http://www.ncregister.com/register_exclusives/horror_in_haiti/

After the disaster: Notre Dame Cathedral, Port au Prince (Simon Roughneen)
PORT-AU-PRINCE — Four days after the Jan. 12 earthquake that destroyed much of Haiti’s capital, surprising news made its way to Jean-Claude Jérémie, making him jump from his spot at a camp close to the port. Like hundreds of thousands of his compatriots, he now sleeps outdoors, his home destroyed.
It was news of a phone call.
“The call was from Father Benoit, he was missing since the earthquake, everyone thought he was dead”.
“So where was he calling from?”
“He said ‘I am under the concrete, buried here.”
Apparently he was unable to reach his hand phone until loosening an arm. The call was made to another parishioner, a friend of Jean-Claude’s.
Among the estimated 200,000 killed during the 7.0 quake was Archbishop Joseph Serge Miot, leading some newspaper reports to suggest an apocalypse for the Church in Haiti, where Catholicism and Christianity sit in an uneasy relationship with the voodoo practiced by some Haitians.
Some stories insinuate that apparently superstitious Haitians will desert Catholicism in drove due to the destruction wrought on the once-magnificent Notre Dame Cathedral and the loss of so many religious as well as devout laypeople.
Built in the distinctively French style and painted pink and cream, it rose above the downtown Port-au-Prince, now a sea of rubble and pancaked multi-story buildings.
“I try to be a very strong Catholic,” said a woman named Joissant,. She runs a small street stall downhill from the shattered cathedral, close to a Catholic school. The earthquake took place in the evening, meaning that the children were not inside the half-collapsed school building.
“I looked up at the church,” she said. “The top (the 100-feet steeple) was swinging round and round, and ground was going updownupdownupdown. The tower fell, through the roof and down onto the floor.”

The bell from the Eglise Perpetuel lying on the street. This church is 500 yards from the cathedral, and was destroyed by the earthquake (Photo: Simon Roughneen)
The cathedral itself now looks like it was shelled. The walls still stand, but the roof collapsed, filling the apse and nave with rubble and burying unknown numbers of clergy and laypeople.
“There was a choir singing in there when it happened,” said Joissant, pointing to an annex at the front of the building.
Behind the cathedral, the archbishop’s residence was damaged, though not heavily. Next door to that, the Catholic Radio Soleil was destroyed, with many journalists and staff killed inside. The station was behind the towering cathedral and was crushed when the cathedral walls and roof crashed down upon it.
German and Dominican Republic rescue workers continue to sift through the rubble, mostly removing dead bodies, but also looking for survivors. Eight days after the disaster, two children were pulled from the wreckage of collapsed buildings elsewhere in the city.
There are huge rubble heaps all over the city, many untouched since the disaster. On Tuesday, one week after the earthquake, on the hills overlooking the city, an Israeli team worked to find survivors at a four-story high school. Heavy concrete floors had pulverized the light bricks and sparse steelwork beneath.
The focus is moving from rescue to delivering aid, and this has run into problems as well. The U.S. military controls the international airport, a tiny building with only one runway and capacity to station no more than six cargo aircraft at any one time. The seaport is damaged, and the streets are clogged with rubble and debris. Roaming gangs of armed men and escaped prisoners add to the dangers for distressed and bereaved survivors, as well as for the aid groups trying to get help to them.
But some rescue work will continue, as people can often survive for days if caught in gaps between large slabs of masonry if there is access to water.
“So did you find Father Benoit?” I asked.
Jérémie answered, “No, he is still in there” ¬ pointing at the remains of the cathedral.
“Is he still alive?”
“We do not know. His phone battery must have died; we cannot get through to him. We have not heard anything from him in four days.”