Special to The Public Record

Wyclef Jean: Don’t Bother Me, I’m Perfect

Wyclef Jean performing at the General Assembly Hall of the United Nations Headquarters in New York City, New York, United States for UNAIDS in June 2006. Photo: Ali Dan-Bouzoua/Wikimedia

Wyclef Jean’s defensive and amateurish video response to legitimate questions about his NGO, Yéle Haiti, suggests doubts about the charity are well-founded.

Under fire for alleged financial improprieties and the perception he’s in over his head trying to raise funds on a massive scale for earthquake victims in Haiti, Jean simply ignored concerns about Yéle’s ability to compete with larger and more established groups such as the American Red Cross.

Instead, he whined about the criticism and portrayed himself as selfless.

On Yéle’s website, Jean was indignant about the scrutiny he and his organization are receiving. “It is impossible for me to even comprehend the recent attacks on my character and the integrity of my foundation,” the clueless singer complained.

Jean told reporters to stop bothering him. “The mainstream media’s pursuit of [information] has required Yéle to divert precious resources during this critical time in order to answer various inquiries. That must end.”

Maybe donations to Yéle should end.

Although Jean lashed out at only the media, his unwillingness to communicate also affects donors who are entitled to know exactly how and when their money will be spent.

It’s not as if such information is obtainable elsewhere. Try finding a telephone number for Yéle. If you find it, try getting someone to speak with you. Likewise, try getting a response from the email form on the website.

Although Yéle is officially accepting internet donations, its website has already crashed at least once from heavy traffic, and it seems to be relying almost exclusively on contributions via text messages. As an Associated Press article pointed out, “It could take at least a month for donors’ money to flow in because it is not released until they pay their phone bills.”

It’s not necessarily a bad thing to raise funds that won’t be allocated for awhile. After all, Haiti can’t be rebuilt overnight, and its inhabitants will need food and medical services in the coming weeks and months as well as right now. But it’s just a fact that many people prefer to finance the immediate emergency response, and Yéle should be forthright about whether it is rendering short-term or long-term assistance.

Unfortunately, Jean’s bratty attitude makes me feel as if Yéle can’t be trusted to do anything.

The situation in Haiti is emotionally overwhelming. For that reason, Jean should be forgiven for his outbursts, but only if he asks to be forgiven. Otherwise, there are far too many relief organizations run and staffed by people who don’t treat donors with contempt, to justify contributing to Yéle. Jean needs to apologize, sincerely state his willingness to answer questions and enable the public to communicate with his staff – or get out of the charity business.

Jeff Norman is the Director of The Veterans Project, a non-profit group that promotes and supports organizations that help veterans – primarily those who fought in Iraq and/or Afghanistan – reintegrate into society when they come home. Its mission is to help remove the stigma associated with post-traumatic stress, and to raise operating funds for organizations providing psychological care and job training to veterans in the aftermath of war. He blogs at Citizen Jeff. He can be reached at jeff@citizenjeff.com.

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4 Responses for “Wyclef Jean: Don’t Bother Me, I’m Perfect”

  1. Rachel says:

    Jeff,

    Money’s donated by text will be released to all non-profits by the phone companies without the wait, per their unanimous agreement (except (TMobile), as of a couple of days ago. Yele’s tax records were found to be perfect by auditors, as of today. Media attacks on Jean during a trying time such as this are worth little. He has a large audience – that doesn’t include you, obviously, and we get his focus. Yele’s still successfully raising funds for a reason. Try updating your article with current news.

  2. Jeff Norman says:

    Rachel, your comment is extremely vague.

    You haven’t refuted any point I made, and you leave me wondering what exactly you mean by this statement: “Yele’s tax records were found to be perfect by auditors, as of today.”

    The time lapse you mention regarding phone companies isn’t any different than the AP quote I cited.

  3. Jeff Norman says:

    Bruce A. Dixon of Black Agenda Report writes :

    “…But it’s worth noting that Wyclef Jean has family ties to the group of gangsters and thugs that the Clinton-era CIA installed in office when it removed Haiti’s elected president, Jean-Betrand Aristide from office in the 1990s. Wyclef Jean has repeated the contemptible lie all over black radio that Aristide skipped the country with $900 million stolen from Haitians…If Wyclef will lie about that, we wonder what else he’d lie about, and why we should trust him with our money.”

    Full story (includes recommended charities): http://tinyurl.com/yargthq

    According to the Haiti Information Project :

    “Wyclef’s uncle is Raymond Joseph, the highest-ranking official abroad representing the U.S.-installed government in Haiti. He is the un-elected government’s representative in Washington. Wyclef’s uncle, who he has often praised, is responsible for fomenting outrageous lies about Aristide and…the Lavalas political party that has contributed to the current climate of witch-hunts, arbitrary arrests and murders in Haiti today.”

    Full story: http://tinyurl.com/ygte5tg

  4. dobropet says:

    Wow, and I thought Fergie’s lyrics attributed to the band’s unlistenable sounds. Let alone she owns a Baseball league (Florida Marilins?) and her highly inflammatory lyrics are biased.

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