Christmas 2004 in Haiti
|
On Christmas Day, the Group to defend the rights of political prisoners (GDP) began a march through the streets of the capital. Chanting, "Our children need to see their fathers," they assembled in front of the Tribunal of Justice. Countless political prisoners languish away in jail cells in Haiti without formal charges and have never been called before a judge |
|
The large contingency of heavily armed SWAT team and special units of the Haitian police seemed out of place as the children broke into a spontaneous rendition of Silent Night. |
|
Christmas Eve demonstration by municipal employees in Petion-Ville who were summarily dismissed because of their suspected political affiliation with President Jean-Bertrand Aristide's Lavalas party. Many hoped the appointed and unelected cartel of mayors would make a holiday gesture and pay them a portion of the back pay they are owed. |
|
Despite their strident spirit, it became clear the fired employees demands fell on deaf ears as couriers passed through the hungry crowd laden with sumptuous holiday gift baskets intended for the appointed and unelected mayors on behalf of their wealthy patrons.
|
|
Families belonging to the Group to Defend the Rights of Political Prisoners (GDP) demonstrate to free their loved ones on Christmas Day in front of the headquarters of the UN mission. The UN peacekeepers mostly seemed disinterested and bored but most likely anxious to return to their homes and barracks to sit down to their Christmas dinner and call their own families back at home via expensive satellite phones. |
Haiti Information Project
Port au Prince, Haiti (HIP)-The benevolence of Santa Claus and the love
and wisdom of a prince of peace are not likely to be associated with
the Gerard Latortue cabal's place in Haitian history. When the
US-installed regime took power following the coup against Haiti's
democratically elected government earlier this year; they made the
grandiose claim of seeking to heal the country's wounds through
reconciliation. Since then, Haiti has been plagued by a petty and
vengeful leadership who, along with a vindictive elite-controlled
media, have led a campaign of political persecution against President
Aristide's Lavalas political party. This spiteful stance only fueled
more violence by unleashing the former military and the Haitian police
to prey upon supporters of the exiled president who in turn retaliated
in what many here justify as a simple act of self-defense. For mere
mortals, turning the other cheek is always difficult when faced with
certain death.
Reconciliation is nowhere to be found during this holiday season in
Haiti. Under the current Haitian regime the word has become synonymous
with human rights violations, the summary dismissal of thousands of
government employees abandoned without a means to a livelihood and
innumerable political prisoners wasting away in jails throughout Haiti.
The presence of a United Nations peacekeeping force is no more generous
as it seems to have done little other than add legitimacy to a cynical
and deadly exercise in pacification undertaken in the name of restoring
democracy.
While Haiti's wealthy elite returned from Christmas shopping sprees in
Miami and New York, the holiday held little joy for the majority of
poor families barely surviving. For some, like fired employees from the
mayor's office in Petion-Ville, it meant tempting retribution by
peacefully demonstrating on Christmas Eve for back pay owed them so
they might have a little something to bring home to their families for
the holiday. Despite their strident spirit, it became clear their
demands fell on deaf ears as couriers passed through the hungry crowd
laden with sumptuous holiday gift baskets intended for the appointed
and unelected mayors on behalf of their wealthy patrons.
For others, like the families of political prisoners, it meant a long
march through the streets of Port au Prince on Christmas Day demanding
to be reunited with their loved ones. The smaller children with sore
feet were glad for the break they got from walking as they stopped to
demonstrate in front of the UN headquarters. The large contingency of
heavily armed SWAT team and special units of the Haitian police seemed
out of place as the children broke into a spontaneous rendition of
Silent Night. The UN peacekeepers mostly seemed disinterested and bored
but most likely anxious to return to their homes and barracks to sit
down to their Christmas dinner and call their own families back at home
via expensive satellite phones.
All told, for most in Haiti the only gift they could afford this year
was to scrape together enough pennies for a humble Christmas dinner to
honor and remember their loved ones. A ritual of breaking bread and
communion in misery that recalled members of their families who are
locked away in prison, living in exile or killed in the political
violence of this past year.
Reverence and grief combined to mark the Christmas celebration in the
poor neighborhoods of Cite Soleil and Bel Air. Under the watchful eyes
of the UN peacekeepers and the Haitian police most people were
reluctant to give their names or allow photographs. The laughter of
malnourished children and the smells from thousands of pots of stew,
made from whatever was available, mingled with the constant buzz of
flies and the omnipresent odors of open sewage and garbage. As families
prepared to sit down to their modest holiday meals many tables were
decorated with photographs and remembrances of absent loved ones. There
were fathers and sons, mothers and daughters, uncles and aunts, sisters
and brothers; cousins were there too. Most tables also included at
least one small picture of a smiling President Aristide who is still
revered among Haiti's poor majority despite all the attempts to beat
and starve it out of them.
In the midst of this uncertainty save for their poverty, this Christmas
in Haiti saw a brief moment of peace for Haiti's poor masses. The
survivors of the holocaust, the imprisoned, the dead and the exiled all
sat down together in spirit to pay tribute to the memory of the birth of
a small child who would grow to be a man known for his acts of
reconciliation, sacrifice and forgiveness. Haiti's poor majority can
only hope the example is not lost forever upon those who supported the
coup, the UN or the regime of Gerard Latortue.