OCCUPIED HAITI
Balch, Emily Greene
The Writers Publishing Co., NY, 1927
Also: Negro University Press (reprint), NY, 1969
Bob Corbett's Notes
- This was a group of WILPF (Women's International League for Peace and
Freedom.) that went to Haiti to do a study. Very short visit.
- Chapter I: Something of the background by Emily Greene Balch
recommends Leger ch 18/19 on foreign adventurism and 232-234
- Leger is a major source for her
- Very light overview essay. Says virtually nothing of general
interest
- Chapter II: The Political History of the Occupation by Paul H.
Douglass
- P. 15. U.S. had been trying to negotiate a treaty for customs
receivership. Why? Stop France?
- Railroad dispute
- P. 17/18 on disputer $500,000 withdrawal of funds by Marines in Dec.
1914
- P. 20-21. Case against German and French threat
- P. 23-24. Grounds for legal challenge to occupation's cover
- Some detailed arguments of suspect U.S. practice.
- Chaper III. Economic and Financial Aspects of the American Occupation.
by Paul H Douglas
- P. 42 ff. Railroad story. Excellent source
- Technical, detailed and useful article on economic aspects of the
occupation
- Chapter IV Land and Living by Emily G. Balch
- P. 57 2,000,000 population in 1924.
- P. 62. Haiti products were shown at the World's Fair in St. Louis. (leger,
p. 296-7)
- Empty and superficial article
- Chapter V: Notes on the Land Situation In Haiti by Emily G. Balch
- Chapter VI: Agriculture and the Occupation by Emily G. Balch.
- Dr. Freeman oversaw the Dept. of Agriculture. He had cattle project
which gave cow and wanted them to give back each alternate calf.
- Chapter VII: Health and Sanitation by Charlottle Atwood
- Overview of the plans and description of disastrous situation.
- Chapter VIII: Problems of Education. by Zonia Baber and Emily G. Balch.
- Americans wanted technical education. Haitians wanted classical
education.
- P. 104. "The whole situation is a tragic impasse. Each group
stalemates the other. The Haitians are not willing to accept American
control of education. The Americans, who hold the purse strings, are not
willing to put any adequate sum into Haitian hands for Haitian-managed
schools."
- P. 93-94 footnote 1 for Russell's view of the situation.
Informative.
"The American point of view is given in General Russell's last
report as High Commissioner.
"Up to the time of the American Intervention, the entire school
system of Haiti, from the primary grades up, emphasized classical
studies, almost to the complete exclusion of industrial education.
As a consequence, the children and young men of Haiti have been
guided from, rather than toward, productive industry. This is the
primary cause of the low productivity of Haiti, as contrasted to
neighboring countries with soil no more fertile nor climate more
favorable than that of Haiti. This emphasis of classical studies and
practical exclusion of agricultural and industrial education has
necessarily led to the creation of a class of young men who desire
to take up professions and occupations such as law, medicine,
commerce and clerical; a great portion of the latter seeking
governmental positions. The members of this class do not know how to
use their hands, and have no idea of the dignity of labor. As a
result there is a regrettable shortage of agricultures and skilled
workers. It is among such a class that revolutions are bred.
"The population of Haiti is estimated at well over 2,000,000 of
people. With improved sanitary conditions and methods of caring for
the ill, which are now assured by the well established Department of
Public Health, the population of Haiti will increase far more
rapidly than in the past. Unless active steps are taken to increase
the productivity, the cost of living is bound to advance, and the
mass of the people to suffer therefrom."
- Chapter IX: Public Works by Emily G. Balch.
- Chapter X: Racial Relations by Addie Hunton and Emily G. Balch.
- Cites Blain Niles, p. 307-310 as saying occupation was good and bad,
supported and attacked.
- Chapter XI: Charges of Abuse in Haiti by Emily G. Balch
- P. 125 Useful paragraph on the corvee.
"What happened was in brief that in order to get military roads
built cheaply and quickly, the military authorities, in 1917, revived
the legal but obsolete Haitian practise of forced labor for road-work.
At first when the construction was near home there was little or no
trouble, but when work came to be at a distance, unwilling workers
were impressed, often very unfairly. They were sometimes manacled like
slaves, compelled to work for weeks with little or no pay and
inadequate food and shot down if they attempted to escape."
- Chapter XII: Public Order by Emily G. Balch
- P. 128 interesting quote by Audain. General point: Occupation
brought order and security. Claims that neither order or security were
much compromised.
"In the course of my long medical career I have only exceptionally
met with vices against nature, fairly common among other people... I
have always been struck with the rarity of suicide, infanticide and
crimes of passion in Haiti... The Haitian has not innate destructive
tendencies, or class hatreds with their savage results. Almost unknown
to us are nocturnal attacks, ambush and assassination, great bands of
bandits such as terrorize certain European cities and countries.
Thieves abound it is true. It is sufficiently common to enter a house
at night and rob it in good shape but if the thief is surprised he
escapes as fast as he can, preferring to put off his attempt rather
than attack the life of the owner. This absence in Haitians of the
idea of murder creates a most appreciable sense of relative security
in a country where nevertheless the policing of the country is badly
organized. One can go without risk from one end of the country to the
other, travel for days alone on deserted ways, plunge without fear
into thick forests or scale the cliffs of our uninhabited mountains."
- Quoted by Dantes Bellegarde. La Republique d'Haiti et les Etats Unis
devant la Justice Internationale, p. 24.
- March 6, 1926. 916 men and 59 officers in occupation, mainly in
P-a-P and Okap.
-
P. 131: prophetic comment: "One meets the complaint in Haiti that
the Americans are training not police, but soldiers, and one cannot
help wondering what the effect of such a force would be after American
withdrawl."
- Chapter XIII Judiciary and Civil Liberty by Grace D. Watson and Emily
G. Balch
- Neither the judiciary or education was under the occupation.
- Chapter XIV The Press and the Prison by Grace D. Watson and Emily G.
Balch.
- P. 143 useful: Press:
- Total circulation: 5000
- French tradition: opinion, not news. More tolerant of abusive
language.
- Always tends to be an opposition press.
- U.S. command used Haitian judiciary to stop what they didn't like.
- Such a move violated Roosevelt's 1918. passage cited, p. 146 Article
XVI of the constitution says: "Everyone has the right to express his
opinion on all matters, and to write, to print and to publish his
thoughts. Writings shall not be submitted to previous censorship. Abuse
of this right shall be defined and punished by the law, without thereby
abridging in any way whatever the freedom of the press."
- Chapter XV. Conclusions and Recommendations: The committees.
- U.S. in crisis of Caribbean policy.
- A threat to liberty of small nations
- A threat to liberty to its own citizens.
- Basically -- get out and help Haiti. Financially while she works
toward self-rule. Irony:
- allows US is there to serve its own interests
- asks it to put those aside, but it doesn't deal with that
phenomenon.
- Appendix A: The Law in the Case
- Summarizes the conclusions of Foreign Policy Associations April,
1922 report "The Seizure of Haiti by the United States."
- Appendix B: Chronological Summary of Haitian History, Previous to the
American Occupation Leger is main source.
- Appendix C: A Haitian View of the Occupation
- P. 177. Wonderful case on Bloody Haiti.
- cacos war killed more than 10 or 20 Haitian "revolutions"
- Fomented by foreigners for profit.
- Wonderful letter. Unsigned. I wonder if it could be Jean Price Mars?
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