The
only successful slave revolt in the worldBy Chuck Leddy
In this bicentennial year of Haitian independence, it's a bitter irony that
celebrations should be eclipsed by political crisis. French troops, whose
evacuation two centuries ago led to the 1804 Proclamation of Independence, are
back again patrolling the streets of Port-au-Prince. Once more, Haiti is haunted
by instability, foreign intervention, and crushing poverty.
In this exhaustively researched and valuable account, Laurent Dubois, a
history professor at Michigan State, looks back to the founding of Haiti. The
Revolution, Dubois says, left "enduring scars" that included
militarism, a tradition of dictatorship, and widespread economic hardship. In
those brutal years between 1791 and 1804, more than 100,000 Haitians were
killed. The Haitian economy, once the producer of half the sugar and coffee in
the entire world, was ravaged. In the period described by Dubois, Haiti fought and defeated three great
European powers: France, Britain, and Spain. Moreover, the revolution liberated
90 percent of the population, which had been living under a brutal system of
slavery. Haiti's was the first, and the only, successful slave revolt in the
history of the world. Moreover, the Haitian Revolution would lead to the
doubling of the size of the United States. It was Napoleon's loss of Haiti that
convinced the overextended dictator to sell the Louisiana territory to the
fledgling US. Dubois opens the book with an impressively detailed description of Haiti's
pre- Revolutionary history. Spain and France competed for the island, called
Hispaniola, until the 1697 Treaty of Rhyswick granted the western part to
France. The French called their colony St. Domingue and created a plantation
economy based on sugar and coffee. Slaves were imported from French colonies in
Africa, and an oligarchy of plantation owners ruled the land. As Dubois tells it, the local planters resented political and economic
interference from France. When decrees were sent from Paris about how slaves
should be treated, the planters ignored them and treated their
"property" as inhumanely as they wished. Yet there were changes in
France that would have a huge impact on Haiti. In the late 18th century, French
intellectuals were popularizing the case against slavery. Enlightenment thinkers
such as Condorcet argued that slavery violated the laws of nature. Organizations
such as the Société des Amis des Noirs demanded abolition. The French Revolution changed everything by promoting universal ideals of
liberty and equality. Plantation owners in Haiti tried to block the
"dangerous" ideas coming from Paris, but the ideas spread among the
slaves through smuggled pamphlets and by word of mouth. The Haitian Revolution
began in August 1791 when slaves in the northern plains rebelled. Dubois
describes how bands of slaves roamed the land, killing plantation owners,
burning fields, and destroying equipment. The slave insurgency escalated into a brutal civil war filled with atrocities
on both sides. In early 1793, Britain and Spain declared war on Revolutionary
France and so Haiti was embroiled in a larger conflict. The French Republic sent
commissioners to Haiti who, hoping to attract ex-slaves to fight against Britain
and Spain, decided to abolish slavery. Haitian history changed forever in 1794 when Toussaint Louverture, an
ex-slave, decided to fight for the French Republic. Within a few years, General
Louverture would become the de facto military dictator of Haiti. He drove out
the British and the Spanish, eliminated his rivals, and asserted control over
the island nation. Dubois adroitly describes Louverture's economic policies: The general chose
to maintain the old plantation economy. Ex-slaves were given salaries, but they
were forced to remain on the land. Louverture's failure to break up the
plantation system was a crucial lost opportunity. The prerevolutionary economic
inequalities, as well as a planter oligarchy, would continue to bedevil Haiti. Napoleon Bonaparte resented Louverture's independence, and he coveted Haiti's
wealth. In early 1802, Bonaparte sent his brother-in-law, General Leclerc, with
a large army to reassert French dominance. Louverture and the Haitian people
came to believe, quite rightly in the author's estimation, that Napoleon
intended to reintroduce slavery. Dubois shows how Leclerc's men, some 80,000 in
all, were caught in a military quagmire. After a year and a half of savage
guerrilla warfare and an epidemic of yellow fever, 50,000 French soldiers were
dead (Leclerc among them). Lourverture ended up dying in a French prison. In
late 1803, a defeated French Army boarded ships and left. On Jan. 1, 1804, Haiti proclaimed its independence in a moment of supreme
hope. However, the centuries-old legacies of slavery and colonialism would not
be so easily dismissed. Dubois, writing in an accessible style and with a
wide-ranging focus, has done an impressive job depicting the tumultuous founding
of Haiti. Readers wanting to place the Caribbean nation's current struggles in a
larger historical context will find Dubois an eminently worthwhile resource. • Chuck Leddy is a freelance writer in Quincy, Mass.
Source: The Christian Science Monitor, from the March 23, 2004 edition - http://www.csmonitor.com/2004/0323/p15s01-bogn.html