RICE CALLING COTTON
Like most Americans, I find that I know very
little about Haiti.
I have read C.L.R. James' seminal book, "The Black Jacobins," which traces
the country from its original Carib inhabitants, then through the French-sponsored
slave trade, and finally to the uprising of its African inhabitants under Toussaint
L'Ouverture and the military defeat of the armies led by Napoleon's brother-in-law
by an army composed of former captive Africans.
I know a little about the brutality of the regimes of the Duvaliers, Papa and Baby
Doc, which was swept away in the popular, democratic revolt that led to the first
administration of President Jean-Bertrand Aristide.
I once saw the now-and-then former President Arisitde speak at a Berkeley church,
in the early 90's, in the period of his last exile. I remember him them as a quiet
but riveting mystic, with the kind of intensity that one imagines flowed from the
great religious-political leaders of history. By great I do not necessarily mean
good. I do not know, one way or the other. Like most Americans, I must confess that
I did little to follow the policies of his administration while he governed Haiti.
I know that he was the democratically-elected president of that nation, and little
more.
And I have watched and read as our national government and national media, in the
course of a day or two, have managed to take this blank slate of Haiti and Aristide
and write upon it in such a way that we have come to accept-quite willingly, and
before our eyes-our country's participation in, if not active orchestration of, the
overthrow of a democratically-elected government several hundred miles from our border.
Haiti first got the attention of most of us sometime last week when, with armed rebels
suddenly pouring across half the country like water through a sieve, Secretary of
State Colin Powell came on television and suggested that Aristide should resign.
Until then, I think, most Americans believed that this was no more than a minor revolt.
On Monday morning, on the first of March, we awoke to find that the Aristide regime
was no more.
"He made the decision to give up power on Saturday evening," Christopher
Marquis wrote in the New YorkTimes, "hours after the White House in a
statement questioned his fitness to rule." Haiti's crisis, the Bush Administration
wrote in a statement, "is largely of Mr. Aristide's making."
But there was a curiousness to the write-up's in both the Times and the
Washington Post of those last hours of the Aristide government. Lydia Polgreen
and Tim Weiner of the Times reported March 1st that Aristide had "resigned"
and "fled" the country, and both the Times and Post articles
of that day paraphrased the questions the Haitian President was supposed to have
asked in ordr to facilitate his exile. But even though both papers extensively quoted
individuals who spoke with Aristide in those hours, not a single one quoted Aristide
as simply saying, "I wish to resign." In fact, there were no direct quotations
from Aristide at all.
And the choice of words used by Times and Post reporters to describe
those conversations-at second hand-were also interesting. Aristide "meekly"
asked American ambassador if his resignation might help, Mr. Marquis wrote. The
Times reported those questions as "poignant," the Post as "plaintive."
Peter Slevin and Mike Allen of the Post wrote that Aristide "ran out
of bluster," with Marquis of the Times gave an editorial opinion that
the Haitian President was "signalling [his] disconnection from the violence
engulfing his country."
Do you think that these "embedded" characterizations had no bearing on
Americans' rapidly-forming opinion about Aristide?
Read them again, and think about the image they conjure in your mind. A pitiful little
man, weak and terrified, unable to understand this sudden turn of events in his fortune,
turns, at the very end, for help from the benevolent older brother-the United States
government-for whom he has so long held such scorn. How sad.
This is all the more important when you come to realize that Mr.'s Marquis and Slevin
and Allen neither heard these Aristide conversations themselves, nor spoke with anyone
from Aristide's side who might have characterized them in another way.
Two members of Congress-Maxine Waters and Charles Rangel-as well as the respected
Africa expert Randall Robinson did speak by telephone with Aristide following the
President's ouster. Aristide, they reported, had described a completely different
scenario of his departure from Haiti. He denied that he had resigned. Instead, Aristide
said that armed U.S. Marines had come to the Presidential palace, took he and his
immediate family at gunpoint to the airport without allowing him to telephone anyone
outside the country to report what was happening, and forced him on a U.S. airplane
and into exile.
"That's nonsense," Bush spokesperson Scott McClellan was quoted by the
Times. McClellan called that a "conspiracy theory."
But if the United States Secretary of State called for Aristide to leave Haiti-which
we know Colin Powell did, because we watched him say it on television-and if U.S.
Marines forcibly escorted Aristide out of Haiti within a matter of days, that would
not be a conspiracy theory. It would be an order.
And that leaves aside that we are speaking about characterizations coming from the
Bush Administration which, one might delicately say, has not been entirely forthcoming
to the public in recent months in matters of international activity.
Meanwhile, on the day after Aristide's ouster-however he went-the Times was
not finished with him. In describing Aristide's presidency, Tim Weiner of the
Times wrote "Aristide rose from his priesthood in Haiti's slums to
his presidency by preaching democracy. But once in power, he dashed the hopes of
many who had hailed him as a champion of the oppressed? In the end, the disillusioned
say, he could not practice what he had preached."
It would be nice if Mr. Weiner had followed this up with some opinion directly from
those Haitian oppressed. Instead, he quotes only U.S. sources. "As a politician,
[Aristide] reverted to the same authoritarianism he had condemned for so long,"
Mr. Weiner quotes former U.S. diplomat Robert E. White as saying. "I don't believe
Aristide had a democratic bone in his xbody."
Thus do we justify the stain on our own hands. Had anyone in the Bush Administration
made such an observation, I might have replied that this would be like rice calling
cotton white.