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- <text id=94TT1302>
- <link 94TO0203>
- <title>
- Sep. 26, 1994: Cover:Haiti:Once and Future President
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Sep. 26, 1994 Taking Over Haiti
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- COVER, Page 31
- The Once and Future President
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> The Aristide who goes back to take charge of Haiti is not the
- same man who fled after the coup
- </p>
- <p>By Amy Wilentz
- </p>
- <p> For a man used to spending long hours of exile alone in his
- small apartment, playing the guitar, taping weekly radio speeches
- and talking on the phone to faraway friends, life changed abruptly
- last week. From the moment Bill Clinton finally decided to restore
- him to power, Jean-Bertrand Aristide, the duly elected President
- of Haiti, found himself bustling about the heady business of
- a chief of state. He has been told to be ready to fly home within
- days of the U.S. takeover.
- </p>
- <p> Aristide has been meeting daily with William Gray, Clinton's
- special envoy, with senior officials from the State Department,
- and with General John Shalikashvili, Chairman of the U.S. Joint
- Chiefs of Staff. They have come to his apartment in the Chinatown
- section of Washington to talk over the details of the invasion,
- to work out the returning President's course of action and to
- share the news he is hearing from Haiti. "He's giving the American
- team his point of view," says an Aristide aide. "He's describing
- for them the reality in Haiti, what people are fearing and thinking,
- what the mood is day to day."
- </p>
- <p> But in his few hours alone, in the middle of the night, Aristide
- must be thinking most about the challenges he will face. The
- country he goes back to rule will be changed in difficult and
- unpredictable ways. The man who goes back to take charge is
- not the same one who fled the September 1991 coup d'etat under
- the protective wing of the U.S. ambassador. "The presidency
- and exile have been a lesson for me," he told TIME recently.
- "I learned that I am a leader, but also a statesman with grave
- responsibilities. It is easier to be a leader than a negotiator.
- It is easier to lead the Haitian people in Haiti than to represent
- them before the world community."
- </p>
- <p> His transformation has been a painful and slow one. As a charismatic
- priest in the progressive wing of the Roman Catholic Church,
- Aristide was used to making a strong impression without bearing
- much responsibility for the political consequences. Fierce and
- theatrical behind the pulpit, he preached grand ideas of justice
- and equality, then left his parishioners to decide what to do.
- Often his sermons brought people out into the streets in a surge
- of anger, only to be fired upon by the army. With a priest's
- immunity, he castigated the most powerful sectors of society--the wealthy elite, the business class, the church's bishops,
- the politicians--blaming them for the exploitative economic
- and political system that stole the country's wealth and condemned
- more than 76% of the population to ignorance and poverty. His
- language was so strong, it brought danger to his door. After
- there had been at least four attempts to kill him, his followers
- began to call him ti pwofet, the little prophet, and Msieu Mirak,
- Mr. Miracle.
- </p>
- <p> Once he decided to run for President in 1990, Aristide realized
- he needed to learn cooperation and conciliation. Uncomfortable
- with group decision making and wary of advice, he found himself
- relying more and more on friends, fund raisers and political
- allies to undertake a national campaign. He and his advisers
- decided to temper his fabled ferocity, and he began lacing his
- speeches with references to brotherly love rather than to righteous
- anger.
- </p>
- <p> As President, he had to keep edging toward moderation, though
- apparently he could not do so fast enough to satisfy his opponents.
- Still, he successfully negotiated deals with the World Bank
- and the International Monetary Fund, two organizations that
- had always received his special scorn, and he spoke frequently
- and amicably with the U.S. ambassador. But when the military
- began to move against him, he reverted to type and gave a speech
- he has come to regret. He seemed to give the nod to mob justice
- when he called the "necklace"--a burning tire placed around
- a victim's neck--a "beautiful instrument" that "smells sweet."
- </p>
- <p> Those words haunted him in exile in the U.S. Skillfully manipulated
- by his detractors, the speech convinced many in Congress that
- Aristide was as guilty of using violence as his opponents. Conservatives
- portrayed him as a man unworthy of American support. The State
- Department distributed a book full of allegations of human-rights
- abuses under his administration. The CIA briefed congressional
- leaders on his mental instability. Conservative Senators like
- Bob Dole and Jesse Helms claimed that Aristide was a rabid anti-American,
- a hatemonger and a quasi-communist. Although the charges have
- been largely discredited, the attacks did serious damage to
- his reputation at a time when his stature as a democrat was
- all he had.
- </p>
- <p> Aristide remains a mystery to many. The life of a controversial
- exile only increased his natural diffidence with strangers.
- A profile in the New York Times described him as "wan, distracted...gentle-mannered to the point of caricature." Haitians
- who know Aristide are confounded by such descriptions. "There
- must be some kind of a cultural misunderstanding," says Guylene
- Viaud, who worked with Aristide's youth groups in Port-au-Prince.
- "To us he seems very open. He loves to joke and to make people
- laugh." Says a close friend: "When he feels secure, he opens
- up. When he's besieged, he shuts people out."
- </p>
- <p> American officials have said publicly that they find Aristide
- intransigent and unmanageable. Aristide says that is because
- they cannot understand the depth of his commitment to the Haitian
- people. "When I tell them I want justice for my people above
- all," he has said, "they look at me as though I'm crazy. But
- that is the one thing I keep in my mind all the time. Idealism
- is a little bit alien to them."
- </p>
- <p> Yet even his friends await Aristide's homecoming with mixed
- emotions. Aristide took a dim view of U.S. interference in the
- hemisphere: many of his sermons attacked the U.S. government--though never, as he liked to point out, "the American people."
- After hearing so much from him about the evils of U.S. policy,
- it is hard for his disciples to understand why he would agree
- to return hand in hand with the U.S. military.
- </p>
- <p> The junta's friends pose a graver problem. They fear that Aristide's
- supporters, if not Aristide himself, will seek revenge for abuses
- and killings committed during the three years since the coup.
- There is a long tradition of vengeance when power shifts. When
- Jean-Claude ("Baby Doc") Duvalier fell in 1986, crowds surged
- through Port-au-Prince seeking out members of the Tontons Macoutes
- and beating them to death. But Aristide's followers are just
- as afraid that weapons left in the hands of the military and
- its gangs of thugs will continue to be trained on them.
- </p>
- <p> It is Aristide who will have to calm Haitians across the political
- spectrum. At the same time, they will be watching and weighing
- his relationship with his foreign protectors. While some argue
- that he has hardly served his constitutional term, he has already
- agreed to step down when it officially ends in February 1996.
- As President during what will effectively be a foreign occupation,
- he will probably have to consult with Washington and, later,
- with U.N. officials before making other important decisions.
- Still, it is hard to imagine him as a mere figurehead; as long
- as his enormous popularity remains, he will have clout with
- the foreigners.
- </p>
- <p> Aristide will find many of his chief supporters gone. Some who
- might have served in his government have been killed. His primary
- financial backer, Antoine Izmery, was hauled from a church and
- murdered by paramilitary thugs in September 1993. Three weeks
- ago, Father Jean-Marie Vincent, a longtime adviser and colleague
- upon whose judgment Aristide had relied for years, was shot
- down.
- </p>
- <p> Despite the difficulties ahead, the returning President firmly
- believes he can help democracy take root in Haiti. "Not one
- minute of this has been easy," he says of the past three years,
- "and no one expects things to go any more smoothly once we are
- back. But there is no choice; we must return." For the Haitians
- who elected him, he remains, as one supporter succinctly put
- it, "democracy incarnate." Whatever its reservations, the Clinton
- Administration has also concluded that without him, democracy
- in Haiti has no hope at all.
- </p>
- <p>-- Amy Wilentz is the author of The Rainy Season: Haiti Since Duvalier
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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