Friday, January 15, 2010

Another Round About Haiti

Andrew Apter, professor of history and anthopology at UCLA, was interviewed by Thomas Rogers on Salon.com about Haiti's voodoo traditions, the ignorance behind the evangelical community's distortions and the real cause of suffering in the third-world country.

Is there any truth to what Pat Robertson is saying?
Of course not! Haitians are Christians. Pat Robertson's language is the reductio ad absurdum of the Christian right. It's so absurd it's almost funny. This notion of a pact with the devil is basically an echo of an old colonial response to the successes of the 1790s Haitian revolution.

What is this pact he's talking about?
Part of the revolution mythology is that one of the revolution leaders sacrificed a pig in Bois Caimin in a voodoo ceremony and made a contract with Petwo [Haitian voodoo spirits]. It may or may not be true, but to call that a pact with the devil is a gross misrepresentation of what voodoo is. It's about anything but the devil. He's imposing an evangelical religious order on a much more sophisticated practice, and he's turning it into a cheap invocation of Satanism.

This is hate speech. It's saying these people are damned. It's a frequent theme among some Christians that Haiti is being punished for this supposed pact with extreme poverty and humanitarian crises. Tragically, many evangelical Christians in Haiti may actually, in their own extreme confusion and suffering and desperation, believe that God is punishing them.

The reason Haiti is poor is because Europe imposed a blockade on trade after the slave revolt in 1804, and you have an extremely polarized class structure in which a few families stepped into the positions of the former colonial plantation owners. There has been a horrible cycle of plundering and autocracy within Haitian leadership.


Why do you think this kind of obsession with Haitian voodoo persists? There's a fascination with all things voodoo, not only in New Orleans but also on TV, on shows like "Bones," and it stems from the occupation of Haiti by the U.S. Marines in the first part of the 20th century. There were campaigns under certain Haitian governments in conjunction with the church to rout voodoo, but it didn't come close to working, because voodoo is part of everyday life in Haiti.

Do you think this has been holding Haiti back?
I think other factors are more important in holding Haiti back: the class structure, the dispossession of a largely illiterate populace, the links that the underclass increasingly has with drug gangs, which has generated a lot of violence, and the tradition of sweatshop labor. I think the backlash against voodoo is a kind of reflection of the problems, rather than a cause of it.

2 comments:

michael said...

The issue is not really whether one believes in a devil or not. Yes, that story is part of the national mythology of Haiti, but how much of what is believed to have happened did happen? And, even if it did happen as commonly believed, what proportion of Haiti's citizens took part in the ceremony? If only 5 or 50 or even 500 were present and actively participating in such a ceremony, how does that craft a history for an entire population? Further, many of those at the cerremopny were soon killed, so what does that do to obligate the entire nation to any such pact. Finally, has there been a yearly renewal of any demonic pact by the entire population? If not, how does something that took place in 1791, shackle the people in 2010?

Anonymous said...

Okay, this I don't understand - even if, and this is a huge if, you believe that Haiti made a pact with the Devil, why would a loving God kill so many Haitians as revenge or retribution? Old Testament,much? Not how Christ would react - he who forgave Judas. Under the revendge of God logic, why doesn't God smite a whole lot more people. This is a kind of immature understanding of the nature of humans and the divine that really does hurt people. Should we not help the Haitians because God wants them to suffer? Not the teaching of Christ who said to feed the hungry, help the sick, give comfort to those who mourn. Good Heavens.