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By DÁNICA COTO (APnews.com)
Church officials set up photos of the 11 Haitian women who died last month when the overloaded boat they were in capsized, at a church in San Juan, Puerto Rico, Wednesday, June 15, 2022. The boat was carrying an estimated 60 to 75 migrants, of which eleven were found dead, at least a dozen still missing and 38 rescued. (AP Photo/Dánica Coto)
SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP) — The caskets were rolled in one by one, lined up in front of friends and family who had no idea that many of the 11 Haitian girls and women they were preparing to bury had decided to flee their country.
They were teenagers, mothers, students, university graduates, all aboard a grossly overloaded boat that capsized last month in the open waters northwest of Puerto Rico.
It was one of the deadliest voyages in the region in recent months. The boat was carrying an estimated 60 to 75 migrants, of which 11 were found dead, at least a dozen are still missing and 38 were rescued — 36 of them Haitians fleeing a deeply unstable country fighting a surge in poverty and violence.
Mourners held aloft their phones at the church and rainy cemetery Wednesday as they live streamed the Mass and burials on social media. They zoomed in on certain caskets for families back in Haiti who couldn’t afford to fly to Puerto Rico and for Haitian migrants living illegally on the U.S. mainland who feared being arrested if they traveled but longed to say goodbye to the victims, including two girls, ages 15 and 16.
“Today we bury their remains, but not their lives and hope,” said one of five priests officiating the ceremony as one man attending the service closed his eyes tightly before tears began to form.
That man, Pierrot Samedi, lost his 23-year-old sister as well as six cousins on the voyage who were never found. He flew to Puerto Rico from West Palm Beach at the urging of local Haitian leader Leonard Prophil, who helped identify the bodies and who has housed and fed all those who arrived for the funeral.
“If you’ve never lived in Haiti, you don’t know what hardship is, you don’t know what misery is,” Prophil said.
The country of more than 11 million people is fighting a 180% increase in kidnappings and a 17% rise in homicides in the past year, according to the United Nations. Dozens of people, including women and children, have been killed and raped in recent months as gangs fight over territory and gain more power following the July 7 assassination of President Jovenel Moïse.
Tens of thousands of Haitians have lost their homes amid gang battles that also have shut down access to the country’s northern and southern regions, the latter still trying to recover from a magnitude 7.2 earthquake last August that killed at least 2,000 people.
Haiti’s worsening situation has prompted thousands to flee their country despite the dangers of illegal human smuggling trips that often turn deadly. Some pay to cross the treacherous Mona Passage to reach Puerto Rico from the neighboring Dominican Republic, while others are dropped off in Cuba, the Bahamas or the Turks and Caicos Islands in their quest to reach the U.S.
In late May, more than 840 Haitians aboard one boat landed in Cuba, the largest such single arrival in recent history. Meanwhile, hundreds of Haitians have reached Florida in recent months after swimming ashore.
U.S. authorities also have reported a big spike in the number of Haitian migrants detained throughout the Caribbean in comparison with previous years. The vast majority of those traveling are men, which makes the death of the 11 women even more unusual.
Those mourning them said it’s inevitable that other fatal voyages will occur in upcoming months.
“This is not going to end,” said Samedi, who lost seven relatives in the most recent deadly voyage. “It’s not the first one nor will it be the last one.”
Most migrants who die at sea and whose bodies are recovered are cremated, but Prophil, the local Haitian leader, said he and others fought for a proper burial because Haitians don’t believe in cremation and the bodies couldn’t be repatriated because of what they criticized as government bureaucracy. They thanked embalmers, funeral homes and a clothing designer in Puerto Rico for donating their time and resources to help the women’s families in what turned out to be a farewell rarely seen after a deadly migrant voyage.
Part of Wednesday’s Mass was held in Haitian Creole, with the country’s flag draped over each casket and a framed picture of each girl or woman balanced on it. Some were selfies and others were pictures of them posing, one of them with her hands on her hips, a wide smile and a bright pink scarf tied around her head.
Two of the women were 31 years old. One had a son and was studying law and the other was studying accounting. Another victim was a 28-year-old university graduate who had studied business administration and had two sons, family members said.
Once at the cemetery, mourners braved heavy rain and stepped through thick, red mud to bury the women as they held each other’s hand, clutched moist tissues or put a palm on the casket before it was lowered into the ground. One woman wailed until others surrounded her and began singing a hymn to calm her.
“We’ve been suffering for centuries, and no one has been listening,” said one woman adding that she hasn’t lost hope. “I believe that before I close my eyes, I will see a better Haiti.”