When you believe . . .
culled from Sky News.
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More mass graves were being dug near capital city Port-au-Prince to bury up to 10,000 quake victims a day.
But, in the midst of all the suffering, people in the devastated seaside town of Jacmel insisted a miracle has happened.
Tiny Elizabeth Josaint was rescued after being trapped alone for eight days in the remains of her home.
Her mother Michelin had put her to bed and gone next door just minutes before the 7.0 magnitude earthquake hit on January 12.
Mrs Josaint's husband, in the downstairs of their home at the time, was killed as the building collapsed. And for eight agonising days, her baby was lost.
How Elizabeth survived, nobody can adequately explain. But in the deeply religious Jacmel community, no explanation is needed. For her grandfather Michellet Josaint, it is a sign.
He told Sky News: "When I come here... I don't find the baby. The people tell me, 'Relax'. And I come here and I find my children with the baby... fantastic."
Much of Jacmel was destroyed. There are worst places in Haiti, but the small community has been hit hard.
Cut off for days, people in the town have dug themselves out of the rubble, tried to restore order and move on.
Rescuers are trying to recover the body of a six-year-old boy who died in the earthquake.
But, because they found Elizabeth more than a week after the disaster, a Colombian search and rescue team is staying in the town.
They hope to find more people alive, but each day, each hour that goes by, the chances get slimmer and slimmer.
The United Nations has organised food, water and medical help in a nearby football stadium.
The American military, its helicopters flying above, are still assessing where to set up more permanent assistance. Their every arrival guarantees a chaotic welcoming committee.
But, even now, there is no widespread aid distribution in the area - something that perplexes their aid partners.
The Canadian Navy's Lee Brown told Sky: "We took some humanitarian aid up to the displaced persons camp, up at the football pitch.
"They were very happy to receive it, but it had been the first aid they had seen. That was very surprising to us, but we're happy to deliver what we had."
Meanwhile, Haitian officials have unveiled a huge operation to move an estimated 500,000 homeless quake victims out of squalid makeshift camps in the capital to new tent villages.
Sky's Robert Nisbet, in Port-au-Prince, said: "Only three out of the 500 camps have drinkable water and there's very little in the way of sanitation and electricity.
"What the Haitian government wants to do is move them out of the city to where they are going to be safer, where there's just more room for them to live.
"They are going to try to get to the camps that are the most desperate first and move them out to these tent villages."
In the UK, X Factor supremo Simon Cowell said he was putting together a charity single to raise money for victims.