Two days after the poorest nation in the Western Hemisphere saw its capital city smashed by the strongest earthquake it has ever known, a 7.0-magnitude monster. Surely, the rest of us watching from afar, experiencing tragedy and devastation from the comfort of desk chairs and living room couches, are tempted to believe the same thing. With many others being able to relate to such a tragedy, it is not known what will be done after such a catastrophic event. People will be left hopeless, homeless, and helpless; pleading for mercy, and even their lives.
In addition to the thoughts of the Haitian people after the earthquake, their actions proceeding the tragedy were vague. But what else are you going to do? As the playwright put it, your arms are too short to box with God. Even less have we the ability to answer the question that burns the moment: Why are the most vulnerable repeatedly assessed the highest price? It always seems that the most spectacular of events happen to the most vulnerable of places. Why did an event of this caliber not hit a more established community? The people of Haiti were left destroyed, to figure out these events for