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18248: Esser: Past Imperfect: Independence Day (fwd)
From: D. E s s e r <torx@mail.joimail.com>
http://africana.com
Past Imperfect: Independence Day
First published: February 3, 2004
200 years after overthrowing its colonial rulers, Haiti struggles
with a dismally familiar slate of "third world" problems - not to
mention a lack of respect.
By William Jelani Cobb
The storyline is familiar: a ragtag band of revolutionaries,
desperately outgunned and facing the best-equipped European power of
the day. An 18th century colony staking its claim to liberty and
freedom in the face of an exploitative mother country. An economy
based upon the labor of thousands of enslaved Africans. And an
underdog victory that creates a new independent nation.
But there is a historical plot twist here.
The revolution was a victory - not only for Haiti, but for every
enslaved person in the West. In this case the revolutionaries aren't
named Washington, Jefferson and Madison, but instead L'Ouverture,
Dessalines and Christophe. The year is 1791 - not 1776. And the
revolution we're speaking of took place in the French colony of San
Domingo, not British North America.
This year marks the 200th anniversary of Haitian Independence. In
1804, a woefully under-equipped army of ex-slaves under the
leadership of Toussaint L'Ouverture and Jean-Jacques Dessalines
defeated Napoleon's Army and declared themselves a sovereign state -
making Haiti second only to the United States as the oldest
independent nation in the Western hemisphere. But don't expect any
grand recognition of its sibling state from these shores. The US
relationship with Haiti has been defined during these two centuries
by fear, disdain, contempt and, ultimately, disregard. And, sadly
enough, those sentiments have not been confined to the elite corners
of American power.
The South Queens, NY community where I grew up was a virtual black
United Nations, with families representing dozens of Caribbean and
Latin American countries and a handful of immigrants from Africa
itself. And that community often found itself fractured along ethnic
lines: West Indians who were suspicious and distrustful of African
Americans, and vice versa. Within the Caribbean community, Jamaicans
found themselves at odds with Trinidadians and Trinidadians with
Guyanese. But all these segments were united in their contempt for
the Haitian immigrants, fueled by ignorant ideas about Haitian
religious practices and conspiracy theories about the country's
relationship to the AIDS virus. Disdain for Haiti was surpassed only
by ridicule for Ethiopia - whose famine was the basis for humor that
covered our shame by association.
But unbeknownst to us, both Ethiopia and Haiti had been the two of
the most important outposts of the African Diaspora. In 1896,
Ethiopian forces defeated the Italian Army at the Battle of Adowa -
becoming the sole beacon of African independence during the era of
colonialism. And in 1804, Haiti had set the original example of black
freedom in the allegedly new world.
The facts are remarkable. Columbus had visited the island (and named
it Hispaniola) in 1492; within 50 years, disease and Spanish labor
policies had slashed the indigenous population from millions to fewer
than 50,000. Nearly 30,000 Africans had been imported to replace them
in the island's gold mines and developing sugar plantations. France
seized the western portion of Hispaniola 1697 and renamed it San
Domingo. Over the next century, the region became the crown jewel of
the French colonial empire, producing 3/4 of the world's sugar supply
and accounting for nearly a third of France's annual trade revenue.
But this kind of profit did not come easily; sugarcane is a labor
intensive crop and, given the vast numbers of Africans being imported
into the colony (by the end of the 18th century between 29-40,000
blacks were arriving each year), it was cheaper to simply work slaves
to death and replace them than it was to spend money on decent
amounts of food and clothing. At its height of sugar production, the
life span of the average slave arriving in San Domingo was seven
years. The cheapness of life in the colony led to insanely brutal
practices by slaveholders. In Black Jacobins, his noted history of
the Haitian Revolution, CLR James wrote that:
Mutilation [of] limbs, ears and sometimes private parts was common...
their masters poured burning wax on their arms and hands, emptied
boiling cane sugar over their heads, burned them alive, roasted them
on slow fires, filled them with gunpowder and blew them up with a
match...
By 1791, the French Revolution's claims to "Liberty, Equality and
Fraternity" had echoed across the Atlantic and that same year San
Domingo saw a series of uprisings. What began with an attempt to gain
additional political rights for persons of mixed race (who
constituted a distinct social group in the colony) quickly evolved
into widespread slave revolts that destroyed almost 200 sugar
plantations by the end of the year.
Led by Toussaint L'Ouverture, a former coachman who had been a slave
until age 45, the army of ex-slaves waged a guerilla war against the
island's slaveholders - and their colonial reinforcements. In 1796,
L'Ouverture shocked the world by abolishing slavery and declaring
himself Lieutenant Governor of the colony. When Napoleon Bonaparte
came to power in 1799, he resolved to reestablish control over the
insubordinate black population declaration, sending his
brother-in-law General LeClerc to the island with 28,000 men in 1802.
A year later 20,000 of them were dead - wiped out by yellow fever and
L'Ouverture's ghost-like guerilla warfare tactics.
L'Ouverture was captured by French in 1802 and sent to France, where
he died in prison, but his lieutenant Jean-Jacques Dessalines
commanded the forces, vanquishing the remnants of LeClerc's army in
November 1803. In January 1804, the territory was declared an
independent nation and renamed "Ayiti" - the indigenous name for the
island, which meant "high land."
The revolution had been a victory - not only for Haiti, but for every
enslaved person in the west because the Haitian uprising hastened the
end of the Trans-Atlantic slave trade. The US Constitution provided
20 years of protection for the trade, but Haiti raised fears
throughout the South - especially in South Carolina, where blacks
constituted the majority of the population. Those fears directly
influenced the outlawing of the slave trade in the US in 1808.
Haiti's founders found there were consequences to having the audacity
to demand freedom. For much of its history, Haiti was treated as a
pariah nation, diplomatically ignored by the western powers. The
United States did not extend diplomatic recognition to Haiti until
the verge of the Civil War, when it was believed that the nation
might be a good dumping ground for free blacks in America. In 1915,
the United States cited the Monroe Doctrine and invaded Haiti
(allegedly to prevent European powers from seizing the country and
grabbing a foothold in the western hemisphere during World War I).
Though the U.S. cited security concerns as the rationale for the
invasion, it was widely believed to have had economic motives - the
US remained on the island for the next 19 years, long after the war
had ended, and instituted forced labor policies that echoed Haiti's
experience with the French 124 years earlier. President Franklin D.
Roosevelt removed American troops in 1934, when the Great Depression
made it too expensive to maintain a military presence on the island.
In the 1950s through the 1980s, the US backed the successively brutal
dictatorships of Papa Doc and Baby Doc Duvalier. More recently, the
first Bush Administration established a policy of granting asylum to
Cuban refugees almost automatically, while detaining or returning
Haitians - a policy that lasted well into the Clinton years and was
not modified until the activist Randall Robinson embarrassed the
administration with a hunger strike.
History is full of tragic ironies. And none more than Haiti's legacy
as a nation that delivered itself from the shackles of slavery only
to struggle against poverty, corruption, debt and foreign powers for
the next 200 years. The revolution was one of history's plot twists,
but its subsequent storyline is riddled with these clichés of the
alleged third world. Freedom, as the maxim tell us, ain't exactly
free. And in the case of Haiti, it has been more expensive than even
Toussaint might have suspected.
About the Author
William Jelani Cobb is an assistant professor of history at Spelman
College and editor of The Essential Harold Cruse. He can be reached
at creative.ink @ jelanicobb.com. Visit his website at
http://www.jelanicobb.com.
http://www.africana.com/columns/cobb/ht20040203haiti.asp