For Release Upon Receipt - February 12, 2010
Cave Hill
When the Americans defeated the British and declared National
The Americans built but half a democracy. They retained slavery as the core of their nation. The Haitian went all the way. They placed in the
The Americans, British, French, Dutch, and Spanish, clinging to black and native slavery as the model of development, condemned the Haitians for this deep democratic constitutional stance.
“Crush the infamy and kill the infant” became the motto of Europe and
The Americans turned their back on
French gun to his head, and American bayonet to his back, the brilliant distinguished President Boyer of
As the Haitian nation buckled under debt and threat of joint French-American military invasions the consequences of a crippled country began to evolve into the world now wrecked by the quake. Nothing on earth but a quake could focus the world’s attention on a crime long committed and gone covered up, buried by the power of the ‘West” to tell the world how to see and think.
Toussaint L’Ouverture led the Holy Grail of freedom. Betrayed by
Then came the quake; another example of nature unearthing that which has been concealed by man.
Economic strangulation led to financial chaos. It served to ignite and sustain the ethnic conflict between blacks and colored that racked national politics and became a way of life. The coloreds believed the blacks were less fit to rule and the blacks did not trust their willingness to ally with
As the nation collapsed into conflict, the distance between rich and poor, peasants and property holders grew wider. The elite borrowed to sustain the government as peasants intensified their preference for less exposure to the world economy. The weight of the national debt grew larger as the payment of reparations proved impossible to sustain.
The Americans seized all financial and revenue sources, including the customs and all excise departments. It held on to these until 1947 when the well had been sucked dry. Popular rebellion against the Americans led to the rise of the Duvaliers - “Papa Doc” and “Baby Doc”. The Haitians jumped out of the frying pan and into the fire. Debt and death danced to the sound of the scream that was once a dream. “Domesticate the hate” joined “crush the infamy” as the revised mantra; together they bore witness to the quake.
For 200 years, the debt had driven Haitian life under the rubble where, today, life survives as a miracle. The infant and the elderly were pulled to safety only to die before the world’s eyes that had been closed without a care. The quake shook those eyes wide awake, but the debt remains. The French know only too well of the crime committed. While, in spite, they succeeded in starving a young nation, the US$21 billion owed cannot be removed from its imperial balance sheet simply by removing President Aristide. Puppet Prime Minister Latortue, placed by France and America in the palace now lying ruin, might have withdrawn Aristide’s demand upon the French, but the people of Haiti, and all freedom loving citizens the world over, are resolved that France has no chance of turning this fact into fiction.
Only a
Sir Hilary Beckles, a historian, is Pro-Vice-Chancellor and Principal of the University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus.