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Beverly Bell

Beverly Bell

Posted: March 20, 2011 10:52 AM

Is Haiti Poor? Its People Respond


We put this question to numerous Haitians. Below are some responses.

Konpè Filo has been one of Haiti's most popular journalists since 1974. Arrested, tortured, and exiled by Duvalier in 1980, Konpè lived in numerous countries until he could return home when the dictatorship fell in 1986. Today he runs a widely watched daily TV show on Radio Tele Ginen Haiti.

That depends on how you define poverty and wealth. Is Haiti poor? No, I would say Haiti is a rich country. We have solidarity and community. We're raised in compounds with common courtyards and we know that what you have, you have to share with your neighbors. You stand in front of your neighbor's house and you ask, "Did you drink coffee already today?" You know that your success and your family's success depend on the community's well-being. That's the model we have.

Haiti has other riches, too, like people who work hard for the global economy, in America, the Caribbean, everywhere. We have people working here, too, doing construction, producing agriculture and other products.

But it's hard for a little country to rise up, especially in our case. We're still paying a toll because of the independence we got [from France in 1804] in one of the best revolutions the world's had. The war against us never ended when we got our independence. We helped other people liberate themselves and gain their sovereignty in South America [helping the liberator Simon Bolívar in Venezuela in 1817] and in [the Siege of Savannah in the revolutionary war in] America. We had our own revolution and we were exporting revolution, so there's still an embargo against us,[1] a barrier blocking us. It's like Cuba: if Cuba had support, if it weren't blockaded, there's no limit to what it could do.

Haiti could go far. But humanity has to become more solidarity-minded so the global economy doesn't predominate and crush some of us.

And the wealthy need to understand that they can't take their riches with them. What they have, they should use it for good, because it actually belongs to everyone. As Victor Hugo wrote, we're all children of God.

Islande Henri is a 22-year-old aspiring artist from Carrefour-Feuilles. Her dream is to become a painter known throughout the world. (You can learn more about her artwork and dream here)

Haiti would be a poor country if we didn't have so many youth with so much capacity and talent. They want to work but they can't, because they don't get any support. You see other countries that maybe would be in the same condition as Haiti except their youth got supported and nurtured, got resources and jobs. If we had a way to take advantage of all the talent of young people here, this country would take wings and fly.

Selina Augustin (not her real name) grew up in the countryside, but moved with her family to a Port-au-Prince shantytown in the hopes of greater job opportunities. Since her husband was killed by an armed gang in 2004, she has raised the five surviving children of her original six alone. She's been unemployed since the earthquake. When times were better and she could afford the merchandise, she sold small household goods on a street corner.

Rich? I don't know, some people are rich. You see my kids? I don't have one single thing to feed them today. You can't survive in this country unless you have big connections. No one helps us. Where are we little people supposed to get the resources we need to feed our children or get them well when they're sick? Two of my kids have a high fever but the doctor told me I had to buy pills for them and I can't afford that. I ask God every morning, "Show me the way. Help me find some aid so these children don't die on my hands." I don't know what to do. I don't know how this country can get out of its deep hole. But first thing, they have to start doing something for us mothers who are trying to keep our children alive.

Iderle Brénus is an organizer and popular educator who has worked with small farmer and women's groups throughout Haiti. She served as the coordinator of Vía Campesina for the Caribbean. Today she coordinates the Campaign for Food Sovereignty in Haiti and does trainings with the National Committee of Peasant Women and other groups.

Haiti is not poor because it has a population that's very young and very active and which could be a fundamental resource if they could get good education. And Haiti isn't poor either because the majority of people in the country are women, many of whom participate actively in the process of agricultural production, Haiti being essentially an agricultural country. Haiti isn't poor also because it has natural resources which are rare and which haven't yet been exploited. We have all this wealth in Haiti.

What Haiti needs now is unified people with the same vision and ideology, who recognize the importance of these resources and who can channel them to the well-being of the country. This necessitates educating youth, supporting women to give them more worth in society, and exploiting our natural resources while respecting biodiversity and environmental development and the planet, which is our mother.

Emanuela Paul is a student of sociology and business management. She is a member of the Dessalinian University Association (ASID), organizing for university reform and against privatization of state services and enterprises.

Haiti isn't poor as a country, but there are classes of people who've been made poor while others are living in extraordinary opulence. There's a small group who exploit the peasant sector and other marginalized classes, who benefit from all the riches and who're enjoying them. The political class backing them benefit, too.

People say that Haiti doesn't have enough resources and competence to satisfy its social needs. But how's our money spent? It's critical to look at our national budget, which really shows why Haiti is poor. So much has gone to pay the foreign debt.[2] Whose debt is that, and what was it spent on?

The budget doesn't benefit the Haitian people. There's no serious state financing of health programs or hospital administration. As for education, you can forget it. The poor are excluded from the budget.

The government lowered import taxes - some of them almost to zero - which makes it harder for us to produce. People in the Artibonite Valley, for example, can't compete [with foreign goods]. If these farmers were supported, if agriculture were subsidized, they could produce much more.

But we have doors to exit by. We could change all this if we cut with the social and economic policies that have been systematically imposed since the 1980s. We have resources that are available and we can break with the leaders who have turned this country into a restavèk, child slave, with their neoliberal policies and their privatization of state resources. Plus we have our history, when slaves stood up in a movement for liberty, well-being, and riches for the peasants and the masses in general. We can establish policies which can give us the liberty we started fighting for in 1791.

[1] Nervous at the message the Haitian revolution would send to slaves of other countries, the U.S. refused to recognize Haiti's autonomy, and led an international embargo, for Haiti's first 58 years as an independent nation.

[2] Debt payments were 30.3% in FY2006, for example, and were projected to represent 27.3% of Haiti's GDP in 2007. Mark Weisbrot and Luis Sandoval, "Debt Cancellation for Haiti: No Reason for Further Delays," Center for Economic and Policy Research, December 2007.

Beverly Bell has worked with Haitian social movements for over 30 years. She is also author of the book Walking on Fire: Haitian Women's Stories of Survival and Resistance. She coordinates Other Worlds, www.otherworldsarepossible.org, which promotes social and economic alternatives. She is also associate fellow of the Institute for Policy Studies.

 

Follow Beverly Bell on Twitter: www.twitter.com/Other_Worlds

We put this question to numerous Haitians. Below are some responses. Konpè Filo has been one of Haiti's most popular journalists since 1974. Arrested, tortured, and exiled by Duvalier in 1980, Konp...
We put this question to numerous Haitians. Below are some responses. Konpè Filo has been one of Haiti's most popular journalists since 1974. Arrested, tortured, and exiled by Duvalier in 1980, Konp...
 
 
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08:58 AM on 03/21/2011
Teens Take on :Haiti

We are coming soon Look for us on Facebook. The next generation of activists.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
cameron d
Don't blame me, I voted Smitherman.
09:24 PM on 03/20/2011
Is the Pope Catholic?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Edward Standley
opinionated jerk
08:33 PM on 03/20/2011
I was in the service back in the early '70's and was sent to the Republic of Panama for two years. I was only 17, and it really helped shape my view of the world and my place in it. I will always be grateful to the beautiful, kind people of Panama for teaching me what's really important in life. Most of them would be considered "poor" by U.S. standards, but I've never met richer people in my life.
07:49 PM on 03/20/2011
Haiti is poor because its people has been victims of exploitation, 1st by the French, then the Americans, and sadly, the people have been exploited by some of there own.
07:48 PM on 03/20/2011
Not the government........The bigger the government...the less money for the people(this is the workers only)...liberals always have stolen money
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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nofriendofrepublicans
Mother friendly.
08:08 PM on 03/20/2011
Thanks for the laugh, foxbot.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
reading2009
Down the rabbit hole and through the looking glass
10:00 PM on 03/20/2011
government isn't stealing money. Rich people taking all the money and forgetting that they too benefit from society and thus should help others who could not benefit is stealing.

Rise up and realize that poverty isn't a moral failing, that luck plays a huge role in success and failure, and that we ARE all in this together.
05:19 PM on 03/21/2011
No luck...only work.....nature gives man NO GARANTEES....why would you think man is capable of trumping nature
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Darlie Brewster
HAOL is censored, the truth is not here.
07:33 PM on 03/20/2011
They burned Monsanto gmo seed sent to enslave them . they are a wise pwople.Everyone should burn Monsanto seed.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Edward Standley
opinionated jerk
08:28 PM on 03/20/2011
I heard that the seed produces crops that are sterile, and won't provide seed for following crops. The seed would need to be purchased over and over again. Is that true?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Darlie Brewster
HAOL is censored, the truth is not here.
10:05 PM on 03/20/2011
The "terminator seed" actually is not in production, it doesn't need to be. Hybid seed reproduces poorly and Monsanto has a 75 member team ( ex military thugs) scouring the country that are sent to intimidate farmers and prosecute them. What Monsanto does is find an independent farmer, spread their genetically modified seed across his feild then take him to court and sue him to the ground. The poor farmer can't afford a legal battle and will spend hundreds of thousands just to defend himself. Often the farmer will settle to save himself from bankruptcy.
07:32 PM on 03/20/2011
I very much like the spirit of this aarticle because it defines rich and poor on broader terms, and not just in GDP or average household income in inflated fiat currency. Lately too, as the "wealth" of industrialized countries looks more and more tenuous, there is something empowering about societies that live on more sustainable scales.
07:27 PM on 03/20/2011
Haiti grows delicious organic mangoes. I'm hoping they'll go back into the market again.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Lindstr7
07:12 PM on 03/20/2011
Haiti is still in shambles and I hope people don't forget about them in light of the Japan quake. I just made a donation to J/P HRO. I saw what Sean Penn was doing while watching "No Reservations with Anthony Bordain" and I was very impressed.

http://www.jphro.org/
07:11 PM on 03/20/2011
good to know Haiti is not poor ; I will stop giving money to my church & other organizations to give to Haiti ; I have been duped all along ! I wish I could get back all the money & objects that I sent for the earthquake ''victims''
sampson2
Gardener
07:44 PM on 03/20/2011
I think the point is that Haiti's wealth is intangible, like committed, hard working and compassionate people and not in real or financial assets.
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PoliticalRockChick
Hatred for bible & hypocrites
06:18 PM on 03/20/2011
This was a great question to my people. Many outsiders have their own definition of what is poor and what is rich. In one country having a horse is considered poor, in the US if you have one, you either are a farmer with land or well off.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Balzac
06:00 PM on 03/20/2011
Well, Aristide is back. That's good. But I might vote for the entertainer myself. Wyclef Jean wants to be president. Haiti needs some youth. The end of Aristide's exile and his candidacy gives legitimacy. May the best man win.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Balzac
06:42 PM on 03/20/2011
I feel like switching my support back to Aristide again. I don't really know who represents them best, but I have idea of who will get Haiti organized the fastest. May the best man win. Emphasis on fidelity to traditional values. If it's Wyclef, then I support Wyclef.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Charles Hamel
"we gather knowledge faster than we gather wisdom"
06:57 PM on 03/20/2011
Aristide's story with foreign interference and the power of haitian elites is quite tragic.

There were a great deal of positive economic reforms taking place that would be good for the people, but it interfered with powerful interests.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
deans2cents
I speak my mind...
05:48 PM on 03/20/2011
Dick gregory's mama always said, we are not poor we are just broke.
Poormeans poor inspirit, love, life not just finances. Many years ago Doris Duke was known as the richest woman in the world, to me she was the poorest, as when she died who was at her side, a butler and a few other paid employees....all the money in the worlddoes not buy family, true friends or real love. The people of Haiti are very rich in friendships, life, love, family and caring, they just dont have the american definition of wealth and conspicuous consumption.
05:46 PM on 03/20/2011
There's an outstanding video showing Hans Rosling's lucid vision about this particular subject, where he uses his cool and unconventional data tools to demonstrate how countries are pulling themselves out of poverty. I strongly recommend you to watch his amazing 2007 TED conference "New insights on poverty and life around the world":

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YpKbO6O3O3M
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Trickery
Gave up private vanity for public insanity
05:28 PM on 03/20/2011
So apparently they are like any other country that has the "big fish eat little fish" method going on. I also believe that unification amongst the people in Haiti is what is needed to really let the country thrive.