He could fix anything. Dad would see something wrong; something broken or not quite working the way it was supposed to, and he’d fix it or at least he’d try.
Most often got the job done no matter how long it took, no matter how challenging the task, he’d scope it out, gather his tools and go to work, and he would work tirelessly until the job was done, the thing fixed, replaced or recycled but never discarded.
Growing up in an era where everyone was pretty much on their own, yet also dependent on each other, he and his peers had little choice but to count on themselves and whenever necessary, their neighbors; an ethic they derived from their agrarian roots, growing up on farms where there was always work to be done and improvisation was a required skill.
Without handbooks, and in many cases without the formal education necessary to read the books even if they had them, they had to figure things out for themselves but if someone did not know how to tackle a problem, there was usually a neighbor somewhere down the road who could. And they did.
When I arrived back in the sunshine state again recently, the entire peninsula was buried in a rare deep freeze reminding me of the legendary snowfall the state suffered back in 1977.
Of course, any temperature below 50 degrees in South Florida is considered as equivalent to below freezing among many except the hardiest, though others look forward to the infrequent chills and the momentary relief from the otherwise unforgiving sun and the ever-present drone of the air conditioners.
The local media was in a perpetual frenzy as worried farmers and citrus grove owners scurried to save their crops while panicked pet-owners and grief stricken gardeners dragged their precious plants indoors to protect them from the evil arctic blast. Naturally, I was blamed for bringing it down with me though I am certain several Canadians got there ahead of me.
There are probably as many Canadian license plates in Palm Beach County during the winter season as there are Canadian license plates on any given day at Walmart and the Fashion Outlets of Niagara Falls, Florida has figured out how to capitalize on that market in a big way and as a result scant evidence of the global recession is apparent there for the most part in spite of the otherwise obvious sharp drop in the once heavily bloated over-priced and over-abundant new housing market.
Within days of my arrival, the weather maelstrom was replaced by the shocking and devastating earthquake horror not far from the pristine sands of Palm Beach where, during the years that I lived there, flotillas of Haitian refugees were an almost daily occurrence, and just as quickly as they arrived, starving and sick from the harrowing journey, they were sent right back into the hell that Haiti had become.
I became deeply interested in the tiny overpopulated little country while I lived in South Florida. Having made many Haitian friends and acquaintances, I was thirsty for understanding why things were and are the way they remain only more so now.
There was obviously a problem, and I wanted to know what it was and how to fix it; a trait I must have inherited from dad.
Watching the news reports of the tragedy from the comfort of the living room was nothing like hearing the personal pleas from the people I know in Florida who have loved ones still trapped under the rubble there, just off the coast, seemingly within swimming distance from where we stood, many of us in tears feeling absolutely helpless except to pray for them.
I wondered how my father would have seen it; what tools would he gather, and how would he fix this?
I could almost hear him, “Get them out of there, all of them; evacuate the whole place, clean it up and rebuild it right!” he’d say. He’d be sending in the Army, the Marines, the Navy and pulling in forces from all over the region, making arrangements to accommodate the refugees while training them to reconstruct their country from the ground up.
He would admonish those who over the years exploited the country as Richard Kim, writing in The Nation posts, “Haiti's vulnerability to natural disasters, its food shortages, poverty, deforestation and lack of infrastructure, are not accidental. To say that it is the poorest nation in the Western hemisphere is to miss the point; Haiti was made poor — by France, the U.S., Great Britain, other Western powers and by the IMF and the World Bank.”
Kim continues, “As historians have documented, the impoverishment of Haiti began in the earliest decades of its independence, when Haiti’s slaves and free gens de couleur rallied to liberate the country from the French in 1804. But by 1825, Haiti was living under a new kind of bondage — external debt. In order to keep the French and other Western powers from enforcing an embargo, it agreed to pay 150 million francs in reparations to French slave owners (yes, that’s right, freed slaves were forced to compensate their former masters for their liberty). In order to do that, they borrowed millions from French banks and then from the US and Germany. As Alex von Tunzelmann pointed out, “By 1900, it (Haiti) was spending 80 percent of its national budget on repayments.”
No doubt, we live on a precarious, dynamic planet fraught with danger and the ever present threat of calamity; indeed the natural catastrophe that befell our Southern neighbor could, and will one day happen again even here, but the man made disaster could have been avoided and it must be resolved.
A nation that cannot help itself, cannot help its neighbors, and neighbors who exploit one another also imperil if not doom each other.
As my father would say, “Let’s get to the root of this problem and fix it!”
Contact Bill Bradberry at bill.bradberry@yahoo.com.
Bill Bradberry
BRADBERRY: Haiti: Getting to the root of the problem
- Bill Bradberry
-
-
BRADBERRY: Is Black History Month Still Relevant?
I am uncomfortably recovering and slowly recuperating from a relatively minor, but medically necessary procedure which has kept me out of circulation, out of touch and essentially on my back for a lot longer than I have personally believed was justifiable; however, in this case my opinion matters not; the doctor’s diagnosis and promising prognosis trumped mine, so here I lay almost completely befuddled, nearly unable to pen a clear sentence.
-
BRADBERRY: Old medicine and new challenges
Having suffered and recovered from my fair share of illnesses and injuries over the years, I have come to believe that sometimes the treatment and the cure of my condition can seem to be far worse than whatever I may think is ailing me at the moment.
-
BRADBERRY: Someplace like home — but far different
Sitting with my driving foot perched on the doctor’s examination table, I learned that the out-patient surgery he was proposing to perform meant that my leisurely slow walks along the crowded sandy beaches would have to cease for a while and that the long drive back up the East Coast from the warm sunshine would, much to my considerable consternation, have to wait a few more days.
-
BRADBERRY: Waters and righteousness like a mighty stream
I was just settling into my new home near posh Palm Beach, Fla., to live when the enormously prolific biographer, Stephen B. Oates first published “Let the Trumpet Sound: The Life of Martin Luther King, Jr.” way back in 1982.
-
BRADBERRY: In the trivial pursuit of small change
Traveling across our nation’s vast countryside it is easy to see the huge differences in the results rendered when the simple chase of dollars and nonsense is completely substituted for the honest pursuit of happiness, beauty and plain old-fashioned fun.
-
BRADBERRY: Never losing Leanna
It was no great surprise when word came last week that Leanna, my beloved stepmother passed away peacefully in her sleep at home in Florida; her 97-year-old body simply could not keep up with her ageless spirit and boundless wisdom.
-
BRADBERRY: Thanksgiving, thanks for the memories
I’m trying to remember my very first Thanksgiving, naturally I can’t go that far back, but I do remember a lot of them, especially those when I didn’t have much and not surprisingly, some of those when I really had little or nothing to speak of, were, in retrospect, probably some of the best Thanksgivings ever.
-
BRADBERRY: Which way to the falls?
So there I was, comfortably perched on a hard little chair at a round little table smack dab in the middle of one of the busiest little spots outside of the State Park in Niagara Falls on one of the nicest days so far this fall.
-
BRADBERRY: Escaping the wrecking ball, only the beginning
This piece was originally written and published about 10 years ago. In light of recent efforts to preserve the old brick barn at DeVeaux Woods, I thought it might bear repeating.
-
BRADBERRY: Working together gains Trust
With the National Trust for Historic Preservation coming to town this week as part of their nearly week-long conference in Buffalo, I have had the opportunity to work with a number of organizations and individuals to help create a day-long event called Niagara Day.
- More Bill Bradberry Headlines
-






