My old friend (and for almost thirty years my family's doctor) Dan Johnson has a charity he started in memory of his son, Alec, who was drowned in 2014. One of the projects they are supporting is helping a couple who work in Haiti with abandoned children (and aren't part of the Haitian "orphanage industry"). The couple are raising funds to buy the compound they and the children are in, and I'm helping Dan by linking to https://cultivating-community.org/
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Cultivating Community

Cultivating Community, the mission of Transforming Individual Lives Today, a Vermont-based 501(c)(3) charitable organization.

Cultivating Community

Alec was my younger brother. He was a brilliant applied mathematician, changing how we use computers to understand magnetic reconnection. This work helped us to understanding better how the earth's magnetosphere interacts with solar wind, something that sounds esoteric until you realize that the stability of our power grid and satellite navigation depend on an accurate understanding. It will also be essential if we ever achieve power generation by nuclear fusion.

He wasn't just brilliant, though. He cared deeply about others, and always in meaningful and concrete ways. Shortly before he died, he was telling me excitedly about his plans to visit his friends Pierre and Natalie in Haiti, whom he had helped financially for years in their work, rescuing and rehabilitating so-called "orphans" who were mostly abandoned. Pierre knew about this intimately, because he himself was abandoned by his living mother, disowned by his living father, and abused as a restavek (literally, "stay-with") child-slave.

If this makes you more curious about the backstory for this project, the long version with more details is here:

https://cultivating-community.org/rehabilitating-haitian-orphans/

Restavek - Wikipedia

@mcdanlj Interesting. I was in USAF Nuclear Weapons Test Ban treaty monitoring program. I worked in unit operating magnetometers to detect variations in the Earth's magnetic field and sensors to detect variations in the Earth's electricity flowing in outer layer. The Magnetometers were 3' diameter, 6' high, buried 6 ', spaced 1 mile apart in compass points. Lead plates, 3' x 3' square, 1" thick were buried 6', 1 mile apart in compass points. Nuclear events create disruptions in both fields detected n 2nd derivatives of 0.5 Hz signal.
@wsrphoto My experience working with Alec on this was not on the physics side; I'm a software guy and my physics knowledge is sadly weak. But as he was writing code for the models, we had lots of discussions about how to structure the models for best performance, including on distributed supercomputers. So I hope I helped a little bit with the science at the time.