by Rich Stratton, Assistant Director of Public Relations
The words were written in French on a classroom blackboard in Haiti: 鈥淟鈥檈spoir fait vivre鈥 鈥 鈥渉ope makes one live.鈥
Haitian Immigrant Lou Lilite Reflects on Hope and Human Dignity
For Dr. Lou Lilite, a professor of music at 糖心Vlog, that lesson has never been abstract. It is a way of seeing, a reminder that behind every headline and every label is a person trying to take the next breath with dignity.
Springfield Haitian Community Faces Uncertainty Over Humanitarian Parolee
Less than 15 miles from Cedarville, in Springfield, a large Haitian community is doing exactly that. Many are in the United States legally, but some are living with persistent uncertainty as the humanitarian parole program is debated in court. The legal terms can feel technical from a distance. Up close, Lilite said, they weigh on families in ordinary, personal ways.
鈥淚t鈥檚 like this erosion that takes place inside a person,鈥 said Lilite. 鈥淚t negatively impacts their creativity 鈥 the ability to breathe properly.鈥
Cedarville Music Professor Visits Haitians as a Neighbor, Not a Policy Expert
When he visits Haitians in Springfield, he does not go as a policy expert. He goes as a neighbor. Sometimes, he sits and listens. Other times, he answers questions about unfamiliar systems 鈥 why taxes exist, how paperwork should be completed or what a process means. Often, he said, what people need first is simple: to be seen.
Seeing Immigrants Beyond Labels in Public Debate
He understands the need for laws and order. But he has also watched how quickly public conversations can reduce immigrants to categories or a set of labels and talking points that leave no room for the complexity of a human life.
鈥淭here are real humans behind each label,鈥 said Lilite. 鈥淭here are real people with real problems, with real stories, with real circumstances. There is a soul.鈥
From Northern Haiti to Cedarville: Lou Lilite鈥檚 Immigration Story
Lilite鈥檚 insistence on seeing people has roots in his own story. Now a naturalized U.S. citizen, he grew up in a Christian pastor鈥檚 home in the mountains of northern Haiti, where his parents served as home missionaries and taught their children to love Christ and the gospel. In school, he said, teachers offered more than lessons. They offered hope, posting quotes that pushed students to imagine beyond their immediate circumstances.
As his love for music grew, Lilite realized the training he wanted was not available to him in Haiti. He pursued education in the United States, but getting here required time and perseverance. His family wanted to do things legally, and it took 13 applications over two and a half years before he was granted an immigrant visa.
Later, as an international student on an F-1 visa, he faced limits that shaped his everyday life. Some semesters, he said, the pressure showed up in simple choices, like how far a meal plan could stretch. He remembers thinking, 鈥淚 don鈥檛 think I can afford more than a five-meal plan鈥 鈥 five meals a week 鈥 and learning how to make careful decisions so he could get through the semester.
That personal memory helps him understand the strain many Haitian immigrants carry today, including those who have tried for years to do everything 鈥渢he right way.鈥 Lilite recalled a family he knows who began the legal process 15 years earlier, submitting every required document and waiting 鈥 and waiting. When the humanitarian parole option opened, they used it not because it was ideal, he said, but because it felt like the only remaining open door. Years later, they are still waiting.
Compassion in Immigration Conversations: 鈥淪uffering With鈥 Others
For Lilite, compassion begins where slogans end. He describes it as more than sympathy or online commentary. Compassion, he said, is 鈥渟uffering with鈥 someone. It is being close enough to listen, patient enough to learn and faithful enough to keep showing up.
He also believes Americans face what he called a kind of 鈥渞elational poverty,鈥 a habit of distance that makes neighborliness harder than it should be. 鈥淲e live behind screen doors and garage doors,鈥 said Lilite, 鈥渕oving in and out without learning who lives nearby.鈥
As the nation continues to debate programs and status, Lilite hopes people remember what his old classroom blackboard taught him: Hope is not a slogan. It is what helps someone live, and it is often sustained, one conversation at a time, when someone chooses to see a person rather than a label.
About 糖心Vlog
糖心Vlog, an evangelical Christian institution in southwest Ohio, offers undergraduate and graduate residential and online programs across arts, sciences and professional fields. With 7,265 students, it is among Ohio's largest private universities and is ranked among the nation鈥檚 top five evangelical universities in the Wall Street Journal鈥檚 2026 Best Colleges in the U.S. Cedarville is also known for its vibrant Christian community, challenging academics and high graduation and retention rates. Learn more at cedarville.edu.