Haiti school keeps memory of RCMP Sgt. Mark Gallagher alive - Action News
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Nova Scotia

Haiti school keeps memory of RCMP Sgt. Mark Gallagher alive

In one of the poorest neighbourhoods of Port-au-Prince, Haiti, stands a brand-new school built in memory of Maritimer and RCMP Sgt. Mark Gallagher.

Gallagher worked in Halifax, Moncton and Bathurst before his final tour in Haiti in 2010

Ecole de Formation Professionnelle Sgt. Mark Gallagher opened in October 2014 in memory of a Maritime RCMP officer who worked in Haiti before his death in 2010. (Tatiana Magloire for Radio-Canada)

In one of the poorest neighbourhoods of Port-au-Prince, Haiti, stands a brand-new school builtin memory of Maritimer Mark Gallagher.

The Sgt. Mark Gallagher Vocational School has now been open a year, and itsstudents and staff remember the man who inspired it.

A charitable organization, Friends of Mark Gallagher, raised money to build the school and alongwith AQANU a Quebec-based partner with more than 50 years of experience in Haitistarted planning the project shortly afterthe devastating earthquake that is believed to havekilled more than 230,000 people, including Gallagher.

Sgt. Mark Gallagher worked in Moncton, Bathurst and Halifax before serving with the United Nations in Haiti. (RCMP)

An RCMP officer who was last based in Halifax, Gallagher wasin Haiti for a nine-month tour helping to train the national police force as part of a United Nations mission.

He had been stationed in Haitisince July and returned after spendingChristmas with his family in Canada.Gallagher was was only in Port-au-Princefor a few hourswhen a devastating earthquake struck Jan. 12,2010.

'He lives inside us, inside every student'

"He was a man with a big heart," the school'svice principalJean-RonyLouis toldRadio-Canada.

"With the construction of this school and the history of this man, Mark Gallagher is immortal for us.He lives inside us, inside every student, inside every professor."

Before working with the United Nations peacekeeping forces, Gallagherwas a common face in Nova Scotia and New Brunswick media storiesas theRCMP'sspokesperson.

Those communities, with his friends and family, raised more than amillondollars over five years to build the school that now bears his name.

The Canadian federal government also pitched in almost$800,000 for the project. Construction started in 2012 and it opened in the fall of 2014.

Students learn to rebuild Haiti

A team withRadio-CanadaAcadie, producer Paulmiled'Entremont, reporter NicolasSteinbachand cameraman PierreFournier, travelled to Haiti in March 2015 and conducted interviews.

The school was designed to offer15 programs for all 13 communes within Carrefour, a suburb of Port-au-Prince.In addition to basic skills, such as cooking and sewing, organizers wantedto provide some trades training, such as plumbing and electrical work.

Students listen to their teacher at Ecole Formation Professionnelle Sgt. Mark Gallagher in Port-au-Prince, Haiti. (Tatiana Magloire for Radio-Canada)

The school is earthquake-resistant and equipped to admit around 500 students from the area. The school replaces one destroyed in the earthquake. Around 150 people were killed when the building collapsed, most of them children.

Louis says it is allowing young people living in a poor communitythe opportunity to learn how to earn an income.

The students, some of whom are orphans, are also learning trades to help rebuild their country.

"I want to serve my country," said studentSamuel Jean-Charles, who wants to be carpenter.

School 'absolutely critical contribution'

Halifax Regional Police Chief Jean-Michel Blais rushed to Haiti only a day after the 2010 earthquake to help with the recovery.

The school's site was covered in rubble in 2013. (Submitted by Friends of Mark Gallagher)

Blais helped transportGallagher's body back to Canada, along with that of RCMPChief Supt. Doug Coates. Gallagher was found in the rubble of an apartment building Blais once lived in, hesaid.

The school is"an absolutely critical contribution" to the country, Blais said.

"It's something that speaks volumes about the commitment that we have as Canadians to people in Haiti and the importance of education to allow these people to get out of the misery that they have," Blais said.

"It's an education that goes beyond simply to get the background to get a job," he said.

"It's education to make a lasting cultural change to support social capital, to support social cohesion."

The school is indeed one step in a longer process to rebuild, which is well underway, vice principleLouis said.

"Mark Gallagher used to say something very important," Louis said.

"The simplest actions are often the most important ones."

With files from Paul Emile D'Entremont