The mission of the Coalition for Inclusive Dialogue is to promote, facilitate, and lead an inclusive dialogue between all social, political, and economic sectors of Haiti to foster the emergence of peaceful, democratic, and prosperous Haiti.
Without distinction, Haiti’s sons and daughters are equal before the law. This founding principle is part of the motto of our Republic: Liberty-Equality-Fraternity. This value must constantly be promoted and underlined.
As individuals, everyone continually reinvents themselves, reinvent their speech, and value al that nature and other beings on earth bring to them, their communities, and their families.
We each have equal standing as full-fledged sons and daughters of Haiti. Neither our place of birth, our beliefs, our origins, or our gender should constitute barriers to participation in the life and future of our communities. However, belonging to the national community entitles us to our rights, but it also gives us commensurate duties.
Although different as individuals, we accept to hear and understand each other, and we accept to examine their ideas to react to their actions without prejudice. We agree to change our point of view on an issue when this is warranted.
As members of the community of sons and daughters of Haiti, we adhere to mutual respect as a cornerstone of our interactions. Disagreements must be handled in mutual respect.
As sons and daughters of Haiti, we are no more than the temporary stewards of the national heritage, which must be safeguarded to be transmitted to future generations. We develop an awareness and respect for our heritage, whether tangible or intangible.
Our destiny is linked. We can only progress by accepting our complementarity with others. At the social level, the behavior of each of us, individually and as members of social or interest groups, affects all other community members, whether immediately or prospectively. Environmental mutations, which result from global climate changes, affect us all. |
As products of different life histories and experiences, we will come across behaviors that are new to us and perhaps that we will reject. As sons and daughters of Haiti, we are ready to accept that the other person is different and that disagreements may exist. Of course, this assumes the common recognition of the intolerable.
1- Bring together, connect, and intervene to promote new and responsible behavior among all stakeholders in the national transformation at the local, national or supranational levels;
2- Bring together, connect, and intervene to promote awareness and commitments for new responsible and respectful behavior between all actors to foster national transformation;
3- Identify, recruit, or motivate national or foreign personalities who have relevant experience in reconstructing fragmented societies or those that have suffered traumas;
4- Communicate, inform, and disseminate credible information;
5- Facilitate or promote the implementation of social and economic initiatives capable to consolidating positive social and affective relationships among members of a same geographic community; and
6- Connect with decision-makers or influences abroad on Haitian affairs”