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21750: (Hermantin)Miami-Herald-Latortue attending fundraiser in Dade, and protest is re (fwd)



From: leonie hermantin <lhermantin@hotmail.com>
     and protest is re

Posted on Fri, May. 07, 2004


Latortue attending fundraiser in Dade, and protest is readied

Haiti's new prime minister and former South Florida resident Gerard Latortue
is returning to champion the country's bicentennial celebration, but the
visit is not without controversy.

BY JACQUELINE CHARLES AND DAVID OVALLE

jcharles@herald.com


HAITIAN BICENTENNIAL

Long before he was tapped to head Haiti's new government, Gerard Latortue
was a connoisseur of Haitian history, committed to the country's legacy.

His Boca Raton home was a treasure trove of rare books, like a 19th century
memoir of a lieutenant general describing the first days of the Haitian
Revolution, and an 1850 theater playbill about revolutionary leader
Toussaint L'Ouverture.

So it seems logical that Latortue, who became Haiti's new prime minister two
months ago, is visiting North Miami today to help raise funds for a program
at this summer's Smithsonian Folklife Festival in Washington, D.C., that
will commemorate the bicentennial of Haitian independence.

It is scheduled for June 23-27 and June 30-July 4 on the National Mall.

The live exhibit, two years in the making, is one of the few projects
supported by former Haitian President Jean-Bertrand Aristide that the
Latortue government has embraced.

Officials say it's a worthy, nonpolitical cause that reminds people that
this is the country's bicentennial year, amid all its troubles.

''It's there to highlight Haitian culture and we are putting a lot of
emphasis on it,'' said Alix Baptiste, Latortue's undersecretary of state for
Haitians living abroad, who helped organize the 6 p.m. fundraiser today at
the Museum of Contemporary Art, 770 NE 125th St.

But the invitation-only event, which also will be attended by the U.S.
ambassador to Haiti, James Foley, isn't without controversy. Aristide
supporters, still upset by his Feb. 29 ouster after a string of violent
rebel uprisings, say they plan to demonstrate outside the event, protesting
against the United States and its ''puppet, installed'' government.

Also, some members of the North Miami City Council are irked that Mayor
Josaphat Celestin, a Haitian American, organized the event on the city's
behalf without their knowledge.

Councilman Jacques Despinosse, who has verbally sparred with Celestin in the
past, said there are so many questions surrounding the fall of Aristide's
government that the event is too politically sensitive to be hosted by his
city, which is home to one of the largest Haitian-American communities in
South Florida.

''No one knows the reason why he's doing it. It's his show,'' Despinosse,
who is also Haitian American, said of the mayor.

Councilman Michael Blynn said he welcomed the delegation but was wary of
protesters.

''I don't like being in a controversial situation,'' he said. ``I think the
mayor should have at least given us an opportunity to express our
concerns.''

Celestin said there is no cost to North Miami taxpayers to host the
fundraiser, which hopes to raise between $75,000 and $300,000.

''This is a Haitian cultural event, not a political event,'' Celestin said.

Controversy aside, event supporters say they chose North Miami because of
its central location and large Haitian population.

They say that regardless of political affiliations, Haitians should support
the festival because it highlights Haiti in a positive way.

The annual Smithsonian Folklife Festival, which celebrates folk culture
around the world and in the United States, draws between 1 million and 1.6
million visitors, said Loretta Cooper, director of development for the
festival.

Organizers have contributed $800,000 toward the Haiti program's $1.6 million
price tag, she said.

The additional funds have to be raised by the Haitian government under the
contract signed by the Aristide administration.

The money will go to pay for transportation, lodging, food and a per diem
for 85 Haitian artisans, artists and performers who will be flown in from
Haiti as part of a live exhibit of arts, culture and music.

Visitors will, for instance, be able to learn firsthand how artisans use
bamboo to make furniture or how sugar cane is made into kleren, Haiti's
traditional moonshine. They also will learn from stone carvers how their
enslaved African ancestors were able to create the Citadel, the 19th century
mountaintop fortress built to defend Haiti's independence from France.

''The general public will see a dynamic program,'' Cooper said. ``We think
because Haiti has been in the news so much you simply cannot get better
press, and we think people are going to be extremely curious about Haiti.

``We are very, very excited.''

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