Sean Penn Talks Haiti, Humanitarianism and Hollywood

All photos taken by Eric Ray Davidson
All photos taken by Eric Ray Davidson

If Sean Penn could offer up one piece of universal advice, it would probably be ā€˜Donā€™t believe everything you read.ā€™

If you assumed this was in reference to how heā€™s portrayed in the press, youā€™d be partially correct. Itā€™s more than that though: the award-winning humanitarian and two-time Oscar-winning actor would also be alludingĀ to the public perception of Haiti, a place he has personally invested his time and finances in, and his attention to, for the past six years. After an earthquake ravaged the Caribbean country in 2010, he founded J/P Haitian Relief Organization (HRO), which began as an emergency relief organization of 32 Americans. It has since expanded to a rank of nearly 200ā€”most of whom are Haitianā€”with a goal of turning over the previously-built medical, educational and community development centers entirely to the Haitian people. Despite all the progress heā€™s made, the country is far from escaping its reputation as the poorest country in the western hemisphere, but Penn wonā€™t bow out until the job is done. ā€œThere was a commitment that we made to the country, and itā€™s just unfinished business, I suppose. Thatā€™s why weā€™re still here.ā€

Thereā€™s no doubt that the 56-year-old icon has doneā€”and continues to doā€”more than his part to help Haiti escape its vicious cycle of poverty and insecurity. However, the countryā€™s ā€˜Open for Businessā€™ slogan isnā€™t even close to being true right now, especially in the wake of the damage Hurricane Matthew inflicted upon the countryā€™s southern region, destroying several villages and killing more than 800 people. Penn, however, places blame on more than Mother Nature. ā€œ[Haiti] has been very close to staying open for business, and then it gets thrown back for two main reasons.ā€ He notes that one is because the countryā€™s leaders and its wealthy residents seem to be overinvested in the comfort zone of a system that doesnā€™t allow for export, and demands that the country ā€œbe a slave to the poor.ā€ The other, more pressing problem in his eyes is the media: ā€œ[Members of the press have] been so incredibly irresponsible and uninformed in their reporting on Haiti, politically,ā€ he says, adding, ā€œI think that a four-day visit is a lot more damaging than no visit at all. Thereā€™s kind of an impatience with understanding culturally [and politically] what goes on.ā€

Though he isnā€™t a fan of media in general, heā€™s quick to praise Anthony Bourdainā€™s early coverage of the nation on his food and travel reality show,Ā No Reservations.Ā The celebrity chef and TV personality turned what could have been a frothy segment on Haitiā€™s cuisine and culture into an insightful look at its 2011 climate. Penn filmed a small segment for the series and, after it aired, took himself out for a meal in the nationā€™s capital, Port-au-Prince. ā€œI remember going into a restaurant that night and people had seen [the piece]. Everyone was saying, ā€˜Finally, somebodyĀ gotĀ Haiti,ā€™ā€ he recalls.

Somebody besides him, that is to say. Because what started off for Penn as a two-week trip to ā€œlend a handā€ distributing pain medications like morphine and ketamine to trauma centers turned into a nine-month pilgrimage. Bottom line: he wanted to do some good, and he wanted to be close enough to his daughter Dylan and son Hopper that, if something serious happened back home in Los Angeles, heā€™d be a quick plane ride away from the US. ā€œNow, some might say, ā€˜Well, why not stick to the United States [if you want to do some good]?ā€™ā€ he notes. ā€œIt really just happened this way: once I got to Haiti, like so many other people, I fell in love with itā€”the people there, the possibilities that is has.ā€

He also believes that the United States has a ā€œsacred debtā€ to the Haitians in order to correct some of the mistakes it made in the pastā€”a debt owed, if you willā€”and that it really pays to get the country out of trouble for the first time and help provide secure footing. ā€œItā€™s not going to be an overnight processā€”nobody ever said it would beā€”but I think that the people are ready to take care of themselves, and thatā€™s when things change.ā€

And change it will be a-coming in a very, very big way. In August, Penn and J/P HRO announced their participation in Haiti Takes Root, an ambitious, long-term commitment from both the Haitian and French governments, as well as billionaire Sean Parker via The Parker Foundation. The ten-year, $300 million initiative seeks to repair the country from within by increasing technical expertise and strengthening environmental governance. The goal is to improve government relations and both ecotourism and environmental legislation. Needless to say, itā€™s a pretty ambitious undertaking, but Penn and his pals are up to the challenge.

ā€œA powerful consortium of commitments have been made from the French government, to the Haitian government, to many international NGOs, and of course the Parker Foundation,ā€ he says of the collaboration. ā€œ[Sean Parker] signed on as the piper. Heā€™s an extremely generous philanthropist and I knock wood that things are going well for him [in his other philanthropic ventures, including The Parker Institute for Cancer Immunotherapy] because heā€™s really bold. He is a disrupter and I love him.ā€

One might say that Penn is somewhat of a disrupter himselfā€”though, quite humbly, he dismisses the praise. ā€œ[The initiative] hasnā€™t seemed to be disruptive yet, but I think weā€™ve gotten people coming on board who have mutual concerns and a lot of support [for the cause].ā€ He pauses a beat, and seems to be almost speaking to himself when he says, ā€œThe only thing is that weā€™ve got to get it right.ā€

Economically, the country is in severe need of agro-reforestation but, luckily, Penn is up for the challenge. Heā€™s got big plans for Haitiā€”including a complete restructure of the countryā€™s landscape to enhance its value as an ecotourism destination. That said, he realizes that they need to keep it simple to start with. ā€œYou canā€™t forget to have exportable produce, but you have to have good roads first because, if you donā€™t, the produce is going to get bruised all the way to the market. There are a lot of pieces to this puzzle and itā€™s going to take a lot of investment.ā€ He adds, ā€œIf Iā€™m talking to the people of the United States of America, [Iā€™d say that] we have made a tremendous investment and we have to finish it. Itā€™s a call to humanity, itā€™s a call on behalf of our neighbor, to pick a country up out of poverty and put it [in a position to feel] pride. Thatā€™s the call to action.ā€

REBELING AGAINST ADVICE + PARTY PLANNING FOR A CAUSE

Sean Penn

The best advice Sean Penn could offer, for the record, isnā€™t the same thing as the best advice heā€™s ever been givenā€”advice which, in his true contrary fashion, also happens to be the best advice he didnā€™t take.

ā€œ[Someone told me,] ā€˜Donā€™t stay more than three months in a disaster zone without taking a couple of weeks off.ā€ But, no, Penn didnā€™t take a few weeks off, or even just stay for a few monthsā€”he stayed for nineā€¦ monthsā€¦ straight. ā€œI made the mistake of not taking that advice,ā€ he admits with a rueful smile. ā€œI think I went a little kooky.ā€

Just chalk it up to part of his charm. However, by living in Haiti for so long, he got to know the peopleā€”the rich and the poor, the women and men, the rural and urban dwellers. He educated himself, he listened, and he learned. ā€œ[Once you] start to get a feel for the place, [you] know youā€™ll never really know the place,ā€ he shares. ā€œ[You] know that youā€™re going to have to use your best instinct[s] about who to trust, who to learn from, who to question, and who to challenge and be challenged by. Itā€™s a long process, but weā€™ve had a lot of success.ā€

Part of the reason for that success is that he was able to let go, to delegate, to cede control. ā€œAt a certain point, I stopped calling the shots,ā€ he explains. ā€œI had shot-callers that were living the life, that were Haitian. Like anything else, I had to develop good relationships and trust them.ā€

Trust isnā€™t something Penn gives easily or quickly, but something he chooses pragmatically, at least in his business dealings. As the evidence of Haiti Takes Root should convey, heā€™s a ā€˜big pictureā€™ kind of guy. He doesnā€™t have time to sweat the small stuff; he needed to build a team on the ground who cared.

ā€œI always joke around because here I have a lot of young volunteers who are definitely what youā€™d call humanitarians. The daily compassion, weeping at deaths of everybody who had died; I just had no time to do that.ā€

This doesnā€™t mean Penn is unfeeling, or cold, or whatever else you would want to call him: his passion for Haiti and its people is genuine. In fact, he cares so much that he almost seems to go into another zone when talking about his work there. The intensity you often see him portray onscreen is 100 percent real. ā€œIā€™m a facilitator, so Iā€™m not inclined to get to know everybody intimately,ā€ he admits, adding, ā€œI wanted to have a T-shirt that said, ā€˜Tell it to the humanitarian.ā€™

The smirk with which he delivers this piece of bluster is pure Penn. True, he might not always be warm and fuzzy, but thereā€™s no disputing the fact that this guy is the very embodiment of a philanthropist. In fact, the Oxford English Dictionary describes a humanitarian as ā€œa person who seeks to promote human welfare.ā€ Sorry, Seany, but you fit the bill.

Seriously though, one of his best ā€˜big pictureā€™ ideas is to bring people together with music. Each year, guests know theyā€™re in for some world-class entertainment at J/P HROā€™s annual charity gala, Help Haiti Home. This is in addition to the ethereally-decorated room, a gourmet dinner, star-studded crowd with wall-to-wall celebrities such as Johnny Depp, Chris Hemsworth and Gwyneth Paltrow and big-name philanthropists like Marc Benioff and Sean Parker, as well as the be-all, end-all of auctions with items up for grabs from masters like Banksy and Jeff Koons.

Some might say that Penn has the cushiest gig while putting together the gala: his sole involvement is being the guy who picks the band. And, when youā€™re friends with some of the biggest icons in entertainment, thatā€™sĀ not hardā€”which is why everyone from Coldplayā€™s Chris Martin and the Red Hot Chili Peppers to U2 and even ex-wife Madonna has performed. Never mind that his event competes with all the hoopla of Golden Globes weekā€”he has built it, and Pennā€™s disciples do come.

While he canā€™t reveal who this yearā€™s entertainment will be, he informs us that the galaā€”which will take place on January 7ā€”has been renamed Haiti Rising, mostly because Haiti is figuratively in a different place now. Since its relocations mandate has been achieved and the country is looking towards its next chapter, the galaā€™s name is meant to convey its progress.

Strategically, its moniker will also reflect the still-pressing need for financial contributions. Its word tense is telling, after all: it is a country on the rise, but it has not yet peaked.

ā€œThe needs are different, the resourcesā€”or lack of thereofā€”are different,ā€ Penn says. ā€œPeople have to understand that, [although Haiti faded from] the headlines, thereā€™s not big government grantsĀ going out there. You might have gotten a lot of your sectors financed on a multi-million dollar grant in the first couple of years after the earthquake, but itā€™s almost entirely dried up. Everything we do is from private donations at this stage.ā€

Those donations are in dire need this year, and the reason isnā€™t one that Penn is pleased about. ā€œThereā€™s been a change and it isnā€™t good news,ā€ he notes grimly. ā€œIā€™ve said every year at the event, ā€˜Come. Come see Haiti.ā€™ I knew that I could say that and people would be safeā€¦ but I canā€™t say that this year.

ā€œWeā€™ve had many foreigners killed, shot and kidnapped,ā€ he continues quietly. ā€œThereā€™s a lot of political instability. Now, that doesnā€™t mean you canā€™t be safe again in Haiti. Of course I feel safe there. But, at large, I would not be someone to recommend it right now, and thatā€™s a terrible thing.ā€

Heā€™s confident that things will improve but, again, it will take timeā€¦ and finances. ā€œItā€™s going to change, itā€™s going to be OK, but itā€™s not off the hook,ā€ he notes, adding that he and his team are hell-bent on raising funds for Haiti.

ā€œWeā€™re saying, ā€˜Look. Hereā€™s the value of what weā€™ve been doing, and hereā€™s the color of change in that now. Hereā€™s what we need now thatā€™s different [from our former needs]. Hereā€™s what we want to celebrate thatā€™s different. I just told you a piece of bad news, but itā€™s not all bad.ā€™ā€

His goal is to make everyone see the good in his cause, and his star-studded, sold-out event attended by some of the richest and most famous people in the world is the perfect platform. ā€œI know how much we need to raise every year and [if we donā€™t raise it], people are going to pay a huge price in Haiti. I feel a lot of pressure, but, knock wood, weā€™ll continue to have great support.ā€

If he had one gripe itā€™s that, in his opinion, the same ten people are the ones giving over and over again. Sure, in 2015 and 2016, Help Haiti Home raised $6 million and $7 million, respectively, but it baffles Penn that, among a crowd that has so much, most seem to give so little.

ā€œThere are a few extraordinary people that come, but then you have a room that is full mostly of people that are not giving anything. They eat, stargaze and watch the band but, honestly, I donā€™t think thereā€™s a person in that room that canā€™t afford $25. I always wonder about that.ā€

Sean Penn

HAITI IS THE FOCUS, BUT HOLLYWOOD IS STILL THEREĀ 

Throughout his career, Penn has been called many thingsā€”not all of which were positive. But, then, this is Hollywood in the digital age. Everyoneā€™s a critic.

If weā€™re talking about the good stuffā€”and we areā€”thereā€™s a lot. His humanitarianism is the most obvious. In addition to his work with Haiti, he was fully hands-on in the relief effort post-Hurricane Katrina. Heā€™s received several substantial honors, including being named Ambassador at Large for Haiti in 2012 and being presented with the 2012 Peace Summit Award at the 12th World Summit of Nobel Peace Laureates.

But Penn, a longtime activist and promoter of civil rights, has always been one to stand up for his beliefs. In 2002, he penned a prescient open letter, published inĀ The Washington PostĀ andĀ TheĀ New York Times, to President George W. Bush against the planned invasion of Iraq. Furthermore, he traveled to Baghdad and Tehran in 2002 and 2003 to report for theĀ San Francisco Chronicle.Ā He has interviewed Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez and Cubaā€™s President Raul Castro forĀ The Nation, the latter of which was Castroā€™s first-ever interview with a foreign journalist. In 2013, Penn also played a vital role in getting wrongfully imprisoned American entrepreneur Jacob Ostreicher released from a Bolivian prison, for which he was honored by the Aleph Institute in 2015. Plus, no one can forget his most recent effort, a secret interview forĀ Rolling StoneĀ with Mexican drug lord Joaquin ā€˜El Chapoā€™ Guzman.

This is a guy you can peel like an onion, layer after layer after layer. And, yes, heā€™s still the Hollywood iconā€”a five-time Academy Award-nominated actor, taking home the coveted Best Actor trophies forĀ Clint Eastwoodā€™sĀ Mystic RiverĀ in 2004 and Gus Van Santā€™sĀ MilkĀ in 2009, who has also directed five feature films, including the critically-acclaimedĀ Into the Wild, Indian RunnerĀ andĀ The Pledge. (And those are just the highlights; it would actually take pages to cover all that Penn has done since he began his career with the 1981 film,Ā Taps.) This fall, he begins shootingĀ The Professor and the Madman,Ā directed by Farhad Safiniaā€”another unprecedented first, given that this film allows him to star alongside Mel Gibson. The two have been talking about doing the film, which is based on Simon Winchesterā€™s 1998 book of the same name, for 12 years. Penn will play ā€˜Madmanā€™ Dr. W.C. Minor in this true story of the creation of the Oxford English Dictionary, a man who submitted more than 10,000 entries to the project as an inmate at an asylum for the criminally insane to Gibsonā€™s OED founder, Professor James Murray.

Though thereā€™s been a lot of hype and discussion about the project, Penn is keeping mum. ā€œWe just didnā€™t [work together before],ā€ he says. ā€œI donā€™t know why. [But I took the role because] itā€™s a great project, I get to work with Mel and itā€™s a beautifully written script.ā€

Heā€™s far more vocal on his thoughts regarding the upcoming presidential election, expressing his preference to Stephen Colbert onĀ The Late Show: ā€œEither you can [ā€¦] go out and vote in a very big way for someone like Hillary Clintonā€”who you can then challenge and support, which is the only way that a president can have any successā€”and you stick it out for four years,ā€ he says, ā€œOr we can just masturbate our way into hell with a guy who looks like the only blonde magician.ā€

While his opinionated vote isnā€™t surprising, Penn is a man whose overall actions still are. He uncharacteristically showed up to present at the pop-centric iHeartRadio Music Festival in Las Vegas this September, then popped up on several talk shows out of the blue to tout a free audiobook,Ā Bob Honey Who Just Do Stuff,Ā by a mysterious author named Pappy Pariahā€”who may or may not be Penn himself in disguise. The point is, he might be a humanitarian and award-winning actor, but heā€™s still a rebel and all-around badass who does exactly what he wants for reasons that, though they might not make sense to others, always, always have a purpose for Penn.

But has one facet of his personality hurt another? Has his ā€˜rebel without a causeā€™ persona of the past harmed the actual present-day rebelĀ withĀ one? Penn doesnā€™t know and, quite frankly, he doesnā€™t care. ā€œI donā€™t read anything about myself in current tense, but Iā€™m aware of stuff,ā€ he admits. ā€œIā€™m aware of extremes. Iā€™m always surprised by anything very positive or anything very negative.

ā€œI can imagine, based on things Iā€™ve heard about myself, that nobody would show up at [my] damn event because of my involvement, you know?ā€ he continues. ā€œI can imagine that and, yet, people come out. I put one foot in front of the other, and it is what it is.ā€

While the juryā€™s still out on whether public perception has helped or hurt him, his celebrity status has only benefitted his cause. Whatā€™s more, he feels itā€™s a civic duty to affect change if you have the platform to stand on. ā€œIf youā€™re in the acting or film business, where your major job is to share things, then you ought not to be [in the business] if you donā€™t,ā€ he says.

Still, truth be told, he doesnā€™t really dig the ā€˜philanthropistā€™ labelā€”or any label, for that matter. ā€œItā€™s all just one thing,ā€ he says. ā€œItā€™s every day, putting your feet in your pants. Itā€™s acting and working in Haiti. It all feels like, for me, the same job. Itā€™s a really lucky life and a really fortunate one, but itā€™s all just life to me.ā€