Godefroy
entered New York with only a few dollars and a change of
clothing; but he couldn't speak the language.
Twenty
years later, he's motivating audiences in his adopted
tongue -- English. This acquired gift for gab has lifted
him from poverty to position. To hire Godefroy can cost
as much as $5,000 for corporations, but nonprofits get
a big break, sometimes even free of charge. He's also
started a philanthropic foundation and returned to Haiti
last year to open a clinic. The former doorman now has
doors opening for him.
Today,
he hopes to inspire other Haitian-Americans as the keynote
speaker at Minority Development & Empowerment Inc.'s
Haitian Flag Day salute from 6 to 9 p.m. at the Broward
Center for the Performing Arts in Fort Lauderdale. On Tuesday,
he has a 9:30 a.m. address to students at Coral Springs
High. Haitian Flag Day, a celebration of that country's
independence from France, actually fell on Sunday.
"I
was learning English by writing three words on my hands.
At the end of the week I learned three words," said
Godefroy, 41, from his home near Atlanta. "I bought children's
books because the language was easier."
After
he arrived in the United States, Godefroy worked menial
jobs from New York to Miami. He eventually ended up in
Atlanta working as a hotel bellhop. At the hotel, he often
catered to motivational speakers.
Patterning
himself after big-ticket motivational speakers Les Brown
and Keith Harrell, Godefroy has spent the last year pushing
his book, No Condition is Permanent.
He
routinely visits universities and colleges with a "you
can do it" message. And he has delivered speeches
at events for corporate giants such as Coca-Cola and Charles
Schwab, he said. He was featured on 60 Minutes. He recently
delivered the keynote address at Radio Haiti's annual banquet
in Fort Lauderdale.
The
Haitian Flag Day salute, which stretched for more than
a week this year, culminating with Minority Development's
event, has provided him with an opportunity to come back
to South Florida and share his message with fellow Haitians,
he said.
"Rene
is one of the fastest rising stars in the Haitian community.
He's one of those individuals who has crossed over," explained
Minority Development's Marvin Dejean. Already on the speaker's
circuit for mainstream America, Godefroy is beginning to
get more attention from his own countrymen.
"Getting
him was a super coup for us," Dejean said. He's already
gotten roughly 170 responses from folks poised to take
advantage of Godefroy's performance. The Performing Arts
Center's New River room holds 200.
"For
as long as I have been speaking for Americans, I didn't
really know that Haitians would embrace the message," Godefroy
said. Yet, he's found that his mantra, "no condition
is permanent," also strikes a chord with them.
His
message reaches all because it is an example of determination,
said Danielle Bright of the Haitian American Parents Association
in Spring Valley, N.Y. where Godefroy recently spoke for
career day.
"A
lot of immigrants have succeeded in this country," she
said. "But coming to this country and not speaking
the language and deciding to be a motivational speaker,
that's what I call pushing the limit."
It
was always Godefroy's dream to come to America. He got
his chance after an agent saw him playing drums in a small
Catholic church. A Haitian theater group invited his troupe
to Montreal. He used most of his money from those performances
to pay the truck driver to smuggle him across the border.
In
1998, so inspired by other motivational speakers, he became
determined to join their ranks. He studied, watched tapes,
read lots of books, took classes and listened to the speakers
who flowed in and out of Atlanta's Renaissance Waverly
Hotel, where he
worked for almost a decade.
He
saved enough tip money to attend a National Speakers Convention
and ran into some of the same people he opened doors for
in Atlanta. He later sent them a "raw"
video of himself delivering a speech. They were impressed
by his story and how he saved his tips to get to one of their
conventions. In 2000, they invited him back as one of the
keynote speakers.
Recalling
the day he first performed in front of the group, he reminded
his fellow speaker:
"This is your doorman from Atlanta, sir. I told you
I was going to become a motivational speaker."
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