Saturday, June 27, 2015

The Haitian Earth

"But you and I, we is Haiti, Yette."

Of Walcott's Haitian Trilogy, The Haitian Earth is my favorite. While Henri Christophe was the strongest and Drums and Colour the weakest, The Haitian Earth features characters who are not from the revolutionary leaders. This play, first performed in Saint Lucia, emphasizes the peasantry and lower-classes of the Haitian Revolution. The play also incorporates numerous instances of Creole as dialogue, abounds in references to the earth as the heart of the nation, symbolizing the role of the peasantry as the true inheritors of Haiti, and uses a peasant woman as the Chorus. 

References to Haiti's cracked earth, dry earth, and tyrannical rule from Dessalines and Christophe  (who uproot the soil, crush the peasantry) make Pompey and Yette the protagonists of the story, representing the union of black and mulatto (Dessalines is depicted as anti-white and anti-mulatto, similar to the previous plays in the trilogy). Pompey, an ex-slave, works the earth, nurtures it like the Haitian peasantry, while Yette, a mulatto women and former mistress and prostitute in Le Cap, grows to love the Haitian earth and embrace her life with Pompey. Later, she plays an even more important role as the victim of rape by Dessalines and murdered by Christophe for practicing her chienbois spell (something akin to a 'voodoo doll' in this instance), which speaks to a subtle feminist ethos considering how the earth is feminized in the text. 

Nevertheless, despite praising the peasantry (perhaps as homage to Saint Lucia's peasantry), the text does fall in the trap of condemning Haiti to an endless night of political oppression after Toussaint. Much like the other plays in the trilogy, Dessalines (compared to a boar) and Christophe are presented as nothing more than tyrants, Haiti subjected to exploitation and greed, but the plays also fail to explore how European greed and colonialism continued to shape Haiti after 1804. 

It seems as if Haiti, after subjected to a racial 'bloodbath' wherein mulattoes and whites are killed, is trapped in a cycle. Of course, as a work of literature, the play is not about historical accuracy, but the play does read as excessively unfair to Dessalines and Christophe while expressing Haiti's Revolution as tragedy rather than triumph. In some ways, it is quite similar to Carpentier's approach to the Haitian Revolution, yet written to celebrate the rural underclass in a distinctly Afro-Caribbean style, full of the language, music, beliefs and egalitarianism. 

Quotes

Toussaint: The soil itself
Is bleeding, and I can't stop it.

Toussaint: I am remembering civilisation. All those glorious white marbles in your museums, all your Gothic arches, your embroidered books. What do they mean to a slave whose back is flayed so raw that, like a book, you can read the spine?

Pompey: Fold up your hopes to show them to your children. 
Because after him, now come
The angry kings.
God help us men.

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