Haiti - The Aftershocks of History - By Laurent Dubois - Book Review

U.S. Marine Corps/National Geographic Society, via Corbis

A U.S. Marine inspecting a troop of Haitian soldiers, 1920.

For the better part of two centuries, outsiders have been offering explanations that range from racist to learned-sounding — the supposed inferiority of blacks, the heritage of slavery, overpopulation — for why Haiti remains the poorest country in the Western Hemisphere. None of these work: nearby Barbados has a greater population density, and about 90 percent of its people are descended from slaves, yet it outranks all but two nations in Latin America on the United Nations Human Development Index. Neither Barbados nor any other country, however, had so traumatic and crippling a birth as Haiti.

HAITI

The Aftershocks of History

By Laurent Dubois

434 pp. Metropolitan Books/Henry Holt & Company. $ 32.

Robert W. Kelley/Time & Life Pictures — Getty Images

François (Papa Doc) Duvalier, foreground, relied on the violence of the Tontons Macoute to hold on to power.

As a French possession, it was once the most lucrative colony on earth, producing nearly one-third of the world's sugar and more than half its coffee. All, of course, with the labor of slaves. And slavery in the Caribbean was particularly harsh: tropical diseases were rife, there was no winter respite from 12-hour workdays under the broiling sun, and the planters preferred to replenish their labor force by working their slaves to death over a decade or two and then buying new ones. In 1791, what today is Haiti became the scene of the largest slave revolt in history. Over the next 13 years, the rebels fought off three successive attempts to re-enslave them. The first was by local planters and French soldiers, aided by arms from the United States, whose president and secretary of state, George Washington and Thomas Jefferson, were both slave owners horrified by the uprising. The second was by the British, at war with France and eager for fertile sugar land and slaves to work it. And finally, after he took power, Napoleon tried to recapture the territory as a French colony and restore slavery.

Ill-armed, barefoot and hungry, the rebels fought against huge odds: Britain dispatched an armada of 218 ships to the Caribbean, and its troops battled for five years before withdrawing; Napoleon sent the largest force that had ever set sail from France, losing more than 50,000 soldiers and 18 generals to combat and disease. The former slaves lost even more lives defeating these invasions, and no country came to their aid. This blood-soaked period also included a horrific civil war, periods of near famine, and the massacre or flight into exile of most educated people and skilled workers of any color. By the time Haiti declared independence in 1804, many of its fields, towns and sugar mills were in ruins and its population shrunken by more than half. The Haitian Revolution, as it is known today, was a great inspiration to slaves still in bondage throughout the Americas, but it was devastating to the country itself.

For a gripping narrative of that period, there are few better places to turn than "Avengers of the New World: The Story of the Haitian Revolution," by Laurent Dubois, a Duke University scholar of the French Caribbean. Now Dubois has brought Haiti's story up to the present in an equally well-written new book, "Haiti: The Aftershocks of History," which is enriched by his careful attention to what Haitian intellectuals have had to say about their country over the last two centuries.

The history is a tale of much misery, shot through with flashes of hope and bravery. Both the United States and the colonial powers in Europe were profoundly threatened by the specter of slaves who had successfully battled for their freedom; the United States didn't even recognize Haiti for over 50 years. Still worse, France in 1825 insisted that Haiti pay compensation for the plantations taken from French owners. In case the Haitians did not agree, French warships lay offshore. The sum the French demanded was so big that a dozen years later, paying off this exorbitant ransom, and paying the interest on loans taken out for that purpose, was consuming 30 percent of Haiti's national budget. The ruinous cycle of debt continued into the next century.

Seldom, however, can outsiders be blamed for all a country's troubles. More disastrous than foreign interference was that Haiti's birth was such a violent one. Democracy is a fragile, slow-growing plant to begin with, and the early Haitians had experienced none of it, not as subjects of the African kingdoms where many of them were born, not as slaves and not as soldiers under draconian military discipline for over a decade of desperate war. In Haiti's succession of constitutions over its first hundred years, the president sometimes held his post for life, and it's no surprise that one leader began calling himself king and another emperor. Furthermore, the revolution itself had seemed to show that any change in government could take place only through military force. As Dubois sums it up: "The only way for an outsider to take power — one that would be used again and again over the course of the 19th century — was to raise an army and march on the capital."

Adam Hochschild is the author of seven books, most recently "To End All Wars: A Story of Loyalty and Rebellion, 1914-1918."

Read More @ Source

Anwar Pergunakan Bersih 2 Untuk Alih Tumpuan Kes Bicara Liwatnya

KUALA LUMPUR 13 Jun -- Ketua Pembangkang, Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim mempergunakan demonstrasi jalanan pada 9 Julai ini untuk mengalihkan tumpuan masyarakat terhadap kes yang sedang dihadapi. Ahli Parlimen Kulim Bandar Baru, Zulkifli Nordin menyatakan bahawa demonstrasi jalanan yang dicadang itu mungkin berhubung kait dengan perbicaraan kes liwat yang dihadapi Anwar Ibrahim. "Demonstrasi Bersih 2 mempunyai niat jahat dan mempunyai agenda lain, kita jangan lupa Anwar Ibrahim akan berhadapan dengan pembelaan, saya kenal Anwar Ibrahim , Anwar akan berhadapan dengan pembicaraannya 16 Julai. "Masa itu dia kena bagi keterangan, dia kena justifikasi pembelaaan alibi (pembicaraan kes liwat membabitkan Anwar dengan Mohd Saiful Bahri) di situ kena beri (keterangan) yang di bawa ke mahkamah, DNA dan lain-lain, bersama seorang saksi orang yang paling dicintai (isterinya) Wan Azizah. Dia tidak konfiden Wan Azizah boleh berdiri dalam kandang saksi nanti," katanya kepada UMNO-Online di sini. Menurutnya, perancangan mengadakan demonstrasi jalanan itu adalah antara usahanya untuk alih tumpuan kerana Anwar berada dalam keadaan tertekan dan cuba mencari cara lain. Demonstrasi jalan antara agenda tertentu untuk mengadakan himpunan, orang yang sudah terdesak, tersepit yang perlu mencari jalan keluar, dalam mengenali dia dan penglihatan saya sendiri, saya tahu dia ada agenda sendiri, mungkin Pas pun tidak tahu, dan saya cukup yakin Pas tidak tahu tindak tanduk Anwar," katanya. Zulkifli berkata ...

Video Rating: 2 / 5

More » Barisan Nasional (BN) | Pakatan Rakyat (PR) | Sociopolitics Plus | 大马社会政治

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

All Anwar Ibrahim Sex Videos (Warning: Explicit)

YB SEX SCANDAL - PART 4 (from Sabahkini)- in Malay

YB SEX SCANDAL - PART 3 (from Sabahkini)- in Malay