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- <text id=93TT1985>
- <title>
- July 05, 1993: A Passage from Petit-Trou
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- July 05, 1993 Hitting Back At Terrorists
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- HAITI, Page 42
- A Passage from Petit-Trou
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Forced to return by U.S. policy, the residents of a Haitian
- village discover only new depths of despair
- </p>
- <p>By EDWARD BARNES/PETIT-TROU-DE-NIPPES
- </p>
- <p> Sometime last Monday afternoon, Francois Nassau rested his distended
- belly on the floor of his father's hovel, curled one thin arm
- under his head, and quietly died. So silent was the boy's passing
- that his mother did not realize he was gone until she tried
- to rouse him. Francois was nine years old.
- </p>
- <p> More than a year ago, Francois, his parents and 116 other Haitians
- had set out with a desperate sense of hope aboard a leaking
- sloop called Dieu Veut (God Wants). For two days they rolled
- and pitched across the rough stretch of sea between Haiti and
- Cuba that sailors call the Windward Passage. They had left their
- homes in Petit-Trou-de-Nippes, a town of 1,000 perched on the
- shore of Haiti's impoverished southern claw, provisioned with
- only two bags of rice and a single 50-gal. barrel of water.
- Even at sea they continued to take on new passengers--some
- arriving in dugout canoes, others by swimming. All were convinced
- that Dieu Veut was their only chance.
- </p>
- <p> Like so many others before, the boat was intercepted by the
- U.S. Coast Guard, and the refugees passed the next two months
- in detention at the Guantanamo Bay naval base in Cuba. Only
- 25 of the refugees were allowed to apply for political asylum.
- The rest were shipped back to the docks at Port-au-Prince, given
- the equivalent of $15 and told to go home, where many were greeted
- by a rogue police force that reserves special violence for people
- who are returned against their will.
- </p>
- <p> The refugees had left Petit-Trou in the first place four months
- after the coup that deposed Jean-Bertrand Aristide in 1991,
- when soldiers began arriving in trucks to round up suspected
- supporters of the exiled President. They hunted in particular
- for a group of 65 young men who were organizing a peasant co-op.
- Desperate not to lose the best of its youth, the community elected
- to pour its savings, its hopes and its most promising citizens
- into a single boat to America. Selling everything but their
- beds, the town cobbled together $1,650 and persuaded its wealthiest
- resident, who runs the local numbers game, to "buy" a 30-ft.
- sloop from police.
- </p>
- <p> After the venture failed, those who made their way back to Petit-Trou
- found a very different village from the one they left. Before
- the expedition the town was tense, fearful, expectant. Today
- it is hollow and listless, its surviving residents thin with
- despair. In the past three months no mail has been delivered
- and no trucks have arrived with supplies. There are no stores,
- no cars, no doctors. There are no books in the schools, which
- doesn't matter because most parents can no longer afford to
- send their children. The hospital has ceased to function, and
- the only government offices still working are the tax collector
- and the local police post, which boasts a .50-cal. machine gun
- and the sergeant's collection of whips. The only work to be
- found is making charcoal that is shipped by boat to the slums
- of Port-au-Prince, but with each tree that is cut and burned,
- more soil washes away, and with it the village's livelihood.
- "We used to be able to grow cereal crops here, corn and rice,"
- says Rene Coty, the local schoolteacher. "But no longer; the
- land has washed away. Instead we grow charcoal--a crop with
- no future."
- </p>
- <p> Having gambled everything in the hope that their relatives and
- friends would be able to find work in the U.S. and send money
- home, the residents of Petit-Trou are discovering that the refugees'
- return did more than demolish expectations; it has also robbed
- the town of all vitality. In a community already knocked flat
- by poverty, the returnees have come to make up a separate and
- uniquely destitute class, devoid of land, possessions and hope.
- Having sold everything but what they could carry, they own nothing.
- Farmers can no longer till because someone else has title to
- their land. Fishermen watch as canoes they once owned are paddled
- away from shore by someone else.
- </p>
- <p> The Clinton Administration argues that as a rule, Haitian boat
- people are fleeing poverty, not political persecution. When
- he debarked from Dieu Veut, Jonas Esterlin, 22, found it hard
- to feel that way. Spotted by police as soon as the Coast Guard
- cutter tied up, he was ordered to a separate area on the docks.
- There, he says, he was pistol-whipped in the head and jabbed
- with an electric cattle prod. "The police kept yelling that
- we had fled to show support for Aristide," Esterlin recalls,
- "and that we should all be killed." Terrified, he broke and
- ran. Police were unable to catch up, so they went instead to
- Esterlin's mother's home in Petit-Trou. Still unable to find
- him, they fired several rounds into the house, wounding Esterlin's
- younger sister in the foot. "Now," says Esterlin, who spends
- most of his time these days working on a charcoal boat, "I am
- without a home and no longer go near the village."
- </p>
- <p> An even more chilling reception awaited Obrin Ossou, a political
- activist who had spent weeks hiding in mangrove swamps along
- the coast before finally landing a berth on the Dieu Veut. According
- to his brother Miguel, Ossou was pulled from the line of refugees
- as he disembarked in Port-au-Prince. He has not been heard from
- since. For the past year, Miguel has paid radio stations to
- broadcast appeals for anyone who might know what happened to
- his brother. "I believe he is dead," he confesses. Local villagers
- are more certain of Ossou's fate. "He was beaten to death by
- police," they whisper.
- </p>
- <p> Without the prospect of work, those returnees who did manage
- to return home have little chance of recovering what they lost.
- Instead they are forced to live off the goodwill of their impoverished
- neighbors, further hastening the downward spiral of a village
- already on its last legs. "Those who left and were granted asylum
- were the town's best people," says Gerard Phillippe, Petit-Trou's
- justice of the peace and the only one of the returnees who has
- carved out some measure of success. "They were the ones who
- organized the peasants and who would have one day run the town.
- Without them the town is dying. It stumbles from day to day
- but has no future."
- </p>
- <p> When Nichols Pierre, a cattle tender, boarded the Dieu Veut,
- he carried only a torn plastic satchel of clothes and a new
- pair of shoes that he hoped would bring him luck in America.
- In the course of selling everything else he had ever accumulated,
- Pierre discovered that at age 38, his net worth amounted to
- slightly less than $23. Now it is zero; he sleeps on the floor
- of friends' houses and begs or steals food to survive.
- </p>
- <p> Renaldo Duval was luckier--at least in the beginning. Financing
- his escape by selling a small house and a plot of land on the
- edge of the village, he established for himself a nest egg of
- 3,000 Haitian gourdes (about $100). Sent back in March, he bought
- a place on another boat. When he was returned a second time,
- he still had enough cash for yet another try. But to no avail.
- Broke, Duval wanders aimlessly around the village, destitute
- and bitter. "It would have been better for them to kill me there
- than to force me back here where I am less than nothing."
- </p>
- <p> Last year Petit-Trou's only storyteller died, leaving no one
- to protect its memories, such as they have become. Already bereft
- of a future, the town now finds itself without its past as well.
- Yet astonishingly, plans are already in the works for still
- another boat, whose keel is secretly being laid a few hundred
- yards from where the Dieu Veut was launched. Rumor has it that
- about 1,000 similar boats are under construction by neighboring
- communities up and down the coast. If the embargo continues
- and Aristide fails to return, the call for "leaving day" will
- be passed by word of mouth, and all the boats will embark at
- once. The hope is that the Coast Guard will be overwhelmed,
- allowing perhaps a handful of boats to make it through. If Petit-Trou's
- vessel is not among the fortunate few, the village, like Francois
- Nassau, will surely have outstripped its endurance. Perhaps
- then it will simply curl up, tuck an arm beneath its head, and
- quietly let go.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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