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Published byEthelbert Hines Modified over 9 years ago
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History of Haiti Zoltan Grossman
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Colonized by French French ruled sugar plantations harshly in western half of Hispaniola. African slaves began speaking French Creole.
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Only successful slave revolt, 1803 Haiti becomes independent under revolutionary leader Toussaint L’Ouverture
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Poverty, instability, dictatorship No help from Europeans, Americans. Became poorest country in Western Hemisphere
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Poverty, instability, dictatorship Desperately poor Haitians chop down trees; deforestation can be seen on border Haiti Dominican Republic
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Dominican Republic HaitiHaiti
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U.S. Marine Occupation Fought rebels from 1915 to 1934
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U.S. Marine Occupation Marine Major General Smedley Butler, 1933 “ War is just a racket…. I spent most of my time being a high class muscle- man for Big Business, for Wall Street and for the Bankers. In short, I was a racketeer, a gangster ….I helped make Mexico… safe for American oil interests in 1914. I helped make Haiti and Cuba a decent place for the National City Bank boys to collect revenues in. I helped in the raping of half a dozen Central American republics for the benefits of Wall Street. …. Looking back on it, I feel that I could have given Al Capone a few hints.”
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Duvalier Dictatorship “Papa Doc” 1957 “Baby Doc” 1971
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Duvalier Dictatorship “Tontons Macoutes” voodoo-following death squad
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Duvalier Dictatorship Rawlings made nearly all baseballs in Haiti until 1986. (Workers made $1,300/year)
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1986 Revolution “Baby Doc” Duvalier ousted, but 4 years of military dictatorship & refugee crisis
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1990 Election of Aristide Catholic priest Jean-Bertrand Aristide, supported by the poor
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1991 Military Coup Aristide ousted by Haitian military; Duvalier’s thugs return for revenge on poor; enormous numbers of Haitians leave by boat (many died at sea)
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1980 = Economic Migrants = Sent Home Late 1980s-Early 1990s = Refugees = Asylum Today = Economic Migrants = Sent Home Changing Status: Haitian Boat People
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1994 Intervention U.S. forces intervene to return democratically elected Aristide to office.
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1994 Intervention Aristide disbands military (thugs remain free); but he did not have much power to change society
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2000 Election After interim leader Ren é Pr é val (1996-2001), Aristide elected again. Opponents accuse of corruption, violence, vote-rigging.
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2004 Rebellion U.S. denies World Bank aid package to Haiti. Former military soldiers & thugs team up with some former Aristide followers to fight his police.
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2004 Rebellion U.S. does not back up democratically elected leader, but asks him to leave to avoid bloodbath. Rebels celebrate his departure.
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2004 Intervention U.S. Marines land again, along with French & Canadians. Will thugs again seek revenge, and trigger a new refugee crisis? U.S. Coast Guard blocking refugees.
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Aristide ally re-elected, 2006 Brazilian UN “peacekeepers” raid Cit é Soleil, other Lavalas communities; Left criticizes Lula Privatization proceeds, coupled with oil price hikes Ren é Pr é val Government
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Massive Food Riots, April 2008
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