Oh my God! Thank you, Sheila for remembering! You feel terrible? Do not, because even the Creator of this website is guilty as well. It's been so uneventful here that I completely forgot the 12th anniversary of this community. I truly believe that you are THE ONLY ONE who remembered. So, MANY THANKS!!!!!!!
One of the highlights of the 10th anniversary for me, two years ago, was the fantastic opportunity to host you and your little sister Rose (now a wife and mother) to our event. I can't ever describe to you the joy I truly felt, having my picture taken with the two of you, who represent to my eyes the future of Haiti. Yes, the so-called "diaspora" will have to play a significant role in the rebuilding of our country and caring thinkers and professionals in health and education like the two of you should be given a meaningful part in the process.
To think that we had projected a joyous reunion this year in Haiti. But as they say, L'HOMME PROPOSE ET DIEU DISPOSE (gen de lè mwen panse DISPOZISYON NÈG ANLÈ SA A! Pito mwen kite sa avan nèg Leonel la rantre nan jwèt la, paske depi li tande non Letènèl la... li mande goumen ak Tayi ak Gelin!) Based on the calamity that fell upon us, I shall never project another big reunion.
However, I still would like us to stay in touch and possibly meet each other informally in small settings. What a joy for me it was to meet through Ann Pale and Windows on Haiti, superb opinionated individuals like Marilyn Mason, Jean Gelin, Louis Merosne (Tayi), Serge Bellegarde, Jean Saint-Vil and Manzè Choublak, Jude Jean-François, Rudy Monpierre (Widy), Nekita Lamour, Leonel Jean-Baptiste, Ezili Danto and Chantal Laurent, Tidodo and Michel Nau, Kaptenn and Pwofesè Pakapala, and a few unforgettable contributors from the city of Leogane! (I did not try to list everyone, so if you do not see your name listed, don't take it as a negative). That Windows on Haiti lasted a full ten years of feverish activity, giving to the world some generous notions about Haiti and her sons and daughters, is truly more than I could have asked. When I started the site in April 1998, my objective was to make it last until January 1, 2004! And even that seemed quite ambitious at the time...
And we are now embarking on our 13th year, quite a bit more humble... Other beautiful Haiti sites have sprung all around us. And now the national dialogue carries on unabated on state-of-the-art social networks such as FaceBook. Has Windows on Haiti become irrelevant? Of course not! It lives on in our hearts and it carries with it the satisfaction of knowing that it has spread around a lot of seeds that are now in full bloom or may be blooming a little later... No matter what happens, we can all be proud of the fact that we have held the banner of Haiti very high indeed!
At one time, Windows on Haiti was cited in the New York Times as the hub of the Haitian community on the Net...
At one time, Windows on Haiti was
one of only two sites (the other being the site of the Embassy of the Republic of Haiti in Washington, D.C.) that were given as references in the State of the World Annual Report of the Encyclopedia Brittanica...
At one time, our Windows on Haiti editor was given a special interview on a special publication (on global multilingual communications) from the United Nations...
At one time, a specially selected, and uniquely formatted by Windows on Haiti, excerpt from a Frederick Douglass speech made its way around the world in the new format (as a poem), and even found its way in the Presidential Speech on the occasion of the Bicentennial of Haiti, on January 1, 2004: "As Frederick Douglass wrote in his poem about Haiti...,"

[I fell off my chair, that day! Had never thought for a second...]
At one time, our Windows on Haiti editor was interviewed by Voice of America from Washington and by Jean Saint-Vil in Ottawa, and invited to speak to Pax Christi Virginia and various other human rights groups about Haitian Rights...
At one time, Windows on Haiti was hosted by the Jan Mapou Library in Little Haiti (Miami) in a special cultural celebration of our eighth-year anniversary in which many local artists, community leaders, and members coming from many states, participated joyously and later on, we toasted our unique bond and strong attachment to the culture of Haiti in Tap Tap restaurant...
At one time, well two years ago, Windows on Haiti celebrated its 10-year anniversary in Newark, NJ, and guests came in from Canada, from Massachusetts, from Pennsylvania, from New York, from Florida, [ and even from New Jersey!!!

] to rejoice in such an event, to meet each other in the flesh, usually for the first time, to renew our bond and special friendship...
At one time, we promised that we would meet again, this time for the twelfth anniversary, but this time in "Ayiti Cheri". But when the time came, we all forgot... (except you, Sheila). But who can blame us, after all that has happened? No one! Windows on Haiti has had a magnificent run... Thank you for being part of its history. Most sites do not last ten years. We are happy to have been there when it counted and to have been significant for many of you. Windows on Haiti, Just Imagine! Our principles and unfailing hope for the future of our nation will keep us going...
Thank again for your thoughts! They bring us joy and comfort, just when we need it the most.