the others are packed into cities like the capital, port au prince.hen we came, wyclef was greeted like a head of state. to most haitians, he's the living incarnation of their dream, someone who got out, struck it rich, but didn't forget where he came from. >> jean: these kids, they could identify with me, because they say, "he looks like us and he talks our language." >> pelley: in 2005, wyclef created a charity that seems designed to attack all of haiti's problems at once. it's called yele haiti. he spent nearly a quarter of a million dollars of his own money to start it. and now, with donations and sponsors, it has an annual budget of $3 million. >> jean: the first thing we have to do is to get these kids to rise up, their self-esteem. they always walking in the streets with their head like this. they felt like everybody forgot them. so, if i could start an organization where there's programs, and they feel like people care, i felt that that would be a start. >> pelley: wyclef's yele haiti helps feed 50,000 haitians a month with food donated by the