Children listen to local band Freché e Do (Fresh Air and Gold) play music in Tapis Vert, a tent community on the edge of Cité Soley. Cité Soley, Haiti 1 January 2011
A young boy plays a toy guitar made from an empty water bottle while listening to local band Freché e Do (Fresh Air and Gold) in Tapis Vert, a tent community on the edge of Cité Soley. Cité Soley, Haiti 1 January 2011
A young girl dances to the music of ;ocal band Freché e Do (Fresh Air and Gold) in Tapis Vert, a tent community on the edge of Cité Soley. Cité Soley. Haiti 1 January 2011
A woman hangs plastic flowers from the ceiling of her temporary home in the tent camp in Place Pechon across from the National Palace in downtown Port au Prince. Most of the residents of these camps had been living there since the earthquake the year before and had seen very little progress or improvement in their situation during that time. Port-au-Prince, Haiti 2 January 2011
An empty classroom in the temporary housing for Sainte Trinité School in downtown Port au Prince. The entire structure of the school was destroyed in the earthquake. Port-au-Prince, Haiti 2 January 2011
A desk in the temporary housing for Sainte Trinité School in downtown Port au Prince. The entire structure of the school was destroyed in the earthquake. Port-au-Prince, Haiti 2 January 2011
The famous Neg Mawon (Mawon Inconnu) statue almost completely enveloped in the surrounding tents. The statue, which sits in Place Pechon across from the National Palace, represents the call to revolt made by the escaped slaves which initiated the revolution that culminated in Haiti's independence in 1804. Port-au-Prince, Haiti 2 January 2011