As written by Bev Brand on Sunday, March 24.
My heart was so sad for the way Annalise Ynocent Metalus had to live and it was especially hard to watch her die. We met Annalise a year ago this March when Jean Robert enrolled she and her husband in the Five Loaves program, which matches a family in the US with a family in Haiti who cannot afford health care. She was such a sweet spirit but had such a heavy heart. Her home was one of the worst we have seen – no food, no furniture, no mat to sleep on, dirt floor, leaky roof, only the clothes on her back. Analise had seven children, two had died. We were told one son had died in an accident in the Dominican and it had affected her deeply. Perhaps she was depressed, she certainly was malnourished. Living in those conditions would be extremely depressing. She was so grateful for the food and clothes we brought and for the opportunity to be part of Five Loaves.
Earlier this year, we found out her house had burned down and multiple mission teams from Iowa came together had built a one room home for them in January (to read and see pictures of this story – click here). Even though it was small, it had a cement floor, a bed to sleep in, a roof that didn’t leak and it was clean. When we arrived in Haiti in February, we went out to visit Annalise and found her laying, unresponsive in the dirt in back of her house (to read Tim Brand’s post on the day – Death Has a Smell and I Now Know It). After a visit to the hospital, a bath and some clean clothes, we found she had cancer and there was nothing they could do for her.




