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Other Interesting Haiti related
sites on the Web:
- Haitian art at
Medalia
The
Island of Haiti with Escapeartist
- Haiti Archives (History)
Church of Later Days
Saint in Haiti
- Photos d'Haiti
Radio
Vision 2000 Live from Haiti
- Haiti Global Village
Haitian
students On GLobal Village
List of Other Haitian Links Toussatint Louverture (last 5 Years in Haiti)

What
others say:
- Richard Gillepsie from Towson University wrote a 32 chapters book-on-line about
Toussatint
Louverture last 5 years in Haiti. Click Here to Read the story.

- Excerpts form an article of the June 1993 issue of
"Les Acajous", a newsletter published by ODL. The article of "Les
Acajous" is based on an other article by Earl Caldwell on the New-York's Daily
News a few years earlier:
-
The phrase "Boat People" is a term used to degrade and dehumanize Haitians
living in this country. Not so long ago, before modern travel, the Americans (who
consider themselves true Americans) came to this country by boat. Like most
Haitians, they were leaving poverty behind for the "land of
opportunity". And like Haitians, they underwent the same perils
encountered on the high seas for a better life, for the "promised land".
-
Haitians should never lower their heads to this insult. Furthermore, we should
teach our kids to be proud of their origin. Anyone using the term "Boat
People" as an insult should be considered close-minded and ignorant of certain
historical facts.
- Fact one:
- We Haitians are the second independent nation in the "New World" (the Americas
and the Caribbean).
- Fact two:
- We are also the first independent black nation in the world (outside and probably inside
Africa).
- Fact three:
- We are the first and only black colony to have fought, while enslaved, one of the
world's most powerful nation at the time, and won; and thus, proclaimed ourselves an
independent nation.
- Fact four:
- We are the first to introduce the concept of "Pan Americanism",
- a) By
helping Francisco Miranda and Simon Bolivar in their fights to liberate Venezuela,
- Colombia, Bolivia,
and Ecuador.
- b) By
helping the USA in its revolutionary war. (Around 800 Haitians participated in the
battle
of Savannah, Georgia.)
-
- In an article written by Earl Caldwell in the November 27th 1991 issue of the Daily
News he stated:
- "There is another piece in the Haitian history that hasn't
been told. This goes back more than 200 years, back to a time when a strong and
independent America was more a dream than a reality.
-
In 1779, America was fighting a revolutionary war. This particular battle was known
as "The Siege of Savannah". Little gets said about the battle in
Georgia, because instead of victory, it turned out to be a defeat for the French and
American forces, so one-sided, it bordered on disaster. And History says the troops
were nearly annihilated, had it not been for the black troops from Saint-Domingue, which
was then Haiti's name as a French colony.
-
When the battle was over, instead of "The Siege of Savannah" it became
known as "The Day Haiti Saved the Retracting Patriot Army."
-
This, my fellow Haitians, is how the first Haitians "Boat People" came to this
great country known by the name of America. They were not here to escape slavery,
because they got their independence not long after. Instead, they were here to help
this great nation's dream become reality.
-
After them, a lot of other Haitians have left their beloved land in search of a better
life, just like the Europeans, Asians, etc... A lot of them also came by boat, then again,
so were the Pilgrims and others alike who called themselves "Real Americans".
-
Maybe Haitians are poor and mostly illiterate, but we also have an heritage, a history to
make even the most powerful nation envious. Although listening to others, you'd
never know it. And maybe that is what they want: to make us feel ashamed to be who
we are, Proud Haitians.
End

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