Latest update February 16th, 2025 7:49 PM
Jan 15, 2010 Editorial
The images of devastation that are coming out of Haiti are mind-numbing. Few of us in Guyana can appreciate the destructive power of a 7.0-magnitude earthquake on a city with mostly concrete buildings, but with building codes honoured in the breach.
We are publishing the following essay by John Dreyfuss, managing editor of The Root, and a Haitian, to offer an insight into that tragic state. In the meantime, we have to help not only because we are fellow members of Caricom but because of the debt every colonised nation owes to Haiti for its freedom.
“Some countries are just not lucky. Haiti is one of those places where bad things keep happening. The massive earthquake that destroyed a large part of the 250-year-old capital city, Port-au-Prince, is just the latest blow for a country that can ill afford any more disasters. In the last two decades, Haiti has suffered a series of coups, flawed elections, high crime and inept governments. Last year, back-to-back hurricanes devastated cities in Haiti’s central plain, its richest and most fertile region.
Haiti is a country with a glorious past, a brutal present, and a bleak future. It is also a country sharply divided along class and cultural lines. You will hear over and over in the coming days that it is the poorest country in the Western Hemisphere. What you will not hear is that it is also a country rich in culture, world-class art, and music that is celebrated all over the French-speaking world.
For those of us who were born there, each setback is a blow in the gut, a reminder of the precarious state of our native land. It also gives us a gnawing sense of guilt about how fortunate we are to be in places where systems work, building codes are enforced and a system of emergency rescue exists.
Haiti has never had much luck with leadership, either. It was created in a profound act of defiance, breaking away from France when that country was one of the most powerful in the world. The former slaves defied Napoleon when he reversed the 1794 emancipation decree of the French Revolution and defeated an army led by his brother-in-law to restore order. Haiti was a pariah for a half century, a country run by black men at a time when all its neighbours practiced slavery built on the specious rationale that black people were not human. The U.S., whom Haiti had helped during its own Revolution, refused to recognize the black government – and trade with it – until the Civil War, when Southern Senators could no longer block recognition by Abraham Lincoln.
But leaders in conflict are rarely good leaders in peace and Haiti underwent a long history of military dictatorship, coups, revolutions and occupations. The United States occupied Haiti for 17 years, leaving in 1934, but like much of the Caribbean and Central America that has been under American military rule, the primary legacy was a Haitian military apparatus that became a powerful player in the country’s politics. The 30-year rule of the Duvalier family drained the country of its meagre funds and created a vast Diaspora of talented professionals.
While early media reports are already saying that Haiti is least ready to deal with this disaster, I know that Haitians are a hardy people. They survived the unspeakable cruelty of their colonial masters and their colonial opponents. They survived centuries of corrupt rule and, when they gained the opportunity to emigrate to the U.S., Canada and elsewhere, their success showed that the plight of Haiti is not inevitable, that the relentless bad news and bad luck is not something inherent to Haiti and Haitians.
There will be a major rescue operation; experts will argue and debate how to remake Haiti again. Consultants will collect large fees. Bill Clinton, who has been serving as the pied piper for Haitian development, will bring investors on another trip to look for opportunity – construction companies will surely join the delegation this time. My hope is that all the experts will listen carefully to the Haitian people and help them rebuild what they need to change Haiti’s future.”
Feb 16, 2025
Kaieteur Sports-Guyana’s Junior Golden Jaguars delivered a remarkable performance Friday evening, securing a 2-2 draw against Costa Rica at the Costa Rica National Stadium. The result is a...Peeping Tom… Kaieteur News- I have an uncle, Morty Finkelstein, who has the peculiar habit of remembering things with... more
By Sir Ronald Sanders Ambassador to the US and the OAS, Sir Ronald Sanders Kaieteur News-Two Executive Orders issued by U.S.... more
Freedom of speech is our core value at Kaieteur News. If the letter/e-mail you sent was not published, and you believe that its contents were not libellous, let us know, please contact us by phone or email.
Feel free to send us your comments and/or criticisms.
Contact: 624-6456; 225-8452; 225-8458; 225-8463; 225-8465; 225-8473 or 225-8491.
Or by Email: [email protected] / [email protected]