you must remember to free the snake before reusing the box for toys.

It is 3:30 a.m. local time -- one hour from high tide. Tide heights have been revised and the flood is not expected to beat 1974. I think we dodged a bullet. Only one death in Ipswich so far, and about 20,000 homes flooded. A few thousand have been evacuated, but everyone seems to be coping well. We were lucky because the really big tides are not until Jan. 21.

Submitted Jan. 12 (11 p.m. local time) - "... this rain can flush out snakes."


We live on acreage near the Brisbane Koala Bushlands, about one kilometre from the factory. Since spying [a] dead koala I haven't seen any other dead wildlife. Even my arch enemy, the eastern brown snake that lives under our factory's electrical transformer, is lying low, although this rain can flush out snakes. The most lethal of these are the eastern brown and red-bellied black snakes. We do have deadly snakes on both properties, but I am treading softly and carrying a big broom. I did hear of a bull shark in the streets of Ipswich. Bull sharks are quite dangerous and responsible for many attacks because they live in estuaries and canal developments. They actually have a special organ that uses iodine to allow them to survive long periods in fresh water, so this situation can provide them with plenty of cover to work the crowds, so to speak.

Submitted Jan. 11 (5:44 p.m. local time) - "I hope it will be better for Brisbane this time around."


I am sitting in a Brisbane factory by myself, wondering what the worst of this flooding will bring. I wasn't here in 1974, the last great Brisbane flood, but I did emigrate from Canada in 1978. The first house I bought in Brisbane was inundated in 1974. A condition of purchase was flood insurance. I had to do some renovations in the attic and, when I crawled up there, found that silt was left over from the 1974 flood and covered all the wiring. So there I was, shovelling out silt, four years after the flood.

I hope it will be better for Brisbane this time around. We have better flood mitigation and drainage now but they say the water will rise higher. We are expecting a king tide at 3 p.m. [local time] so I will monitor alerts. Maybe I can help out. They were calling for some people to help shift people's gear to higher ground in Ipswich, which is just west of Brisbane, and that water is on its way here.

Brisbane will be OK, though we have good support and everyone pulls together. They are like Canadians in that regard, only warmer and a bit wet lately.

Are you contending with flood waters in Australia? Are you a Canadian living abroad there? Share your stories with the CBCNews.ca Community team. Email your news tips and photos to yournews@cbc.ca or send us a Citizen Byte blog post. You can also upload photos here and videos here.


More CBCNews.ca Community content


Australia flooding: Social media reaction



]]>

brisbane-floods.jpg
An entire suburb is submerged outside Ipswich, west of Brisbane, Australia, Wednesday, Jan. 12, 2011. (Associated Press Photo)

arthur-bio.jpgBio: Arthur Boyer was born in Thunder Bay, Ont., and studied journalism at Humber College and Ryerson University before deciding to become a paramedic. He took a working holiday at a hospital in Brisbane, Australia, where he met his wife who was training as a nurse. The couple decided to settle in the Brisbane area. Boyer currently works for an engineering firm that makes water tanks and pontoon boats. He will be contributing updates about the flood to the CBCNews.ca Community.

Submitted Jan. 21 (7 a.m. local time) - " Now comes the post-mortem."
 
It has been over a week since the flood, and Brisbane is almost back to normal.  Some vulnerable areas are still cleaning up, but the attention has moved onto the floods in Victoria. The towns of Dimboola and Kow Swamp are being evacuated. Kow Swamp at least sounds flood-prone, but to see Toowoomba, at the top of the Great Dividing Range, hit by a flash flood seems surreal.

I got my personal message of thanks from the Lord Mayor of Brisbane for volunteering, as did the thousands of other volunteers. In fact, so many volunteered that many were sent home. It was very gratifying to see friendships forged and the community strengthened through this common struggle.

Now comes the post-mortem. A broad-ranging inquiry has been formed and all issues are to be aired, including the role of ministers and political leaders in the development of estates in vulnerable areas. It has also been made clear that everything will not be rebuilt.

Some estates may not be rebuilt and bridges may be moved. The Riverwalk (a boardwalk-like promenade over the river) will certainly be rethought. This structure was washed away completely and threatened to take out crucial bridges. I am sure the flood-migration system established after 1974 will receive approval because it certainly did its job.

Another major issue is flood insurance. Few had it because of the prohibitive costs, so there is talk of either making it compulsory or subsidizing premiums. In an ironic twist from nature, some of the houses whose insurance policies did not include flooding were crushed by fallen trees in a violent thunderstorm two days ago. Now they can claim.  Unfortunately, most will have to resign themselves to the loss of many of their possessions. They survived, though, and for a city of over a million to experience such devastation and lose only one life, is just short of a miracle. For which we are all grateful.

Submitted Jan. 14 (11:30 a.m. local time) - "It looks like I can finally be of some help."

ABC local radio has advised that as of today there are 16 confirmed deaths with 53 still missing, mostly from the Grantham area. They have also advised that half of all homes without power have had it restored and we now have 25,000 remaining without electricity.

It looks like I can finally be of some help. Four large gathering points have been established. Volunteers are to collect there and will then be bused to areas in need. Potential volunteers are to flip a coin: heads show up at 7 a.m., tails at noon. I will be going to McGregor High School at noon today. I am not a regular cheerleader for either politicians or authorities but I must confess they have all done a fine job during this crisis.

Submitted Jan. 14 (6:30 a.m. local time) - "Things will return to normal soon, mate."

The cleanup starts now. Brisbane city council is calling for volunteers and has set up a hotline, so I will be off to help all day today. The effort seems well-managed. Authorities are setting up industrial bins everywhere for disposal and have distributed instructions on what to do when. Roads that are open are being kept clear, and crews are clearing debris.

So far, no bodies have been found in Brisbane. Unfortunately, three looters have been arrested. Some young guys were trying to steal booze from a flooded bottle shop (liquor store). I still have power, but there are about 80,000 without, so I am going to eat a quick breakfast and get out there. My first job is to clear the dead koala from near the house because it is starting to smell. We have a large carpet python that hangs around and gets rid of the vermin, so I don't mind his company. I haven't seen him lately and suspect he has gotten into the attic. Other pythons have been spotted around in the floods.

OK, I'd better call in and see if they need me. Things will return to normal soon, mate. Thanks for listening and wish us well.

Submitted on Jan. 13 (7:30 a.m. local time) -- "I am really impressed by the quality of the people of Brisbane."

Apparently we peaked at 4.4 metres, one metre below the 1974 level. More than 11,000 houses were totally flooded. Believe it or not, the most pressing problem is getting water supplies to flooded areas. There is a shortage of clean drinking water. I am sure this will be readily solved.

I am really impressed by the quality of the people of Brisbane. There was no verified looting. Shops opened their doors and gave away supplies to any who could get to them. When the power went off, several businesses donated all their stock and some evacuation centres had big barbeque cook ups so everyone got a good feed. They have had to ask people to stop donating goods, especially clothes. Generally people heeded warnings and either helped out or got out of the way. Neighbours helped neighbours and only one life was lost in Brisbane as of this update. I remember several snowstorms from my youth in Thunder Bay, and the atmosphere here was much like that -- general good humour and helpfulness. Thaw out a Canuck and you'll find an Aussie.

I suppose there will be shortages in the coming months, as many of the areas supplying foodstuffs have been destroyed, as has some transport infrastructure.

I am back at work and things around here are returning to normal surprisingly fast.  Brisbane will take a bit longer to clean up, as will Ipswich. Toowoomba and some of the hard-hit towns in the Lockyer Valley, like Grantham, will need a lot of rebuilding. I will advise you of anything significant. Other than that I am keeping myself available to help out. Brisbane's Lord Mayor Campbell Newman has said an announcement is pending for those willing to volunteer for cleanup.


Submitted Jan. 13 (5:30 a.m. local time) - "The level is down considerably and flowing away well."

I just got back from our dam. The level is down considerably and flowing away well.  Several water monitors plopped into the water but I didn't see any wallabies. Usually at this time of day I can catch one or two eating our flowers or trimming the lawns. Perhaps they don't like the rain. At least there will be plenty of feed around for them. There are two types of wallabies common to this area: the red-necked and the swamp wallaby.  I'd imagine the latter will be happier now than the former.

Although evacuation centres are still filling, the water has peaked and will remain high for some time [before] easing off through to the weekend. Then we can start the cleanup.

Submitted Jan. 13 (4:45 a.m. local time) - "Just a quick update on the bull shark."


Just a quick update on the bull shark: they are dangerous because they frequent fresh water and are quite aggressive. They are called bull sharks because of their nature, blunt snouts, and habit of butting prey. I am not sure that they do use iodine to tolerate fresh water. I have read that this has something to do with their ability to control urea secretion and special renal/liver functions. Their gills do alter in freshwater.

It is 4:45 a.m. and high tide has passed with the flood peak just below 1974 levels. The frogs kept me awake all last night so I'll have to keep my wits about me as I head in to work and do battle with my arch-enemy, the eastern brown snake. We do have a few of the brown snakes around our house but I haven't seen them lately. One attacked my friend Byron from Thunder Bay, Ont., when he was visiting two years back.

cane-toad.jpg
A cane toad sits inside a plastic bag at a billabong near Darwin, Australia. Animal experts say the recent Queensland floods could lead to a resurgence of cane toads. (David Gray/Reuters)

Submitted Jan. 13 (3:30 a.m. local time) -- "I was just boning up on snakebite first aid."

I suppose this weather will be great for future cane toad populations. We have heaps around our place. There are always two or three squashed on the driveway.

I was just boning up on snakebite first aid. A compression bandage will buy you six hours after you've been bitten by an eastern brown snake. But I would not want to try to get to medical help today. The facilities are all busy and many roads are closed. There was a small chat on local radio by a snake removalist. Apparently they are very busy now, as snakes move to higher ground.

One lady was trying to remove an eastern brown from her pantry. The trick is to stay calm, give the snake an exit and do not threaten it. I'll vouch for that, because the eastern brown has a very broad definition of threatening behaviour. The last one to attack me was irritated by me dropping my pants and sitting on the loo. He was stuck in a corner ... but once riled he had about seven strikes at me. I had to climb onto the cistern to get out of his way. They say a toy box is handy to contain snakes. I suppose you must remember to free the snake before reusing the box for toys.

It is 3:30 a.m. local time -- one hour from high tide. Tide heights have been revised and the flood is not expected to beat 1974. I think we dodged a bullet. Only one death in Ipswich so far, and about 20,000 homes flooded. A few thousand have been evacuated, but everyone seems to be coping well. We were lucky because the really big tides are not until Jan. 21.

Submitted Jan. 12 (11 p.m. local time) - "... this rain can flush out snakes."


We live on acreage near the Brisbane Koala Bushlands, about one kilometre from the factory. Since spying [a] dead koala I haven't seen any other dead wildlife. Even my arch enemy, the eastern brown snake that lives under our factory's electrical transformer, is lying low, although this rain can flush out snakes. The most lethal of these are the eastern brown and red-bellied black snakes. We do have deadly snakes on both properties, but I am treading softly and carrying a big broom. I did hear of a bull shark in the streets of Ipswich. Bull sharks are quite dangerous and responsible for many attacks because they live in estuaries and canal developments. They actually have a special organ that uses iodine to allow them to survive long periods in fresh water, so this situation can provide them with plenty of cover to work the crowds, so to speak.

Submitted Jan. 11 (5:44 p.m. local time) - "I hope it will be better for Brisbane this time around."


I am sitting in a Brisbane factory by myself, wondering what the worst of this flooding will bring. I wasn't here in 1974, the last great Brisbane flood, but I did emigrate from Canada in 1978. The first house I bought in Brisbane was inundated in 1974. A condition of purchase was flood insurance. I had to do some renovations in the attic and, when I crawled up there, found that silt was left over from the 1974 flood and covered all the wiring. So there I was, shovelling out silt, four years after the flood.

I hope it will be better for Brisbane this time around. We have better flood mitigation and drainage now but they say the water will rise higher. We are expecting a king tide at 3 p.m. [local time] so I will monitor alerts. Maybe I can help out. They were calling for some people to help shift people's gear to higher ground in Ipswich, which is just west of Brisbane, and that water is on its way here.

Brisbane will be OK, though we have good support and everyone pulls together. They are like Canadians in that regard, only warmer and a bit wet lately.

Are you contending with flood waters in Australia? Are you a Canadian living abroad there? Share your stories with the CBCNews.ca Community team. Email your news tips and photos to yournews@cbc.ca or send us a Citizen Byte blog post. You can also upload photos here and videos here.


More CBCNews.ca Community content


Australia flooding: Social media reaction



]]>
Updates from Brazil: Chiran Livera tag:www.cbc.ca,2011:/news/citizenbytes//244.107395 2011-01-19T18:13:46Z 2011-01-20T18:28:45Z (Submitted by Chiran Livera)Bio: Chiran Livera is currently on the International Federation of Red Cross Red Crescent Societies response team assessing the impact of the flooding that ravaged parts of Brazil last week. The floods have killed more than 600... Your Voice ChiranLivera_1.jpg
(Submitted by Chiran Livera)

ChiranLivera_bio.jpg
Bio: Chiran Livera is currently on the International Federation of Red Cross Red Crescent Societies response team assessing the impact of the flooding that ravaged parts of Brazil last week. The floods have killed more than 600 people and left many without access to medical supplies, proper shelter, food or water. Originally from Vancouver, B.C., Livera has worked for the Canadian Red Cross in several provinces. 

The CBCNews.ca Community desk asked him to share a few details of the recovery efforts in Rio de Janeiro.  

Submitted on Jan. 18 - 'Grave but hopeful'
 
I arrived in Rio de Janeiro a day after the major floods and landslides and have been here now for nearly a week. I came to support colleagues from the Brazilian Red Cross who have been working around the clock in responding to this emergency.
 
Since I arrived, the situation has been very dramatic and full of adrenaline. The major damage has been in areas outside of Rio de Janeiro and this is where the Red Cross is most active. The volunteers, who themselves have been affected by the floods and landslides, have unlimited compassion and courage as they continue to do search and rescue activities and evacuation of wounded persons. This has been the highlight of my time here so far. 
 
During the first few days, the only method of access to the area was by helicopter. As the weather improved and emergency crews continued to remove debris from the roads, we were eventually able to use four-wheel drive trucks to enter the towns. Inside, the situation was grave but also hopeful. There was widespread infrastructure damage, but with neighbours helping neighbours, everyone played a role in providing relief. 

Similar to what I have seen in other emergencies, the resiliency of the affected persons is incredible. Water levels had risen in some areas to five feet and landslides had buried entire blocks of houses. However, amidst all the chaos, people wasted no time in cleaning the debris and attending to the affected persons.
 
Heavy rains are common in this part of Brazil, but the large accumulation over a short period of time overwhelmed the soil absorption capacity and led the rivers to overflow. There were times over the past few days where we had to momentarily stop activities as landslides continued to occur. Fortunately, many people have evacuated and are in shelters and with relatives outside the affected areas. 

ChiranLivera_2.jpg
Livera, far right, is working with the Red Cross in Brazil to assess the damage caused by the floods. (Submitted by Chiran Livera)

Submitted on Jan. 20 - "We had made a difference"

As the relief work continues in the towns of Nova Friburgo, Teresopolis and Petropolis, affected people have told us they do not know where their family members are. After the landslides, many went to shelters in neighbouring towns. One of the first things people need after a disaster is to know where their loved ones are.
 
Yesterday, I went with a Red Cross team that provided some comfort to families longing to be reunited. Our day began early as we packed our four-wheel drive vehicles with satellite phones and notebooks. We drove two hours from Rio de Janeiro to Nova Friburgo, one of the most affected towns, and had a brief meeting with the civil defence co-ordinator to inform him of our intentions. 
 
One of the first people we came across was a woman searching for a brother she believed escaped the landslides. After a few moments of calling our teams in other towns, we found that her brother was also searching for her, and we offered our satellite phone so they could have that first conversation. The happiness in her face as tears fell gave us all the satisfaction that we had made a difference.

My colleagues from the International Committee of the Red Cross continued these activities throughout the day as I headed back to the civil defence office to continue co-ordinating our relief efforts. 

ChiranLivera_4.jpg
A woman talks to a relative over the phone for the first time since floods in Brazil displaced families from their homes. (Submitted by Chiran Livera) 

Are you currently witnessing the flood disaster in Brazil? Are you a Canadian living there? Share your stories with the CBCNews.ca Community team. Email your news tips and photos to yournews@cbc.ca or send us a Citizen Byte blog post. You can also upload photos here and videos here.



More CBCNews.ca Community content

Brazil floods: Social Media updates 
]]> ChiranLivera_1.jpg
(Submitted by Chiran Livera)

ChiranLivera_bio.jpg
Bio: Chiran Livera is currently on the International Federation of Red Cross Red Crescent Societies response team assessing the impact of the flooding that ravaged parts of Brazil last week. The floods have killed more than 600 people and left many without access to medical supplies, proper shelter, food or water. Originally from Vancouver, B.C., Livera has worked for the Canadian Red Cross in several provinces. 

The CBCNews.ca Community desk asked him to share a few details of the recovery efforts in Rio de Janeiro.  

Submitted on Jan. 18 - 'Grave but hopeful'
 
I arrived in Rio de Janeiro a day after the major floods and landslides and have been here now for nearly a week. I came to support colleagues from the Brazilian Red Cross who have been working around the clock in responding to this emergency.
 
Since I arrived, the situation has been very dramatic and full of adrenaline. The major damage has been in areas outside of Rio de Janeiro and this is where the Red Cross is most active. The volunteers, who themselves have been affected by the floods and landslides, have unlimited compassion and courage as they continue to do search and rescue activities and evacuation of wounded persons. This has been the highlight of my time here so far. 
 
During the first few days, the only method of access to the area was by helicopter. As the weather improved and emergency crews continued to remove debris from the roads, we were eventually able to use four-wheel drive trucks to enter the towns. Inside, the situation was grave but also hopeful. There was widespread infrastructure damage, but with neighbours helping neighbours, everyone played a role in providing relief. 

Similar to what I have seen in other emergencies, the resiliency of the affected persons is incredible. Water levels had risen in some areas to five feet and landslides had buried entire blocks of houses. However, amidst all the chaos, people wasted no time in cleaning the debris and attending to the affected persons.
 
Heavy rains are common in this part of Brazil, but the large accumulation over a short period of time overwhelmed the soil absorption capacity and led the rivers to overflow. There were times over the past few days where we had to momentarily stop activities as landslides continued to occur. Fortunately, many people have evacuated and are in shelters and with relatives outside the affected areas. 

ChiranLivera_2.jpg
Livera, far right, is working with the Red Cross in Brazil to assess the damage caused by the floods. (Submitted by Chiran Livera)

Submitted on Jan. 20 - "We had made a difference"

As the relief work continues in the towns of Nova Friburgo, Teresopolis and Petropolis, affected people have told us they do not know where their family members are. After the landslides, many went to shelters in neighbouring towns. One of the first things people need after a disaster is to know where their loved ones are.
 
Yesterday, I went with a Red Cross team that provided some comfort to families longing to be reunited. Our day began early as we packed our four-wheel drive vehicles with satellite phones and notebooks. We drove two hours from Rio de Janeiro to Nova Friburgo, one of the most affected towns, and had a brief meeting with the civil defence co-ordinator to inform him of our intentions. 
 
One of the first people we came across was a woman searching for a brother she believed escaped the landslides. After a few moments of calling our teams in other towns, we found that her brother was also searching for her, and we offered our satellite phone so they could have that first conversation. The happiness in her face as tears fell gave us all the satisfaction that we had made a difference.

My colleagues from the International Committee of the Red Cross continued these activities throughout the day as I headed back to the civil defence office to continue co-ordinating our relief efforts. 

ChiranLivera_4.jpg
A woman talks to a relative over the phone for the first time since floods in Brazil displaced families from their homes. (Submitted by Chiran Livera) 

Are you currently witnessing the flood disaster in Brazil? Are you a Canadian living there? Share your stories with the CBCNews.ca Community team. Email your news tips and photos to yournews@cbc.ca or send us a Citizen Byte blog post. You can also upload photos here and videos here.



More CBCNews.ca Community content

Brazil floods: Social Media updates 
]]>
Photo essay: Derek Sciba captures Haiti's rebuilding process tag:www.cbc.ca,2011:/news/citizenbytes//244.105474 2011-01-12T13:41:00Z 2011-01-12T14:11:53Z Many Haitians, such as this homeless child, live in tent camps before having a chance to get to more permanent shelters. (Submitted by Derek Sciba) Derek Sciba is the marketing and communications director for World Concern, a Christian humanitarian organization.... Your Voice Derek Sciba - homeless girlMany Haitians, such as this homeless child, live in tent camps before having a chance to get to more permanent shelters. (Submitted by Derek Sciba)

Derek-Sciba-bio.JPGDerek Sciba is the marketing and communications director for World Concern, a Christian humanitarian organization. Sciba has documented its assistance programs in communities across Asia and Africa. Over the past year, he has also travelled to Haiti three times to help in earthquake relief efforts.

Summary:

Sciba was last in Haiti from Jan. 5 to Jan. 12. His role in Haiti includes providing raw video footage and photography to international news organizations. The CBCNews.ca Community team asked him to share photos from his most recent visit.

Derek Sciba - Patrick tent

Patrick, a homeless man, lives in a tent with his wife and two children. "I care about the long-term welfare of the people who live here. When we talk about people in extreme poverty, you can look at families in Haiti. They live a life on the edge of survival. Every day it is a question of survival." (Submitted by Derek Sciba)


Derek Sciba - Eve home

Eve Rose Douynen was living on the street until her house was repaired. Many Haitians live in refugee camps because of the devastation the earthquake caused. "My primary interest is to check in on the home construction and repairs. Those are some of the most significant ways we can help stabilize a family's life." (Submitted by Derek Sciba)


Derek Sciba - cholera

Health trainer Frantz Mildor gives training for the prevention and treatment of cholera at a local church. "I'm also seeing what's going on with cholera prevention. There is a lot of bad information out there, lots of rumours about how cholera is spread. When you give people the facts, and the tools, you are truly saving lives." (Submitted by Derek Sciba)


Derek Sciba - Widzer

Widzer, a local Haitian businessman, has found employment and invested in his wife's small business. "I feel a personal and spiritual calling to help people address core needs in their life to gain stability. Once they see that they don't have to live for the moment, that they have a future, it changes everything." (Submitted by Derek Sciba)

More CBCNews.ca Community content:

]]> Derek Sciba - homeless girlMany Haitians, such as this homeless child, live in tent camps before having a chance to get to more permanent shelters. (Submitted by Derek Sciba)

Derek-Sciba-bio.JPGDerek Sciba is the marketing and communications director for World Concern, a Christian humanitarian organization. Sciba has documented its assistance programs in communities across Asia and Africa. Over the past year, he has also travelled to Haiti three times to help in earthquake relief efforts.

Summary:

Sciba was last in Haiti from Jan. 5 to Jan. 12. His role in Haiti includes providing raw video footage and photography to international news organizations. The CBCNews.ca Community team asked him to share photos from his most recent visit.

Derek Sciba - Patrick tent

Patrick, a homeless man, lives in a tent with his wife and two children. "I care about the long-term welfare of the people who live here. When we talk about people in extreme poverty, you can look at families in Haiti. They live a life on the edge of survival. Every day it is a question of survival." (Submitted by Derek Sciba)


Derek Sciba - Eve home

Eve Rose Douynen was living on the street until her house was repaired. Many Haitians live in refugee camps because of the devastation the earthquake caused. "My primary interest is to check in on the home construction and repairs. Those are some of the most significant ways we can help stabilize a family's life." (Submitted by Derek Sciba)


Derek Sciba - cholera

Health trainer Frantz Mildor gives training for the prevention and treatment of cholera at a local church. "I'm also seeing what's going on with cholera prevention. There is a lot of bad information out there, lots of rumours about how cholera is spread. When you give people the facts, and the tools, you are truly saving lives." (Submitted by Derek Sciba)


Derek Sciba - Widzer

Widzer, a local Haitian businessman, has found employment and invested in his wife's small business. "I feel a personal and spiritual calling to help people address core needs in their life to gain stability. Once they see that they don't have to live for the moment, that they have a future, it changes everything." (Submitted by Derek Sciba)

More CBCNews.ca Community content:

]]>
Photo essay: Paramedic Sarah Caloccia remembers the Haitian children tag:www.cbc.ca,2011:/news/citizenbytes//244.105460 2011-01-11T21:09:13Z 2011-01-11T22:01:10Z A child receives medication from paramedic Sarah Caloccia in Haiti last year. (Submitted by Sarah Caloccia)Sarah Caloccia is an Ontario Peel Region paramedic who volunteered with one of GlobalMedic's rapid-response teams in Haiti immediately after the Jan. 12, 2010, earthquake.... Your Voice web-Sarah-Caloccia-_02-givi.jpg
A child receives medication from paramedic Sarah Caloccia in Haiti last year. (Submitted by Sarah Caloccia)

sarah-bio-photo.jpgSarah Caloccia is an Ontario Peel Region paramedic who volunteered with one of GlobalMedic's rapid-response teams in Haiti immediately after the Jan. 12, 2010, earthquake. Caloccia provided treatment to victims, focusing on medical aid and water purification.
 
Her story:
 
As Caloccia looks back on her experiences during the disaster relief, she remembers the many Haitian families who were able to create community among chaos: living peacefully in refugee camps, "together like neighbours." She is also humbled by the many children she met, especially a group of young boys who found happiness in simple toys made of plastic juice bottles and lollipop sticks. 
 
In light of the one-year earthquake anniversary, the CBCNews.ca Community team asked Caloccia to share a few photos of her volunteer efforts there.

web-Sarah-Caloccia-1.JPG
Haitian children help to put up tents for temporary shelters. "... What struck me most and what I remember the most were the people. It was humbling to see people who had suffered such devastating loss have the strength to carry on." (Submitted by Sarah Caloccia)

web-Sarah-Caloccia-2.JPG
Boys show off their toy creations using resources available to them. "I've heard the saying that children are resilient and in Haiti I definitely saw that. They were also so resourceful and found ways and the time to play and have fun despite the circumstances they were living in." (Submitted by Sarah Caloccia)

web-Sarah-Caloccia-3.JPG
Caloccia poses with a 14-year-old boy, Routhiere, who became an orphan after the earthquake in January 2010. "I met one orphan in particular named Routhiere, who was 14 and had lost his mother in the earthquake. This boy was volunteering at the ADRA compound where our team was based from and he was anxious to help in any way he could. He worked as hard as the adults and immediately became a friend to our team." (Submitted by Sarah Caloccia)

web-Sarah-Caloccia-4.JPG
Small cars made of plastic juice bottles, lollipop sticks and string were a few of the toys the children played with. "These children had lost parents, siblings, friends and more, yet they had the ability to carry on and still be kids." (Submitted by Sarah Caloccia)

More CBCNews.ca Community content:

Do you have stories to share about Haiti? Email us at yournews@cbc.ca.

]]> web-Sarah-Caloccia-_02-givi.jpg
A child receives medication from paramedic Sarah Caloccia in Haiti last year. (Submitted by Sarah Caloccia)

sarah-bio-photo.jpgSarah Caloccia is an Ontario Peel Region paramedic who volunteered with one of GlobalMedic's rapid-response teams in Haiti immediately after the Jan. 12, 2010, earthquake. Caloccia provided treatment to victims, focusing on medical aid and water purification.
 
Her story:
 
As Caloccia looks back on her experiences during the disaster relief, she remembers the many Haitian families who were able to create community among chaos: living peacefully in refugee camps, "together like neighbours." She is also humbled by the many children she met, especially a group of young boys who found happiness in simple toys made of plastic juice bottles and lollipop sticks. 
 
In light of the one-year earthquake anniversary, the CBCNews.ca Community team asked Caloccia to share a few photos of her volunteer efforts there.

web-Sarah-Caloccia-1.JPG
Haitian children help to put up tents for temporary shelters. "... What struck me most and what I remember the most were the people. It was humbling to see people who had suffered such devastating loss have the strength to carry on." (Submitted by Sarah Caloccia)

web-Sarah-Caloccia-2.JPG
Boys show off their toy creations using resources available to them. "I've heard the saying that children are resilient and in Haiti I definitely saw that. They were also so resourceful and found ways and the time to play and have fun despite the circumstances they were living in." (Submitted by Sarah Caloccia)

web-Sarah-Caloccia-3.JPG
Caloccia poses with a 14-year-old boy, Routhiere, who became an orphan after the earthquake in January 2010. "I met one orphan in particular named Routhiere, who was 14 and had lost his mother in the earthquake. This boy was volunteering at the ADRA compound where our team was based from and he was anxious to help in any way he could. He worked as hard as the adults and immediately became a friend to our team." (Submitted by Sarah Caloccia)

web-Sarah-Caloccia-4.JPG
Small cars made of plastic juice bottles, lollipop sticks and string were a few of the toys the children played with. "These children had lost parents, siblings, friends and more, yet they had the ability to carry on and still be kids." (Submitted by Sarah Caloccia)

More CBCNews.ca Community content:

Do you have stories to share about Haiti? Email us at yournews@cbc.ca.

]]>
Haiti Now: Police officer and volunteer Brienna Ross tells her story tag:www.cbc.ca,2011:/news/citizenbytes//244.105434 2011-01-11T20:27:58Z 2011-01-12T13:55:49Z A Haitian woman dries out clothes on an outdoor line. (Submitted by Brienna Ross)Bio: Brienna Ross is a police constable with Ontario's York Regional Police. She volunteers for GlobalMedic, a Toronto-based NGO that offers emergency relief services to victims of... Your Voice web-Brienna-Ross-01.JPG
A Haitian woman dries out clothes on an outdoor line. (Submitted by Brienna Ross)

ross-bio.jpgBio: Brienna Ross is a police constable with Ontario's York Regional Police. She volunteers for GlobalMedic, a Toronto-based NGO that offers emergency relief services to victims of disaster around the world. She travelled to Honduras to assist with flood relief in 2008 and volunteered in the Philippines after a major typhoon struck in 2006. Last year, Ross went to Haiti after the earthquake to help with the recovery effort. Ahead of the first anniversary of Haiti's earthquake, the CBCNews.ca Community team asked her to share her most enduring memories of her time there.

My story:
My experience in Haiti taught me a lot about a country I previously knew little about, including how long their road to recovery would be. Haiti was unlike anywhere else I had been before. I had been to other disaster zones, I had been to Third World countries, I had even made it through a tour in Afghanistan as a member of the Canadian military, but there was something daunting about Haiti and that earthquake. It seemed this country was already struggling with a failing government, extremely high unemployment and corruption. On top of all that, the earthquake decimated what little financial centre they had and killed over 200,000 people, as many as the Asian tsunami.

Most GlobalMedic deployments happen quickly. A disaster occurs somewhere in the world and within 24 to 36 hours, a team of people somehow manages to find time to take off work, get on a plane and put their skills to use to try to minimize the effects of an already traumatizing event. Haiti was no different. GlobalMedic had one of the first teams on the ground providing first aid. Our team doctor conducted many amputations in civil war-like conditions, and the remainder of the team got much-needed drinking water out to people by Day 2 after the "The Big Shake," as the Haitians called it.

My time in Haiti actually started on Day 12 of the disaster. I was part of a six-person team to be deployed to replace the initial team of eight that Global Medic had sent down. After flying into the Dominican Republic, we loaded ourselves and our supplies onto a bus bound for Port-au-Prince. The airport had been taken over by American military personnel in order to facilitate aid flights coming in. No passenger planes were permitted for weeks. We arrived in the capital at midnight, which was not a great start as our team was on strict security measures not to move through the city at night.  

Our primary focus was to train a team of Haitians how to use our different water purification units and essentially make them a self-sufficient team that would be able to continue providing water to the population long after we all returned to Canada. Over the eight weeks that GlobalMedic was deployed, including the two weeks I spent there, we trained a 40-man team to go out daily and provide drinking water to the Haitian people.

During the time of this training, we also continued to treat many of the victims of the earthquake.  There are now thousands of amputees in need of assistance and post-operational care. Without the aid workers, Haiti has very limited medical services available for this. Our medical team did a great job treating these amputees, along with the many doctors that came into Haiti from all over the world. They also ran clinics to deal with the day-to-day ailments that result from lack of food, poor sanitation and hygiene, and the generally destitute living conditions. Refugee camps were overflowing onto the streets because people were too afraid to sleep in any building that could crumble on them at any moment from an aftershock.

Criminals were roaming free on the streets after the prison collapsed in the initial quake. There was a lot of vigilante justice taking place, and it was not uncommon to wake up hearing about a murder that had occurred on the streets overnight.

Haitians were becoming desperate for food during the weeks following "The Big Shake." There was some food being distributed by aid agencies, but people were starting to starve and get sick because they had no ability to purchase any food and had to rely on a distribution being in their area. A lot of the food was being distributed and then was being sold on the black market.
It reached the point that only women and children were provided bags of rice, in an effort to have this food go to families and not be sold for profit. As the situation became more desperate, people began to riot and we tried our best to keep our operations up and running while this was going on. The U.S. Marine Corps protected one food distribution we were at while wearing full riot gear.

The team of Haitians we trained did amazing work and are continuing to do so for their country. Many of them arrived and volunteered to help despite living in refugee camps and losing family members in the quake. Haiti has a long way to go in many respects, but knowing there are people like these volunteers to pave the way is a great start.
Many people asked me upon my return how my experience was there. It was a difficult question to answer.

Some days, it seemed like the task at hand was so huge that it would be impossible to make things better because there is so much beyond just earthquake damage to be repaired. Other days I felt like Haiti at least had its priorities straight, in the sense that people were focused on providing water, shelter and food -- it didn't matter what kind of car they had or the size of their TV. It is refreshing to see people that can still be happy despite losing everything and be so resilient in their pursuit to help other people.

There are so many individual stories of loss and triumph. Things will take a long time to change, but knowing in some small way I helped a little is very rewarding. All in all, this trip had its ups and downs. Like so many other things in life, the struggles we go through make it a worthwhile experience.

I can`t say enough about the support I got from friends and family back home while I was away. I look forward to being able to continue to do this volunteer work in the future.

web-Brienna-Ross-03.JPG Volunteer Brienna Ross looks at homes damaged by the earthquake in Haiti. (Submitted by Brienna Ross)
More CBCNews.ca Community content:

Do you have stories to share about Haiti? Email us at yournews@cbc.ca.


]]> web-Brienna-Ross-01.JPG
A Haitian woman dries out clothes on an outdoor line. (Submitted by Brienna Ross)

ross-bio.jpgBio: Brienna Ross is a police constable with Ontario's York Regional Police. She volunteers for GlobalMedic, a Toronto-based NGO that offers emergency relief services to victims of disaster around the world. She travelled to Honduras to assist with flood relief in 2008 and volunteered in the Philippines after a major typhoon struck in 2006. Last year, Ross went to Haiti after the earthquake to help with the recovery effort. Ahead of the first anniversary of Haiti's earthquake, the CBCNews.ca Community team asked her to share her most enduring memories of her time there.

My story:
My experience in Haiti taught me a lot about a country I previously knew little about, including how long their road to recovery would be. Haiti was unlike anywhere else I had been before. I had been to other disaster zones, I had been to Third World countries, I had even made it through a tour in Afghanistan as a member of the Canadian military, but there was something daunting about Haiti and that earthquake. It seemed this country was already struggling with a failing government, extremely high unemployment and corruption. On top of all that, the earthquake decimated what little financial centre they had and killed over 200,000 people, as many as the Asian tsunami.

Most GlobalMedic deployments happen quickly. A disaster occurs somewhere in the world and within 24 to 36 hours, a team of people somehow manages to find time to take off work, get on a plane and put their skills to use to try to minimize the effects of an already traumatizing event. Haiti was no different. GlobalMedic had one of the first teams on the ground providing first aid. Our team doctor conducted many amputations in civil war-like conditions, and the remainder of the team got much-needed drinking water out to people by Day 2 after the "The Big Shake," as the Haitians called it.

My time in Haiti actually started on Day 12 of the disaster. I was part of a six-person team to be deployed to replace the initial team of eight that Global Medic had sent down. After flying into the Dominican Republic, we loaded ourselves and our supplies onto a bus bound for Port-au-Prince. The airport had been taken over by American military personnel in order to facilitate aid flights coming in. No passenger planes were permitted for weeks. We arrived in the capital at midnight, which was not a great start as our team was on strict security measures not to move through the city at night.  

Our primary focus was to train a team of Haitians how to use our different water purification units and essentially make them a self-sufficient team that would be able to continue providing water to the population long after we all returned to Canada. Over the eight weeks that GlobalMedic was deployed, including the two weeks I spent there, we trained a 40-man team to go out daily and provide drinking water to the Haitian people.

During the time of this training, we also continued to treat many of the victims of the earthquake.  There are now thousands of amputees in need of assistance and post-operational care. Without the aid workers, Haiti has very limited medical services available for this. Our medical team did a great job treating these amputees, along with the many doctors that came into Haiti from all over the world. They also ran clinics to deal with the day-to-day ailments that result from lack of food, poor sanitation and hygiene, and the generally destitute living conditions. Refugee camps were overflowing onto the streets because people were too afraid to sleep in any building that could crumble on them at any moment from an aftershock.

Criminals were roaming free on the streets after the prison collapsed in the initial quake. There was a lot of vigilante justice taking place, and it was not uncommon to wake up hearing about a murder that had occurred on the streets overnight.

Haitians were becoming desperate for food during the weeks following "The Big Shake." There was some food being distributed by aid agencies, but people were starting to starve and get sick because they had no ability to purchase any food and had to rely on a distribution being in their area. A lot of the food was being distributed and then was being sold on the black market.
It reached the point that only women and children were provided bags of rice, in an effort to have this food go to families and not be sold for profit. As the situation became more desperate, people began to riot and we tried our best to keep our operations up and running while this was going on. The U.S. Marine Corps protected one food distribution we were at while wearing full riot gear.

The team of Haitians we trained did amazing work and are continuing to do so for their country. Many of them arrived and volunteered to help despite living in refugee camps and losing family members in the quake. Haiti has a long way to go in many respects, but knowing there are people like these volunteers to pave the way is a great start.
Many people asked me upon my return how my experience was there. It was a difficult question to answer.

Some days, it seemed like the task at hand was so huge that it would be impossible to make things better because there is so much beyond just earthquake damage to be repaired. Other days I felt like Haiti at least had its priorities straight, in the sense that people were focused on providing water, shelter and food -- it didn't matter what kind of car they had or the size of their TV. It is refreshing to see people that can still be happy despite losing everything and be so resilient in their pursuit to help other people.

There are so many individual stories of loss and triumph. Things will take a long time to change, but knowing in some small way I helped a little is very rewarding. All in all, this trip had its ups and downs. Like so many other things in life, the struggles we go through make it a worthwhile experience.

I can`t say enough about the support I got from friends and family back home while I was away. I look forward to being able to continue to do this volunteer work in the future.

web-Brienna-Ross-03.JPG Volunteer Brienna Ross looks at homes damaged by the earthquake in Haiti. (Submitted by Brienna Ross)
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Haiti Now: Julian Donald's 'poignant memories' tag:www.cbc.ca,2011:/news/citizenbytes//244.105428 2011-01-11T20:14:45Z 2011-01-11T21:38:22Z One of the many refugee camps set up around Haiti. (Submitted by Julian Donald)Bio: Julian Donald, based in Toronto, has been an international aid and development worker since 2005 and has assisted relief efforts in Guinea-Bissau, Sierra Leone, Papua New... Your Voice web-Julian-Donald-5 One of the camps.JPG
One of the many refugee camps set up around Haiti. (Submitted by Julian Donald)

web-Julian-Donald-bio.jpgBio: Julian Donald, based in Toronto, has been an international aid and development worker since 2005 and has assisted relief efforts in Guinea-Bissau, Sierra Leone, Papua New Guinea, and Haiti. He spent seven months in Haiti after the earthquake of Jan. 12, 2010 with Mdecins Sans Frontires (MSF), also known as Doctors Without Borders, as a logistician and project co-ordinator. Ahead of the first anniversary of Haiti's earthquake, the CBCNews.ca Community team asked him to share his most enduring memories of his time there.

My story:
I arrived in Haiti with MSF about a month after the earthquake. I still find it impossible to convey the scale of the disaster. It was simply shocking. I could see it from the air as I flew in to Port-au-Prince. Looking down at the city, I could see entire neighbourhoods that had collapsed or had only a few walls still standing here and there.

I was put to work as soon as I got off the plane, of course, and ended up working with the non-food item distribution team handing out emergency relief supplies to displaced people. There were more than a million people left homeless by the earthquake, or about a third of the population of the city. To put that in perspective, try to imagine what it would be like if the entire city of Calgary suddenly found itself without shelter. All of our teams were working non-stop. If there had been time to think about it, it would have been overwhelming. But as it was, we just kept going, doing what we could.

In the six weeks or so of our distribution program, our team alone handed out over 140,000 items -- things like tents, soap, blankets, jerry cans, buckets, and more -- in 45 locations to about 11,000 families. At the same time we were doing that, other MSF teams were operating 26 health facilities across the area, including building four new hospitals.

When you're that overwhelmed, it helps to have amazing people around you. As in all of MSF's interventions around the world, most of the people working with us in Haiti are local, and I couldn't help but be inspired by my Haitian colleagues. The first night the heavy rains started, a friend of mine and his family lost what few possessions they had managed to rescue from the ruins of their house when their temporary shelter flooded and collapsed. I found out about it when he showed up for work the next morning -- an hour early as always.

The next big project I had was to turn an old school bus into a mobile clinic. We took out all the seats, cut a couple of new doors in the side, built in some soundproofed partitions, and added a few solar-powered fans to help keep things cool inside. "Emeline," as the bus was named, and a team of doctors and nurses provided medical care to a big camp of about 45,000 displaced people in Port-au-Prince.

One of the last things I worked on before I came home was a shelter-building program to help families move from temporary shelter (often made of cardboard and plastic sheets) to more adequate housing. A family of five or six people living in the camps typically has five or six square metres of space in their shelter. We helped them build much bigger shelters (up to 25 square metres) that had steel frames to provide solid protection against wind and rain.

This shelter program left me with some of my most poignant memories of working in Haiti. In particular, I will never forget the sight of one family moving into their new shelter, the inside of which they had carefully divided into two bedrooms, kitchen/dining room, and living room. Outside their new shelter, their old one -- rotten cardboard, dirty sheets, and rubble -- was burning in the street.
More CBCNews.ca Community content:

Do you have stories to share about Haiti? Email us at yournews@cbc.ca.


]]> web-Julian-Donald-5 One of the camps.JPG
One of the many refugee camps set up around Haiti. (Submitted by Julian Donald)

web-Julian-Donald-bio.jpgBio: Julian Donald, based in Toronto, has been an international aid and development worker since 2005 and has assisted relief efforts in Guinea-Bissau, Sierra Leone, Papua New Guinea, and Haiti. He spent seven months in Haiti after the earthquake of Jan. 12, 2010 with Mdecins Sans Frontires (MSF), also known as Doctors Without Borders, as a logistician and project co-ordinator. Ahead of the first anniversary of Haiti's earthquake, the CBCNews.ca Community team asked him to share his most enduring memories of his time there.

My story:
I arrived in Haiti with MSF about a month after the earthquake. I still find it impossible to convey the scale of the disaster. It was simply shocking. I could see it from the air as I flew in to Port-au-Prince. Looking down at the city, I could see entire neighbourhoods that had collapsed or had only a few walls still standing here and there.

I was put to work as soon as I got off the plane, of course, and ended up working with the non-food item distribution team handing out emergency relief supplies to displaced people. There were more than a million people left homeless by the earthquake, or about a third of the population of the city. To put that in perspective, try to imagine what it would be like if the entire city of Calgary suddenly found itself without shelter. All of our teams were working non-stop. If there had been time to think about it, it would have been overwhelming. But as it was, we just kept going, doing what we could.

In the six weeks or so of our distribution program, our team alone handed out over 140,000 items -- things like tents, soap, blankets, jerry cans, buckets, and more -- in 45 locations to about 11,000 families. At the same time we were doing that, other MSF teams were operating 26 health facilities across the area, including building four new hospitals.

When you're that overwhelmed, it helps to have amazing people around you. As in all of MSF's interventions around the world, most of the people working with us in Haiti are local, and I couldn't help but be inspired by my Haitian colleagues. The first night the heavy rains started, a friend of mine and his family lost what few possessions they had managed to rescue from the ruins of their house when their temporary shelter flooded and collapsed. I found out about it when he showed up for work the next morning -- an hour early as always.

The next big project I had was to turn an old school bus into a mobile clinic. We took out all the seats, cut a couple of new doors in the side, built in some soundproofed partitions, and added a few solar-powered fans to help keep things cool inside. "Emeline," as the bus was named, and a team of doctors and nurses provided medical care to a big camp of about 45,000 displaced people in Port-au-Prince.

One of the last things I worked on before I came home was a shelter-building program to help families move from temporary shelter (often made of cardboard and plastic sheets) to more adequate housing. A family of five or six people living in the camps typically has five or six square metres of space in their shelter. We helped them build much bigger shelters (up to 25 square metres) that had steel frames to provide solid protection against wind and rain.

This shelter program left me with some of my most poignant memories of working in Haiti. In particular, I will never forget the sight of one family moving into their new shelter, the inside of which they had carefully divided into two bedrooms, kitchen/dining room, and living room. Outside their new shelter, their old one -- rotten cardboard, dirty sheets, and rubble -- was burning in the street.
More CBCNews.ca Community content:

Do you have stories to share about Haiti? Email us at yournews@cbc.ca.

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Haiti Now: Paramedic Sean Large shares his experiences tag:www.cbc.ca,2011:/news/citizenbytes//244.105417 2011-01-11T19:53:57Z 2011-01-11T21:42:39Z An infant receives medical treatment in Haiti. (Submitted by Sean Large)Bio: Sean Large is a paramedic from southern Ontario's Peel Region. He's a volunteer with GlobalMedic, a Toronto-based non-governmental organization that offers emergency relief services to victims of disaster around... Your Voice web-SeanLarge-03.JPG
An infant receives medical treatment in Haiti. (Submitted by Sean Large)

Bio: Sean Large is a paramedic from southern Ontario's Peel Region. He's a volunteer with GlobalMedic, a Toronto-based non-governmental organization that offers emergency relief services to victims of disaster around the world. Large went to Haiti after the 2010 earthquake to assist in the recovery effort. Ahead of the first anniversary of Haiti's earthquake, the CBCNews.ca Community team asked him to share his most enduring memories of his time there.

My story:
A year ago, Haiti was struck by a 7.0-magnitude earthquake that forever changed the lives of not only Haitians, but rescuers and aid workers all over the world. As a member of GlobalMedic's Rapid Response Team, I was preparing to deploy to Haiti within hours of hearing the news. Not knowing what to expect, a team of emergency services workers from around the Greater Toronto Area -- including paramedics, a doctor and a water engineer -- began the long journey to Haiti.  

Once in Haiti, the destruction was surreal: buildings destroyed, S.O.S. signs, bodies lying in the streets, people digging in the rubble for loved ones. We all knew we had a lot of work ahead of us. Once in Port-au-Prince, our first stop was the Adventist Hospital, which was so damaged that all the patients were outside under tarps, in vehicles [and] all sorts of makeshift tents. Doctors were performing surgery in the parking lot under tarps, and without much-needed medications and supplies. Beside the makeshift operating room sat a sole nurse scrubbing razor blades so they could be used for the next surgery.

Out of all the countries that I have deployed to, Haiti was the one that hit me the hardest. Out of all the experiences and memories from Haiti, there are two that will forever be in my heart. The first -- seeing a mother with two seven-day-old infants in her arms (the remaining two infants of triplets born just before the earthquake) camped out from the compound that our team was staying at. No food, water, milk or shelter. They had no nutrition since they lost everything in the earthquake. After placing feeding tubes into the infants' stomachs, we transported them to the Israeli field hospital, which was much better equipped to care for these infants than the local hospital. In fact, if these infants had any chance, it was our only option. But due to the road conditions and rubble blocking the roads, only one survived.

The second memory is when I went to assess the needs of an orphanage and held a young boy in my arms. He was happy to have help come from Canada and gave me a big smile and a huge hug. I remember wishing that I could take him home with me so that he would not have to experience this kind of destruction again.

Before leaving Canada to deploy to Haiti, I recall being asked by several people the same question: "Why go to Haiti? It's unsafe and dangerous. You can be killed doing what you are doing." My response? Because if it were my family and friends, I would want people to come help us. I have to go.

web-SeanLarge-01.JPG
Volunteer paramedic Sean Large holds a young Haitian boy. (Submitted by Sean Large)
More CBCNews.ca Community content:

Do you have stories to share about Haiti? Email us at yournews@cbc.ca.

]]> web-SeanLarge-03.JPG
An infant receives medical treatment in Haiti. (Submitted by Sean Large)

Bio: Sean Large is a paramedic from southern Ontario's Peel Region. He's a volunteer with GlobalMedic, a Toronto-based non-governmental organization that offers emergency relief services to victims of disaster around the world. Large went to Haiti after the 2010 earthquake to assist in the recovery effort. Ahead of the first anniversary of Haiti's earthquake, the CBCNews.ca Community team asked him to share his most enduring memories of his time there.

My story:
A year ago, Haiti was struck by a 7.0-magnitude earthquake that forever changed the lives of not only Haitians, but rescuers and aid workers all over the world. As a member of GlobalMedic's Rapid Response Team, I was preparing to deploy to Haiti within hours of hearing the news. Not knowing what to expect, a team of emergency services workers from around the Greater Toronto Area -- including paramedics, a doctor and a water engineer -- began the long journey to Haiti.  

Once in Haiti, the destruction was surreal: buildings destroyed, S.O.S. signs, bodies lying in the streets, people digging in the rubble for loved ones. We all knew we had a lot of work ahead of us. Once in Port-au-Prince, our first stop was the Adventist Hospital, which was so damaged that all the patients were outside under tarps, in vehicles [and] all sorts of makeshift tents. Doctors were performing surgery in the parking lot under tarps, and without much-needed medications and supplies. Beside the makeshift operating room sat a sole nurse scrubbing razor blades so they could be used for the next surgery.

Out of all the countries that I have deployed to, Haiti was the one that hit me the hardest. Out of all the experiences and memories from Haiti, there are two that will forever be in my heart. The first -- seeing a mother with two seven-day-old infants in her arms (the remaining two infants of triplets born just before the earthquake) camped out from the compound that our team was staying at. No food, water, milk or shelter. They had no nutrition since they lost everything in the earthquake. After placing feeding tubes into the infants' stomachs, we transported them to the Israeli field hospital, which was much better equipped to care for these infants than the local hospital. In fact, if these infants had any chance, it was our only option. But due to the road conditions and rubble blocking the roads, only one survived.

The second memory is when I went to assess the needs of an orphanage and held a young boy in my arms. He was happy to have help come from Canada and gave me a big smile and a huge hug. I remember wishing that I could take him home with me so that he would not have to experience this kind of destruction again.

Before leaving Canada to deploy to Haiti, I recall being asked by several people the same question: "Why go to Haiti? It's unsafe and dangerous. You can be killed doing what you are doing." My response? Because if it were my family and friends, I would want people to come help us. I have to go.

web-SeanLarge-01.JPG
Volunteer paramedic Sean Large holds a young Haitian boy. (Submitted by Sean Large)
More CBCNews.ca Community content:
Do you have stories to share about Haiti? Email us at yournews@cbc.ca.
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Bobby Hayes: Why I volunteer tag:www.cbc.ca,2011:/news/citizenbytes//244.104536 2011-01-05T20:27:02Z 2011-01-05T20:34:34Z Bio: Bobby Hayes, 51, lives in Saint John. After volunteering in his spare time to help impoverished people and addicts living on the street for several years, he formed the Joshua Group in 1993, an organization that provides Sunday breakfast... Your Voice bobby-hayes.jpg

Bio:
Bobby Hayes, 51, lives in Saint John. After volunteering in his spare time to help impoverished people and addicts living on the street for several years, he formed the Joshua Group in 1993, an organization that provides Sunday breakfast and activities for the city's at-risk youth. Hayes is a top 10 finalist in CBC and Outpost magazine's Champions of Change contest. CBCNews.ca Your Voice asked him why he volunteers.

My story:
I would often go into some of the rundown houses to give food to people that were on welfare and old age pension. I would find these people sleeping in bus stops, garbage bins, old cars, park benches and old abandoned buildings. I would give them doughnuts, juice, coffee and a smile, and tell them God loved them. I kept my truck full of food to hand out as I went along doing my job street sweeping or driving a plow truck. Some nights I would feed 50 to 75 people. If I ran out of food I would go buy bread and meat and make [sandwiches] in my truck.

I remember going into a crack house and meeting a little eight-year-old boy who was scared to come out to meet me. So I left the food and my phone number, and he called me a few days later. We became good friends and he told his friends about me, so I could help them as well.

Next thing I knew, there were 40 to 50 kids. So I went and asked a church if I could bring them to church with me. They thought it was a couple of kids. When they saw all the kids, they were in shock -- it was too much for the church.

So I went to the park with all the kids, where we didn't have to worry about noise and the mess, just the weather. I got my barbecue and started cooking burgers and hotdogs.
Some days there would be 150 kids there.
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Bio: Bobby Hayes, 51, lives in Saint John. After volunteering in his spare time to help impoverished people and addicts living on the street for several years, he formed the Joshua Group in 1993, an organization that provides Sunday breakfast and activities for the city's at-risk youth. Hayes is a top 10 finalist in CBC and Outpost magazine's Champions of Change contest. CBCNews.ca Your Voice asked him why he volunteers.

My story:
I would often go into some of the rundown houses to give food to people that were on welfare and old age pension. I would find these people sleeping in bus stops, garbage bins, old cars, park benches and old abandoned buildings. I would give them doughnuts, juice, coffee and a smile, and tell them God loved them. I kept my truck full of food to hand out as I went along doing my job street sweeping or driving a plow truck. Some nights I would feed 50 to 75 people. If I ran out of food I would go buy bread and meat and make [sandwiches] in my truck.

I remember going into a crack house and meeting a little eight-year-old boy who was scared to come out to meet me. So I left the food and my phone number, and he called me a few days later. We became good friends and he told his friends about me, so I could help them as well.

Next thing I knew, there were 40 to 50 kids. So I went and asked a church if I could bring them to church with me. They thought it was a couple of kids. When they saw all the kids, they were in shock -- it was too much for the church.

So I went to the park with all the kids, where we didn't have to worry about noise and the mess, just the weather. I got my barbecue and started cooking burgers and hotdogs.
Some days there would be 150 kids there.

Some of the trials that the kids went through were tough. Drugs were really taking a toll on the kids and their families and still are. I didn't realize ... how much the kids depended on me. If, for some reason, I never showed up, maybe because of work, sometimes the kids would call looking for me.

Seeing the poverty and neglect, I found myself down with the kids more and more. I was going home knowing I could not help with [enough] milk or bread. I just never had the money. I would go home in my basement, put a blanket over my head and cry, because I felt like I failed these kids and I didn't want my own kids to see me. I had a few of those nights.

I asked people to help, but all I heard was "not now." So, I started mowing lawns, digging ditches, painting, garbage cleanup ... anything I had to do, I would do. The kids helped as soon as I'd get off work. We'd load up the lawnmowers and away we'd go. We're still doing it.

We also want to share your stories of volunteerism. Tell us what volunteer work you do and answer this question: "Why do you volunteer?" We may feature you on our website as well. Let us know in the comments below, email us at yournews@cbc.ca, or leave a message on Facebook or Twitter. You can vote for your favourite Champion of Change here.  

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Victor Fernandez: Why I volunteer tag:www.cbc.ca,2011:/news/citizenbytes//244.104194 2011-01-03T21:26:06Z 2011-01-03T21:36:29Z Bio: Victor Fernandez is a firefighter in St. Albert, Alta. He immigrated to Canada in the 1980s from Chile. In 2000, he founded Canadian Aid for Fire Services Abroad (CAFSA), a non-profit group that gathers used firefighting gear and equipment... Your Voice victor-fernandez.jpg

Bio: Victor Fernandez is a firefighter in St. Albert, Alta. He immigrated to Canada in the 1980s from Chile. In 2000, he founded Canadian Aid for Fire Services Abroad (CAFSA), a non-profit group that gathers used firefighting gear and equipment to send to countries in need, mostly in Central and South America. Fernandez is one of the Top 10 finalists in CBC and Outpost magazine's Champions of Change contest. CBCNews.ca Your Voice asked him why he volunteers.

My story:
In terms of effort and hours, I probably put in 40 to 60 hours a week sometimes for CAFSA. I spend money out of my own pocket and give up holidays from work that I'm supposed to spend with my family. But my family doesn't mind, because I put myself in someone else's shoes when I do this. When you're able to do that, compassion comes in.

There is something called the brotherhood of the firefighter, and my foundation was created in 2000 to help firefighters around the world. We most often go to south and central America, including Guatemala, Chile, and El Salvador. We're looking to go Nicaragua as well.

I began with two firefighter helmets to Santiago, Chile, that I sent to some buddies. Since then, we've sent five fire trucks and more than 800 pieces of protective equipment, including helmets, jackets, pants, boots, and balaclavas.

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Bio: Victor Fernandez is a firefighter in St. Albert, Alta. He immigrated to Canada in the 1980s from Chile. In 2000, he founded Canadian Aid for Fire Services Abroad (CAFSA), a non-profit group that gathers used firefighting gear and equipment to send to countries in need, mostly in Central and South America. Fernandez is one of the Top 10 finalists in CBC and Outpost magazine's Champions of Change contest. CBCNews.ca Your Voice asked him why he volunteers.

My story:
In terms of effort and hours, I probably put in 40 to 60 hours a week sometimes for CAFSA. I spend money out of my own pocket and give up holidays from work that I'm supposed to spend with my family. But my family doesn't mind, because I put myself in someone else's shoes when I do this. When you're able to do that, compassion comes in.

There is something called the brotherhood of the firefighter, and my foundation was created in 2000 to help firefighters around the world. We most often go to south and central America, including Guatemala, Chile, and El Salvador. We're looking to go Nicaragua as well.

I began with two firefighter helmets to Santiago, Chile, that I sent to some buddies. Since then, we've sent five fire trucks and more than 800 pieces of protective equipment, including helmets, jackets, pants, boots, and balaclavas.

It's a very intense procedure to take these trips, and it takes a lot of paper work.
 
Firefighting is one of the most dangerous professions in the world. Everyone else avoids a burning building, but we go in it. In Canada, we are protected 100 per cent, because the health and safety standards are very strict. We have top engineered jackets, great health care, but our firefighters are still getting sick.

The firefighters in these other countries go in with jeans and leather jackets not designed for firefighting, because they simply can't afford more. To properly dress a firefighter from head to toe costs probably $10,000. But if you look at it, $10,000 to save an individual's life -- it's nothing.

The impact we make is not only with the firefighters but the communities. The last mission I was on was in Chillan, Chile, after the earthquake last February. This city has a population of about 170,000 and eight fire stations. They lost four stations. They have around 800 firefighters, but only eight breathing apparatuses for the entire fleet, and only five were in operation.

We came in with 53 breathing apparatuses all ready to go. Each costs thousands of dollars, and this allows the firefighter to breathe fresh air, and go into a toxic environment to save somebody.

I can tell you this -- people in Central America, South America, and the Caribbean don't remember Victor Fernandez. They remember Canada. They say that "this fire truck is from Canada." That makes me, as a Canadian, very proud. In many of these places, they make a big ceremony when we go there. They have Canadian flags, they sing the Canadian national anthem ... it's beautiful. It gets very emotional. I'm a passionate guy about this.

We also want to share your stories of volunteerism. Tell us what volunteer work you do and answer this question: "Why do you volunteer?" We may feature you on our website as well. Let us know in the comments below, email us at yournews@cbc.ca, or leave a message on Facebook or Twitter. You can vote for your favourite Champion of Change here.

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