Dreaming of Haiti

By: Kate Carter (View Profile)

I’d read about Haiti, I’d dreamed about Haiti, and I’d had many late-night conversations in stilted Spanish about Haiti. But when I left Santo Domingo, the capital of the Dominican Republic (DR), to travel west toward Haiti on the island of Hispaniola, I could not believe what I found.

Even if I hadn’t known that the Massacre River—named after it ran red with blood in 1937 when the Dominican dictator, Rafael Trujillo, ordered thousands of Haitians killed—demarcated the border between the two countries, I would have instantly recognized where the DR ended and Haiti began. Although the geography of the DR becomes barren in the western part of the country, it is lush in comparison with the scorched-earth visage of Haiti.

I had lived in Santo Domingo for several months by the time I ventured into Haiti. I was teaching literature at a bilingual school for mostly well-to-do Dominican students, where it was a challenge to relate Nathaniel Hawthorn’s The Scarlet Letter to the lives of Dominican teenagers imbibing the 1999 headiness of Britney Spears and Christina Aguilera.

The school at which I taught put me up in a Florida-style apartment with tile floors and large windows. The building’s doormen, Jaco and Bobi, were Haitian residents who, like many, came next door to the Dominican Republic seeking greater material wealth than the abject poverty back home. I got to know Jaco and Bobi quite well, and heard them tell stories in a funny mix of Creole and Spanish about how they were scared to go anywhere without their identification cards for fear they would be detained by the Dominican police. In the DR, looking Haitian—which means your skin is a couple shades darker than most Dominicans—is a liability.

I became fascinated by Haiti. The country lies only 800 miles south of Miami, yet garners little attention from the United States, except for the occasional boat of would-be illegal immigrants that is detected and turned away. The country is always on the list of the top ten poorest nations in the world. The landscape, even, is sick: the trees have been burned for charcoal, which sells for just enough money to buy basic food in Port-au-Prince, the capital.

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