viewpoint | editorials
| a very haitian story
A Very Haitian Story
By EDWIDGE DANTICAT
The New York Times, November
24, 2004
Miami—On
Sunday, Oct. 24, United Nations troops and Haitian police forces
launched a military operation in Bel-Air, one of the poorest and
most volatile neighborhoods in Haiti's capital, Port-au-Prince.
Their stated goal was to oust armed gangs, some of which are still
loyal to Haiti's deposed president, Jean-Bertrand Aristide.
During the clash that followed, United Nations
peacekeepers used the roof of a three-story building that housed
a church and school run by my 81-year-old uncle, the Rev. Joseph
N. Dantica and his son, Maxo, to fire into the alley below. Official
sources count relatively few casualties for the day, but although
he may never be counted as part of the official death toll, my uncle
was a victim too, not just of the violence in Haiti, but also of
the prejudice of American immigration officials. Before my uncle
lost his life in a series of catastrophic events that unraveled
from the moment the military forces crossed his threshold, he told
another side of that story.
When the international and combined Haitian forces
left Bel-Air, gang members came to my uncle's home, told him that
15 of their friends had been killed and said he had to pay for the
burials or die. Having lived and
worked in Bel-Air for more than 50 years, he had known some of these
young men since they were boys, and they allowed him a few minutes
to make a phone call. He grabbed a few important papers and fled
to a nearby house.
My uncle hid under a neighbor's bed for three
days as the gang members searched for him. They ransacked his home
and church and set the school on fire. When he was finally able
to leave, he and Maxo traveled to the United States - my uncle on
a multiple-entry visa, just as he had, many times, for more than
30 years.
But this time, when immigration officials at Miami
International Airport asked my uncle how long he would be staying,
he explained that he would be killed if he returned to Haiti and
that he and Maxo wanted asylum. They were arrested and taken to
the Krome Detention Center, where, my uncle told his lawyer three
days later, the medicine he had brought with him from Haiti - a
combination of both herbal and prescription medicines for an inflamed
prostate and high blood pressure - was taken away from him. Twenty-four
hours later, still in custody, he died at a nearby hospital.
Sadly, even with its extreme circumstances, my
uncle's case is not unusual in terms of his tragic confrontation
with Haiti's current political turmoil and the Homeland Security
Department's dismissive treatment of Haitian asylum seekers. When
he left Port-au-Prince, my uncle joined a long list of desperate,
ill-fated Haitians who are fleeing a country that is plagued not
only by gang warfare, rebel attacks, summary arrests and other human
rights violations, but also ecological disasters: in September,
flash floods caused by Tropical Storm Jeanne killed 1,900 people
and left 200,000 more homeless.
Still, while the American government just renewed,
for the fourth time, another 18-month term of the Temporary Protected
Status granted to approximately 85,000 Hondurans and Nicaraguans
after Hurricane Mitch in 1998, it will not give the same status
to 20,000 Haitians living here. It denies Haitians this status even
though the interim government in Haiti (with the backing of both
Democratic and Republican officials in the United States) appealed
for the measure to give Haiti time to stabilize its security system
and recover from a severe housing shortage resulting from the ravages
of Jeanne. Homeland Security officials often cite security concerns
and the fear of mass migration to justify their immigration policy
for Haitians but is it really wise for the United States to allow
a country so close to Florida to so seriously decay?
In February, the United States (along with Canada
and France) organized a regime change in Haiti and then withdrew
its forces, leaving a meager Brazil-led force to pick up where it
left off. Despite the international
aid money that has been pledged to Haiti, the absence of a viable
security force and the lack of other much needed infrastructure
- like roads, schools and medical care - inhibits real recovery
and perpetuates an
environment that not only makes life in Haiti dangerous but unlivable
for its poorest and most vulnerable residents.
Like Nicaraguans and Hondurans, Haitians should
be granted temporary protection status while Haiti tries to recover
from the political plagues and environmental disasters suffocating
it. Like the claims from Cubans,
Haitian asylum claims should be considered fairly and humanely so
that calamities like my uncle's flight and eventual death in the
custody of the Homeland Security Department, are never repeated.
Edwidge Danticat is the author, most recently, of
"The Dew Breaker."
|