Dear Sophie, I am writing just to let you know this is the...

Tiba - September 10 2011, 9:32 AM

Dear Sophie,

I am writing just to let you know this is the last message that you will get from me because you are exhausting me.

I have never claimed to be an English scholar nor that I was a sholar period.

Thought you seem to claim yourself to be, or at least position yourself as a scholar, and if so, I am very happy for you.

Ms. Sophie, I want you to know that I am a Haitian "natif natal" and my native language is Creole.

I am not a US-Born, and therefore I cannot claim English as my native language.

You seem to have a hard time accepting me or any other Haitian to have gone to school and achieved any level of education, could that be out of jealousy, envy, or you just a very unhappy woman?

When I looked closely at your last message, I noticed a few things that make you look like a scholar "wannabe" when in fact you're not all that bright either.

For example, you wrote "after you smoke", "you claims" and "he want." If you look at these terms, would you agree, while I have a problem with spelling that you have a big grammar problem?

Which one is worse than the other?

You see Sophie, you are the kind of people that make me want to vomit and that I am disgusted about.

You know, the kind who sit on their heads so long that they cut the oxygen flow from going to their brain and keep "faire etalage de connaissance" 24/7. People like you, the scholar wannabe, are the ones who keep waiting on white people to fix Haiti for them because they don't have the "know-how" to do anything for their contry.

People like you, who are trying so hard to "sit higher than the toilet seat", the ones with low self-esteme.

It is clear that women like you are the type of people in Haiti who keep living off their husbands/boyfriends care and support while they sit home scratching their butts believing they are better than the rest of the Haitian masses.

Sophie, I may not know how to spell but I have been very helpful to my people in my hometown, since 1995. I talk the talk and I walk the walk. I put in place a humanitarian project in my hometown in Haiti that is providing basic health care, education, and economic development to a community of 70,000 people at bare minimum cost to those who can afford it and free of charge to those who cannot afford it. And no, there isn't one red cent from the Haitian government whatsoever, and nothing out of my pocket either.

It's all done through community organizing and outreach that I was able to do here where I live.

And also due to my affort, many kids could go to school thanks to sponsorships that I was able to get them. Soon, I will be taking a big group of people to Haiti to volunteer in the project.

This is what competence is about, the know-how, skills, and most importantly, the love for country and empathy for my people.

As a scholar can you please tell the bloggers what your involvement has been in Haiti?

What have you done for Haiti lately?

"Etalage the connaissance" alone is not going to cut it unless you put it to good use to the benefit of your country and your people.

Please, just don't bother to reply!

Tiba.

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