Haiti Beating Back the Elite's Rage Against All Odds
by Ezili Danto
Aristide
returned
to Haiti today. I've not seen such genuine happiness on the faces of
Haiti's poor in over seven years.
Welcome President Jean Bertrand
Aristide and family.
Today is a good day for the poorest of the poor in
the Western Hemisphere. Their struggle and unimaginable sacrifices and
sufferings bore fruit and it makes them smile. We thank the universal
good for this moment. Blessed be the endless Haiti revolution against
the organized tyranny of the "civilized" and "schooled" peoples.
Today, HLLN re-members the blessed Haiti revolution, Janjak Desalin and the indigenous Haiti army of today and yesterday.
On
this day of the return, HLLN re-members the sacrifice of the warriors
of Site Soley, Bel Air, Solino, Martissant who took up arms in
self-defense against the occupation and coup d'etat. We re-MEMBER the
most hunted Black man in the Western Hemisphere, who, alone, fought the
most powerful armies on earth for two long years before he was
assassinated by UN bullets, we remember the lynching and crucifixion of
Dred Wilmè.
All human beings have the right to life and to self-defense, including the poor in Haiti.
"On
July 6, 2005, Dred Wilmè in his family where assassinated in cold blood
by 1,440 heavily armed UN/US troops. With their tanks, helicopters and
advanced weapons, 440 UN/US soldiers entered Site Soley in the dead of
night (3am) while the community was asleep. One thousand (1000) other
UN/US soldiers surrounded Site Soley to make sure no one could leave.
Bombs where reported unleashed and dropped on the unarmed civilian
community.
According to The Site Soley Massacre Declassification Project the
UN fired over 22,000 rounds of ammunition into this thin-shacked,
cardboard-house, poverty-stricken Black community of about 450,000
Haitians, most having been forced off their safer rural lands by US/USAID/WB/IMF policies in the 80s and 90s."
Today,
we remember and say honor and respect to our fallen and faceless
warriors- the beleaguered poor in Site Soley, Solino, Martissant,
Bel-Air, Gran Ravine, et al.. ravaged by exclusion and color-coded NGO
charitable distribution and allotments that slews human dignity, brings
perpetual dependency. We recall the 20,000 slaughtered by the imposed
Bush Boca Raton regime from 2004 to 2006, slaughtered with the
complicity of UN/US firepower. We pay tribute to Father Gerard Jean Juste, Lovinsky Pierre Antoine
and all those who gave their life for this day of return of the
people’s voice. We pay tribute to the ten thousands unknown Haitians, in
Haiti and in the Diaspora, who never wavered. We lift up Hazel and
Randall Robinson for staying true throughout this long road and always,
always supporting justice for the people of Haiti against all the odds.
We lift up Minister Louis Farrakhan and Danny Glover
who stood with the poor majority in Haiti and advocated for the return
of Aristide in Haiti when most of the U.S. Black intelligentsia turned
away.
We thank all those folks, from all the races and
religions, who signed letters and advocated for this return. We pay
tribute to all the small Haiti radio programs abroad and in Haiti who
stood for justice, Mary at SF Bayview for standing firm and resolute. We
remember the unknown fanm vanyans, Haitian women like Alina
Sixto who sacrificed so much, for so long without accolades and
recognition and who never wavered. We share this day by lifting up the
work and life of our beloved John Maxwell. We pay tribute to the
Africans, in Jamaica, in South Africa who stood in solidarity with the
people of Haiti despite threats of repercussions from powerful
international forces, those who this week ignored the frantic calls from
Barack Obama and the UN’s Ban-Ki Moon to again delay and destroy the will of the people of Haiti. Thank you.
This
historic returns belongs to the poor suffering warriors of Haiti and to
bless the spirits of those who perished too soon. Indeed it belongs to
Haitian men like father Gerard Jean Juste, to all the women community
leaders who where singled out and massacred at the USAID/IOM “Summer for Peace” soccer gathering
on August 20 and Aug. 21st where Haitian youths were lured to their
slaughter while attending a soccer game sponsored by USAID. Haiti’s
young were brutally chopped up by UN/US-sanctioned coup detat police
squads, working with their Lame Ti Manchet thugs and mercenaries.
This return belongs to Esterne Bruner, assassinated, Sept. 21, 2006 by members of the coup d’etat enforcers, Lame Timanchèt.
Before
his death, the courageous Esterne Bruner provide Ezili’s HLLN with the
names of the members who committed the Gran Ravine/USAID-soccer
-for-peace massacres, the names of the death squad of Lame Ti Manchet.
None of these pro-coup detat enforcers have been brought to justice in
UN occupied Haiti because they helped demobilize the pro-democracy
Lavalas movement. This return that eases the insult of the bicentennial
coup d’etat belongs to the hundreds of Haitians, sealed in containers
and dumped off the Coast of Cap Haitian to drown, as US-supported thugs,
still roaming Haiti free behind UN protection today, took over the
North. It belongs to those forced onto mysterious U.S. ships, off the
shores of Haiti, held and tortured in secrecy, some for two years,
because they voted Lavalas or held positions in the popular government
of President Aristide. It belongs to Haitian men like Emmanuel Dred
Wilmè who never left his people, never even left his neighborhood, he
never attacked anyone, he simply defended his community from attack from
the coup detat overseers, from UN and US guns and sycophants who hired
thugs, like Labanye, to kill innocent civilians simply because they
voted for Jean Bertrand Aristide and advocated for their country's own domestic interests as opposed to the interests of the internationals, their Haiti billionaire oligarchy and poverty pimping USAID-NGO subcontractors.
There
will always be more Dred Wilmés, more Father Jean Juste, more Lovinsky
Pierre Antoines, more Esterne Bruners in Haiti as long as there is
misery and exclusion imposed on Haiti by the powerful nations.
Most
of all today, we say honor and respect to the Ezili HLLNetwork members,
of all the races and nationalities, a 10 thousand strong network
against the profit-over-people folks, reaching three million per post,
and on our blogs, who stood with the voiceless and disenfranchised in
Haiti for these last seven years against all the odds, against all the
naysayers.
This historic moment belongs to all of you who stood
with the indigenous Haitians at HLLN who work to make a space for
Haiti’s authentic voices without Officialdom’s approval. It’s a harsh
journey. It could have been a six-hour trip to Brazil and then just a
few hours to Haiti. But it took 18 hours because the “benevolent
internationals” interested in our “democracy and stability” wouldn’t
allow former president Aristide, the symbol of the poor's empowerment in
Black Haiti, to travel through their territories. It took 18 hours for
Aristide to reach Haiti. Going from South Africa to Northern Africa in
Senegal took 10 hours while from Senegal to Haiti took another 8 hours
down to Haiti. I hear England wouldn’t allow a landing either. That
long, long road is symbolic of the Haitian struggle. That long road
Ezili’s HLLN has shared with you and with your support and forbearance.
Unlike colonial celebritism with Sean Penn, no one will give us
accolades at a mere six months journey in Haiti. Ours is a centuries old
long journey. We overstand. The struggle continues. A new era begins
for us here at HLLN. We ask you help us define it. For we know the
empire will strike back. We expect it and thus avoid the surprise blow.
As usual, we shall take the road less traveled towards healing Haiti’s
poor majority with dignity, human rights, self-sufficiency, justice and
inclusion. We won’t sell out. Haiti and indigenous Haitians want justice
not charity, not Clinton/Farmer UN/US paternalism. It’s a desperately
humiliating, bumpy, wholly disemboweling, wholly healing and fulfilling
ride. Against all odds, Ginen poze. Kenbe la – hold on. (See, Don't be distracted by Aristide in Haiti by Ezili Dantò).
Pierre
Labossierre, Jafrikayiti, Guy Antoine, Harry Fouche, Fritz Pean, Yves
Point Du Jour, Jean Ristil Jean Baptise and too many others to name,
congratulations on this day. Only we know what we’ve withstood in
helping to overcome not one but two Bush coup d’etats on the poor
majority in Haiti. Sometimes the fierce guilt of surviving, the endless
stretch ahead, the soul and psychic wounds wrought on by the shame and
humiliation of powerlessness and lack of material resources to do more,
are too heavy a load. It’s too ugly and desperate to articulate the
bullying and blows metered out by the most educated, most wealthy and
most powerful on the most defenseless and non-violent people on earth.
Their collective suffering and deaths shall not be in vain. Justice will
prevail, beauty will win, eventually. If not in our lifetime, then in
the next. We are the Haitians, the indigenous Haitians. From generation
to generation, from the womb to the tomb, our lives are about struggle.
Today, for a moment, we’ll smile
because in this shining and eternal moment that must see us through
what will come at us next, we anti-Duvalierist-Haitians managed to
survive whole with dignity and to witness that against all odds, we beat
back the elite’s rabid rage.
Ayibobo! The Haitian resistance against the Western bicentennial re-colonization of Haiti lives on.
Ezili Dantò
Haitian Lawyers Leadership Network (HLLN)
March 18, 2011