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Ugly history: The 1937 Haitian Massacre - Edward Paulino

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    When historians talk about
    the atrocities of the 20th century,
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    we often think of those that took place
    during and between the two World Wars.
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    Along with the Armenian genocide
    in modern-day Turkey,
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    the Rape of Nanking in China,
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    and Kristallnacht in Germany,
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    another horrific ethnic cleansing campaign
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    occurred on an island between
    the Atlantic Ocean and Caribbean Sea.
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    The roots of this conflict
    go back to 1492,
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    when Christopher Columbus stumbled
    onto the Caribbean island
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    that would come to be named Hispaniola,
    launching a wave of European colonization.
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    The island’s Taino natives were decimated
    by violence and disease
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    and the Europeans imported large numbers
    of enslaved Africans
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    to toil in profitable sugar plantations.
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    By 1777, the island had become divided
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    between a French-controlled West
    and a Spanish-controlled East.
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    A mass slave revolt won Haiti
    its independence from France in 1804
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    and it became the world’s
    first black republic.
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    But the new nation paid dearly,
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    shut out of the world economy and
    saddled with debt by its former masters.
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    Meanwhile, the Dominican Republic
    would declare independence
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    by first overthrowing Haitian rule
    of eastern Hispaniola
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    and later Spanish
    and American colonialism.
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    Despite the long and collaborative history
    shared by these two countries,
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    many Dominican elites saw Haiti
    as a racial threat
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    that imperiled political and commercial
    relations with white western nations.
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    In the years following World War I,
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    the United States occupied
    both parts of the island.
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    It did so to secure its power
    in the Western hemisphere
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    by destroying local opposition
    and installing US-friendly governments.
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    The brutal and racist nature
    of the US occupation,
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    particularly along the remote
    Dominican-Haitian border,
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    laid the foundation for bigger atrocities
    after its withdrawal.
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    In 1930, liberal Dominican president
    Horacio Vásquez
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    was overthrown by the chief of his army,
    Rafael Trujillo.
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    Despite being a quarter Haitian himself,
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    Trujillo saw the presence of a bicultural
    Haitian and Dominican borderland
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    as both a threat to his power
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    and an escape route
    for political revolutionaries.
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    In a chilling speech on October 2, 1937,
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    he left no doubt about his intentions
    for the region.
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    Claiming to be protecting Dominican
    farmers from theft and incursion,
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    Trujillo announced the killing
    of 300 Haitians along the border
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    and promised that this so-called ‘remedy’
    would continue.
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    Over the next few weeks,
    the Dominican military,
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    acting on Trujillo’s orders,
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    murdered thousands of Haitian men
    and women,
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    and even their Dominican-born children.
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    The military targeted black Haitians,
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    even though many Dominicans themselves
    were also dark-skinned.
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    Some accounts say that to distinguish
    the residents
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    of one country from the other,
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    the killers forced their victims
    to say the Spanish word for parsley.
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    Dominicans pronounce it perejil,
    with a trilled Spanish ‘r’.
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    The primary Haitian language, however,
    is Kreyol, which doesn’t use a trilled r.
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    So if people struggled to say perejil,
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    they were judged to be Haitian
    and immediately killed.
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    Yet recent scholarship suggests
    that tests like this
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    weren’t the sole factor used to determine
    who would be murdered,
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    especially because many of the border
    residents were bilingual.
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    The Dominican government censored
    any news of the massacre,
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    while bodies were thrown in ravines,
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    dumped in rivers,
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    or burned to dispose of the evidence.
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    This is why no one knows exactly
    how many people were murdered,
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    though contemporary estimates
    range from about 4,000 to 15,000.
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    Yet the extent of the carnage
    was clear to many observers.
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    As the US Ambassador to
    the Dominican Republic at the time noted,
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    “The entire northwest of the frontier
    on the Dajabón side
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    is absolutely devoid of Haitians.
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    Those not slain either fled across the
    frontier or are still hiding in the bush.”
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    The government tried
    to disclaim responsibility
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    and blame the killings
    on vigilante civilians,
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    but Trujillo was condemned
    internationally.
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    Eventually, the Dominican government
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    was forced to pay only $525,000
    in reparations to Haiti,
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    but due to corrupt bureaucracy,
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    barely any of these funds reached
    survivors or their families.
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    Neither Trujillo nor anyone
    in his government
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    was ever punished for this crime
    against humanity.
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    The legacy of the massacre remains
    a source of tension
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    between the two countries.
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    Activists on both sides of the border
    have tried to heal the wounds of the past.
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    But the Dominican state has done little,
    if anything,
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    to officially commemorate
    the massacre or its victims.
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    Meanwhile, the memory of the Haitian
    massacre remains a chilling reminder
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    of how power-hungry leaders
    can manipulate people
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    into turning against
    their lifelong neighbors.
Title:
Ugly history: The 1937 Haitian Massacre - Edward Paulino
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TED-Ed
Duration:
05:40

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