More.....February 7, 202
/I forgot to add that after the funeral, as I was driving the wife of Richard to the nearest taptap station (public transport), I saw Faudress coming to do his work on the tilapia farm, shielding his eyes from the morning sun.
Faudress is challeged from birth because he was born with dwarfed and twisted legs below the knee.
Wheelchairs don’t last long on these Haitian roads, and some of the disabled have developed a rugged cart operating by manual pedaling. So when I saw Faudress shielding his eyes, it meant he was pedaling the rough road with one hand.
I stopped to tell him I have a hat and sunglasses, given by friends in Boise, Idaho (St Alphonsus Foundation), that I would send to the tilapia ponds for him.
Here he is! The sun is in his eyes on rising, and again on setting- but he is prepared for his afternoon trek!

