Part
I
January
1, 1804 – January 1, 2004:
This day is sacred.
It is the 200th anniversary
of the Haitian Revolution.
Fought
by Haitians.
Won for us all.
Between
1791 and 1804, hundreds of thousands of Africans enslaved in
Haiti ignored the
rivers, forests, precipices, swamps, mountains, gorges, bloodhounds,
rifles, cannon, and whips that separated them and united to launch
a massive, brilliantly executed, spectacular war of liberation
that the armies of Spain, England, and France (with the help
of the United States) all fought desperately – and failed absolutely – to
crush.
The
Haitian Revolution was no “lucky break” involving “a few unruly
slaves.”
This
was no “plantation
uprising.”
St. Domingue (as Haiti
was then called by the French) was at that time the most prosperous
colonial possession of any European power. It created
far greater wealth for France than the thirteen American colonies combined. Its
massive wealth-generating capacity caused it to be known far
and wide as “The Pearl of the Antilles” and its French owners
had a clear and proven management strategy for profit maximization: push
the slaves to their absolute physical limit, work them literally to
death, and then quickly import replacement slaves from Africa
who would, in turn, be worked to death. This, St. Domingue’s
plantocracy had discovered, controlled operating costs, kept
the pace of economic activity at a highly efficient and productive
pace, minimized slack and wastage, and produced massive, stupendous
profits.
Two
hundred years ago today, however, after a 13-year war of liberation,
the slaves
of St. Domingue celebrated their victory over France and other
European powers by establishing the Republic of Haiti. They
had wrested from Napoleon the engine of France’s economic expansion,
banished slavery from the land, and ended European domination
of 10,000 square miles of fertile land and hundreds of thousands
of slaves to work it.
They had shattered the
myth of European invincibility.
“Most have assumed that
(Haiti’s) slaves had no military experience prior to the revolution,” John
K. Thornton explains in African Soldiers in the Haitian Revolution. “Many
assume that they rose from agricultural labour to military prowess
in an amazingly short time…. However, it is probably a mistake
to see the slaves of St. Domingue as simply agricultural workers,
like the peasants of Europe… …A majority of St. Domingue’s slaves,
especially those who fought steadily in the revolution, were
born in Africa… …In fact, a great many… …had served in African
armies prior to their enslavement and arrival in Haiti… …Sixty
to seventy per cent of the adult slaves listed on (St. Domingue’s)
inventories in the late 1780’s and 1790’s were African born… … …(coming)
overwhelmingly from just two areas of Africa: the Lower Guinea
coast region of modern Benin, Togo and Nigeria (also known as
the “Slave Coast”), and the Angola coast area….
“Where the African military
background of the slaves counted most was in those areas, especially
in the north (of St. Domingue), where slaves themselves led the
revolution, both politically and militarily… … …These areas…threw
up the powerful armies of Toussaint Louverture and Dessalines
and eventually carried the revolution.”
A
successful revolution in Haiti, Thornton explains, “required the kind of skill and
discipline that could be found in veteran soldiers, and it was
these veterans, from wars in Africa, who made up the general
will of the St. Domingue revolt… ...Kongolese armies contributed
the most to St. Domingue rebel bands… …(Their) tactical organization
was very different from that of Europe… ...(and they) had learned
to deal successfully with Portuguese armies and tactics in the
years of struggle (in Africa), driving out invaders… …No doubt
these tactics could help those who found themselves in St. Domingue
on the eve of the revolution.
“Kongolese armies seem
to have been organized in…platoons…that struck at enemy advancing
columns and sustained an engagement for a time before breaking
off and retreating… …They made use of cover, both from terrain
and from woods and tall grass, in hiding their movements and
directing their fire. When they fled it was not possible to
follow them.” Portuguese troops who had fought the Kongolese
in Africa also reported that the Kongolese used “shocks – larger
engagements involving massed Kongolese units. According to the
Portuguese accounts, large bodies were assembled for shocks supported
by artillery, sometimes they formed in extensive half moon formations
which apparently sought partial envelopment of opposing forces,
in other cases in columns of great depth along fronts of 15-20
soldiers….
“Their tactics showed
a penchant for skirmishing attacks rather than the heavy assaults
favoured by Europeans in the same era… …Kongolese armies had
a higher command structure that could mass troops quickly, and
soldiers were also accustomed to forming effectively into larger
units for major battles when the situation warranted.… ...Dahomey’s
armies included a fairly large professional force… …Oyo relied
heavily on cavalry forces, had relatively few foot soldiers and
throughout the 1700’s was the pre-eminent…military power in (west
Africa)… …Dahomey’s troops… …fought in close order using fire
discipline quite similar to that of Europe… …
“It was from these disparate ‘arts
of war’ that the revolutionary African soldier of St. Domingue
was trained… …
“One can easily see,
in the formation of the bands mentioned in the early descriptions
of the (Haitian Revolution), the small platoons of the Kongolese
armies, each under an independent commander and accustomed to
considerable tactical decision making; or perhaps those small
units characteristic of locally organized Dahomean units; the
state armies of the Mahi country; or the coastal forces of the
Slave Coast… …
“In addition the pattern
of attacks with small scale harassing maneuvers, short, sustained
battles and then rapid withdrawals are also reminiscent of the
campaign diaries of the Portuguese field commanders in Angola. Felix
Carteau, an early observer of the war in the north of St. Domingue
noted that the (slave revolutionaries) harassed French forces
day and night. Usually, he commented, they were repelled, but
each time, they dispersed so quickly, so completely in ditches,
hedges and other areas of natural cover that real pursuit was
impossible. However, rebel casualties were light in these attacks,
so that the next day they reappeared with great numbers of people. They
never mass in the open, wrote another witness, or wait in line
to charge, but advance dispersed, so that they appear to be six
times as numerous as they really are. Yet they were disciplined,
since they might advance with great clamor and then suddenly
and simultaneously fall silent….
“It was not long before
observers noted that the rebels (in St. Domingue) had developed
the sort of higher order tactics that was also characteristic
of Kongolese forces, or those of the Slave Coast….
“In addition to these
tactical similarities to African wars, especially in Kongo, there
were other indications of the African ethos of the fighters… ...they
marched, formed and attacked accompanied by the ‘music peculiar
to Negroes....’ Their religious preparation, likewise, hearkened
back to Africa….
“It is unlikely that
many slaves would have learned equestrian skills as a part of
their plantation labor… ...Since there was virtually no cavalry
in Angola, one can speculate that rebels originating from Oyo
might have provided at least some of the trained horsemen. Also,
the Senegalese, though a minority, also came from an equestrian
culture… …
“African soldiers may
well have provided the key element of the early success of the
revolution. They might have enabled its survival when it was
threatened by reinforced armies from Europe. Looking at the
rebel slaves of Haiti as African veterans rather than as Haitian
plantation workers may well prove to be the key that unlocks
the mystery of the success of the largest slave revolt in history.”
St.
Domingue’s policy
of working its slaves to death and then quickly importing replacements
from Africa proved to be the ultimate karmic boomerang. St.
Domingue’s African-born slaves not only were not yet broken psychologically,
but they were also in possession of significant military training
and experience gained on the other side of the Atlantic. And
they combined with brilliant, indefatigable, St. Domingue-born
blacks like Toussaint L’Ouverture and Dessalines to create a
black revolutionary juggernaut the likes of which Europe and
the United States had not seen before – or since.
The blacks of St. Domingue
forced the world to see both them and the millions of
other Africans enslaved throughout the Americas with new eyes. No
longer could it be assumed that they could forever be brutalized
into creating massive fortunes and building sprawling empires
for the glory of Europe and America.
On
January 1, 1804, hundreds of thousands of slave revolutionaries
established an
independent republic and named it Haiti in honor of the Amerindian
people, long since killed off by European brutality and diseases,
who had called the land Ayiti – Land of Many Mountains. They
had banished slavery from their land and proclaimed it an official
refuge for escaped slaves from anywhere in the world. They had
defeated the mightiest of the mighty. They had shattered the
myth of European invincibility.
Europe
was livid. America,
apoplectic. The blacks in St. Domingue had forgotten their place
and would be made to pay. Dearly. For the next two hundred
years.
Toussaint L’Ouverture, Dessalines, and
their slave revolutionaries must forever live in our hearts as
inspiring, authentic counterweights to the “yassuh-nosuh-scratch-
where-ah-don’-itch-and-dance-tho-there-ain’-no-music”
image of our forebears that Europe and the United States have drilled
into our psyches.
And we must remember
that history forgets, first, those who forget themselves. Via
means direct and indirect, crass and subtle, there have been
whispers and street corner shouts that “current conditions in
Haiti” make our celebration of the Haitian Revolution “inappropriate” at
this time.
We,
whose souls and psyches have been bleached of everything prior
to the Middle
Passage are now being told that we must tear from our
consciousness and rip from our hearts the most dramatic and triumphal
assertion of forebears’ dignity, worth, and perspicacity since the
Middle Passage.
How diabolically contemptuous.
Not
only must we not forget the Haitian Revolution, we must celebrate
it. Today,
through all of this its bicentennial year, and beyond.
And we must research,
understand, and expose what happened to Haiti and in Haiti
since the revolution. We must become fully conversant with the
role of “the world’s leading democracies” in Haiti between 1804
and today. We must develop a keen understanding of the repercussions
of the 61-year economic embargo that the United States imposed
on Haiti in response to its declaration of independence, and
we must recognize the current-day consequences of France forcing
Haiti to pay 90 million in gold francs (equivalent today to some
$20 billion) in 1825 as “compensation” for Haiti declaring its
independence – or be crushed militarily by France.
Today, “the world’s
leading democracies” cluck and gloat at their ongoing stranglehold – in
the form of a crushing financial embargo – on today’s descendants
of Toussaint, Dessalines, and their freedom fighters. Throughout
the Americas, we who benefited from the daring war waged by the
slaves of St. Domingue, must reject the maneuverings of the world’s
most powerful nations in Haiti and find ways to build bridges
to the Haitian people and the officials they choose – through
the ballot – to lead them.
Just
over two hundred years ago, after there had been a “cessation of hostilities” and
the brilliant military strategist Toussaint L’Ouverture had already
retired to a quiet life in the St. Domingue country-side, France
decided, nonetheless, to arrest and ship him to a prison cell
3,000 feet up the Jura Mountains of France where he would freeze
to death. As he stepped on board the boat that would forever
take him away from St. Domingue, Toussaint issued a promise to
his captors and a call to us all.
We
are those roots.
The
revolution was fought by Haitians, but won for us all.
Through
our work and with our resources, in a spirit of self-respect
and self-awareness,
we must serve as counterweights to the powerful nations who
deem the ballot box sacrosanct in their countries, but surreptitiously
encourage and manipulate its rejection by “the opposition” in
Haiti. We must serve as proponents of political civility and
social justice in Haiti while “the world’s leading democracies” slyly
encourage recalcitrance, tumult, and division. We must reject
being manipulated by the corporate media into embracing the
notion that in France, Germany, the United States and other “civilized
nations” elections are the only legitimate determinant of the
will of the people, but in Haiti those street demonstrations specially
selected by the corporate media for coverage tell us all
we need to know about anybody’s will. We must impress upon
all Haitians the fact that the outside world does not distinguish
between – and cares nothing about – Lavalas, Convergence,
or any other political grouping. The world sees only “Haiti,” “Haitians,” and
all the connotations that western media have attached thereto. Those
nations that two hundred years ago failed desperately in their
attempts to crush the Haitian Revolution today have a deep
psychic need to “prove” Toussaint’s progeny capable of nothing
but disaster. We must reach out to and work with our Haitian
brothers and sisters to prove these nations wrong.
Throughout
the Diaspora, we must stand with and defend Haiti – on this
the anniversary of the Haitian Revolution, throughout this
bicentennial year, and for all time. For in so doing, we
stand for and defend ourselves.
Part
II
Haiti,
Jessica, and WMD
America’s
foreign policy officials have perpetrated horrific untruths
recently. Iraq’s “weapons of mass destruction,” Jessica
Lynch’s “battlefield heroism” and “abuse,” and Aristide’s “failure
to deliver” in Haiti are cases in point.
Iraq’s oil, the fear
of war-triggered terrorism, and Iraq’s antiquity have made
us more aware, and less susceptible – though not immune – to
media manipulation regarding Iraq. Similarly, American soldiers
who have served in Iraq have American defenders who
will not allow these soldiers’ contributions to be overlooked
while, for example, Jessica Lynch’s truth is trampled and twisted
to whip up “patriotism” and animus for “the bad guys.”
Who,
however, knows or cares anything about Haiti? How many Americans
know that – in
our names – American policy-makers have used our country’s
enormous power to block 8 million Haitians’ access to approved
loans for safe drinking water, literacy programs, and health
services? How many know, when we read about “Haiti’s steady
slide,” that powerful American policy-makers are massively
responsible? These officials are holding the Haitian people,
who desperately want to own their democracy, in a brutal
economic death-grip. Is this the face that America intends
to continue showing to the black and brown peoples of the world? Ordinary
Americans can no longer afford indifference.
Our
president says that we are terrorism targets because “they are jealous
of us”; because “we love liberty and they do
not”; because we represent “truth and justice.”
Is
it really our compassion and magnanimity that cause the rage
in distant hearts to reduce
Bali tourist spots to embers, Manhattan towers to dust, and
our Nairobi embassy to rubble? If so, the Dali Lama is in
great danger.
In these times, Americans must assess
what our policies are doing to human beings beyond our shores. And
we must realize that the same “information” machine
that lied about WMD and Jessica Lynch lies about much more – including
Aristide and Haiti.
The
United States has had Haitian blood on its hands for a long
time. Today,
they are dripping.
In
2000, the year of our electoral meltdown, election observers
in Haiti recommended
that seven senate seats (out of a total of 7,500 positions
filled nation-wide) go to a run-off. Haiti’s electoral commission
disagreed, creating the only international concern
about the election. To avoid “the wrath of the mighty,” these
senators resigned. However, American officials who had vehemently
opposed the restoration of Haiti’s elected government in 1994,
now seized on the run-off controversy to further demonize Aristide,
break the Haitian people’s spirit, and “prove” the Haitian
Revolution a failure
Powerful
Americans are crushing the Haitian people’s dream of building their own
democracy in their own image, and these officials blocking
Haitians’ access to safe drinking water tells us all we need
to know. They loathe Aristide because he represents the poorer,
blacker masses of Haitian society, whereas America’s traditional
allies have always been Haiti’s moneyed, white or mulatto “elite.” The
parallels between America’s policies toward Haiti and our policies
towards apartheid South Africa have never been lost on me.
During
my colleagues’ and
my battle to end America’s long-standing collusion with South
Africa’s white supremacist government, highly respected U.S.
government officials publicly asserted that Mandela and the
African National Congress were terrorist and that the anti-apartheid
movement was antithetical to U.S. interests. Aristide’s government
was restored in 1994 following a coup in which Haiti’s US-allied
army killed 5,000 civilians. And those American officials
who had defended apartheid South Africa lost no time in turning
their policy venom full bore on today’s descendents of the
most spectacular slave revolt in the history of all the Americas – and
the man Haitians chose to lead them.
Aristide
has not “failed
to deliver.” Powerful individuals from the most powerful nation
on earth have placed a financial embargo on his country and
made the strangulation of his government – and therefore his
people – a priority. They are determined to render him incapable of
delivering so that his people will, in time, tire of the excruciating
hardships and tire of him.
At
the dawn of this New Year, perhaps we should reflect on what
we have done to
Aristide, what we have done to the Haitian people, and on Thomas
Jefferson’s lament: “When I consider that God is just, I shudder
for my country.” The way we continue to treat weaker peoples
and nations around the world will determine, for years to come,
whether justice is something Americans have reason to welcome
or something we have reason to dread.
Randall
Robinson ([email protected])
is founder and former president of TransAfrica. He is an
author and lives in the Caribbean.