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29742: Hermantin(News)For Haitian deportees, American-style 'grills' mark them as targe (fwd)
From: leonie hermantin <lhermantin@hotmail.com>
For Haitian deportees, American-style 'grills' mark them as targets for
violence, hate
By Ruth Morris
South Florida Sun-Sentinel
December 29, 2006
PORT-AU-PRINCE, HAITI -- When authorities deported Marc-Henry Petion from West
Palm Beach he was a chubby kid nicknamed Pillsbury who spoke almost no Creole
and sported a grill -- a line of gold caps affixed to his front teeth that
served as his flashy, street-smart calling card.
Three years later, he has picked up the language and altered his appearance.
The dreadlocks he once wore are stuffed in a plastic bag in the tiny
cinderblock room he rents on the outskirts of Port-au-Prince. He lopped them
off to avoid calling attention to himself as a deportee, a classification that
carries a heavy stigma on Haiti's unstable streets. He's also forgone the
oversized clothes he wore in South Florida, another telltale sign of his U.S.
upbringing.
But he doesn't have the money to remove his grill, so has learned to keep his
mouth shut, literally.
In Haiti, where deportees are widely thought to fuel gang violence and
kidnappings, the struggle to assimilate is a perilous one. A misplaced pronoun
can give you away, subjecting deportees to outright hostility. But no physical
trait advertises a deportee's status more loudly than grills, which are
virtually non-existent here except in the mouths of youths who have lived in
the United States. Some deportees have gotten rid of them to avoid
discrimination -- and thugs looking to extract the gold and sell it.
"It's all I have as a token of the United States. It's like a trophy," said
Petion, 27, who left Haiti with his family as a toddler and grew up in South
Florida as a permanent resident. Federal officials deported him after he served
a nine-month sentence for driving with a suspended license and signing a false
name to a traffic ticket.
Wearing a grill in Haiti, "you don't know what might happen," he said. "I don't
walk the streets."
To underscore his point, he mentions a friend who had a grill and was abducted
seven months ago. The kidnappers pulled off the caps one by one, with pliers.
Once made for corrective dental procedures such as crowns and fillings,
gold-capped teeth became popular in the late 1970s. By the early '80s, some of
hip-hop's emerging stars began to wear them, making grills a popular part of
street culture.
Also known as "fronts," they sometimes come with pricey diamond inlays. While
some people opt for removable caps that snap into place, others, including
Petion, have permanent caps fitted with an adhesive. They range in price from
$20 to thousands.
Herby Charles, 29, from Miami, said he removed his grill before being deported
to Haiti. With it, he wasn't sure what kind of a welcome he'd get.
Even without it, he said, people shouted and cursed the bus that carried him
and other recent arrivals to the National Penitentiary the day of his removal.
Like Petion, he was deported three years ago.
"They're judging a book by its cover," Charles said. "Imagine you're going
inside the country and people are already calling you dogs. What's it going to
be like for you?"
Haitians account for a relatively small percentage of deportations from the
United States. But community activists in South Florida have complained that
federal officials are putting deportees at risk by sending them back to the
troubled nation during violent flare-ups.
They've also asked for the government to extend temporary protected status to
Haitians already living in the United States, which would allow them to stay
here while their country recovers from cycles of political strife.
Haiti has been known to temporarily jail criminal deportees even if no charges
are pending against them in their homeland. Authorities say the measure is
precautionary, since crime is already rampant. Haiti's roller-coaster ride
through rebellion and lawlessness has included reports of deportees popping up
in the ranks of insurgent gangs.
"They are killing us," said Gregory Basile, standing at a lottery ticket stall
in Port-au-Prince, expressing a common view of deportees.
"They should not send them here. These guys are very good. They know how to use
firearms. They can just lean against a car and open it without using a key."
Once released, criminal deportees face an uphill battle to assimilate. When
Petion and Charles arrived, their homeland was a foreign place to them. Petion
was two years old when his parents left. Charles was eight. Neither spoke much
Creole.
They became friends and now they share the scrapings of American culture that
come their way: a care-package of Oreo cookies and pancake mix, a jar of peanut
butter. They say they have both had difficulty finding work in Haiti's
shipwrecked economy, in part because of the stigma of deportation. And they've
learned to stop speaking English around police, whom they mistrust.
Michelle Karshan, executive director of the Alternative Chance counseling
program for criminal deportees, said grills spark fear and can even provoke
malice in Haitians, who usually associate the gold caps with hardcore
criminality. But many deportees are not hardened criminals. Some simply
overstayed tourist visas. Among criminal deportees, convictions range from
misdemeanors to felonies, the majority related to street-level drug sales.
"I know guys that don't speak, they don't smile, if they have the gold teeth,"
Karshan said. "You don't have free movement in your own society."
The issue prompted Karshan to call a Fort Lauderdale dentist who fitted some of
the deportees' grills to ask if he would voluntarily remove them. He was under
review by licensing authorities, she said, and hung up on her.
While the gold caps represent one of the most ostentatious barriers to fitting
in, deportees say dreadlocks, accents, and even posture can give them away.
"They even walk differently. They're physically different because they are
healthier than the general population, and a lot have come from prison so
they've lifted weights," Karshan said.
"The word criminal implies assassin in Creole," she added. "That alone puts you
on the wrong foot. There's a perception they're all killers."
Ruth Morris can be reached at rmorris@sun-sentinel.com or 305-810-5012.
Copyright © 2006, South Florida Sun-Sentinel
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