The
coverage of the aftermath of the two earthquakes to hit Haiti has
been increasingly troubling, but not just for the obvious reasons.�
What is left of the Haitian government reports that 150,000 bodies
have been buried, leading to the conclusion that the estimate of
at least 200,000 dead is probably, and very unfortunately, accurate.�
Reports this past week indicate that Port-au-Prince harbor has been
damaged more than first thought, thus creating additional problems
for the delivery of relief and reconstruction assistance.� Thousands
of people have been forced to evacuate Port-au-Prince, returning
to rural areas where tent cities have emerged.� And, every so often,
despite the odds, one more living, breathing person is rescued from
the ruins.
Mainstream
coverage of the disaster has varied in quality and quantity.� Most
of us have been overwhelmed by the extent of the devastation, with
pictures of Port-au-Prince resembling those of Berlin in 1945, with
the only thing missing being bomb craters.� Yet after the initial
coverage, the tendency has been for a focus on three things, (1)individual
survival stories, (2)humanitarian relief efforts, and (3)how individual
US citizens have contributed.
I
wish to be neither cynical nor dismissive regarding the coverage.�
In general, the more coverage of Haiti the better such that people
around the world, but especially those of us in the USA, do not
forget or minimize the extent of the tragedy.� Yet the troubling
aspect of all of this has been the almost total lack of historical
context to this disaster.� With the exception of left-wing media,
mainstream coverage has largely restricted its �historical� analysis
to descriptions of Haiti�s poverty and corruption.� If they are
extending themselves, the mainstream media may give a bit of attention
to the tyrannical regime of Papa Doc Duvalier and the two coups
against democratically elected President Jean-Bertrand Aristide.�
But this is largely where the history stops.
The
result of this ahistorical approach is that the viewers and listeners
of mainstream media coverage get no sense of the breath of Haitian
history, or the roles of the USA and France in undermining Haiti�s
efforts at national self-determination and democracy.� None of this,
of course, is to let any Haitian tyrants off the hook, but the fact
of US and French interference�including the US invasion and occupation
from 1915-1934�places the January 2010 earthquake in an entirely
different context.
As
a result of the sorts of mainstream coverage to which we are exposed,
many of us have found ourselves rocked between despair and anger.�
The pictures are overwhelming, yet we tire of seeing and hearing
a presentation of a black people as being a constant flow of victims,
treated as if their misery is either the result of their own inadequacies
or the work of supernatural forces.
Progressive
people, particularly but not exclusively in Black America, are,
therefore, called upon to break this cycle.� Much as has been done
in the wake of wars, interventions, and occasionally natural disasters,
there needs to be a large-scale educational campaign that is moved
across the USA.� There needs to be a period of time�soon�set aside
where there are in-person, in-print and on-line teach-ins that focus
on Haiti.� Such teach-ins need to introduce their participants to
Haiti�s history and culture, but they especially need to introduce
audiences in the USA to the parasitic role that the USA and France
have had vis a vis Haiti since Haiti first achieved political independence
in 1804.� African American media; the media of other portions of
the African Diaspora in the USA; as well as media from the larger
progressive world, need to call attention to US policy towards Haiti,
including raising policy options that the Obama administration in
the USA and the Sarkozy administration in France, can pursue as
part of a process of repairing the damage that these two
imperial powers have carried out over more than two hundred years
(note:� in the case of France, since prior to 1804).
There
is no rocket science to a wave of teach-ins; it necessitates initiation
and organization.� We, at BlackCommentator.com, as small a media
outlet as we may be, are committed to stepping up to the plate to
help this happen.� We need other outlets, not to mention political
and social organizations as well as religious institutions, to do
likewise.� Let�s not debate it; let�s move it.
BlackCommentator.com
Executive Editor, Bill Fletcher, Jr., is a Senior Scholar with the
Institute for Policy Studies,
the immediate past president of
TransAfrica Forum
and co-author of, Solidarity Divided: The Crisis in Organized Labor and a New Path
toward Social Justice (University
of California Press), which examines the crisis of organized labor
in the USA. Click here
to contact Mr. Fletcher. |