One of the first people murdered on our land
was a queen. Her name was Anacaona and she was an Arawak Indian.
She was a poet, dancer, and even a painter. She ruled over the
western part of an island so lush and green that the Arawaks called
it Ayiti land of high. When the Spaniards came from across the
sea to look for gold, Anacaona was one of their first victims.
She was raped and killed and her village pillaged in a tradition
of ongoing cruelty and atrocity. Anacaona's land is now the poorest
country in the Western hemisphere, a place of continuous political
unrest. Thus, for some, it is easy to forget that this land was
the first Black Republic, home to the first people of African
descent to uproot slavery and create an independent nation in
1804.
I was born under Haiti's dictatorial Duvalier
regime. When I was four, my parents left Haiti to seek a better
life in the United States. I must admit that their motives were
more economic that political. But as anyone who knows Haiti will
tell you, economics and politics are very intrinsically related
in Haiti. Who is in power determines to a great extent whether
or not people will eat.
I am twenty six years old now and have spent
more than half of my life in the United States. My most vivid
memories of Haiti involve incidents that represent the general
situation there. In Haiti, there are a lot of "blackouts,"
sudden power failures. At those times, you can't read or study
or watch TV, so you sit around a candle and listen to stories
from the elders in the house. My grandmother was an old country
woman who always felt dis- placed in the city of Port-au-Prince
where we lived and had nothing but her patched-up quilts and her
stories to console her. She was the one who told me about Anacaona.
I used to share a room with her. I was in the room when she died.
She was over a hundred years old. She died with her eyes wide
open and I was the one who closed her eyes. I still miss the countless
mystical stories that she told us. However, I accepted her death
very easily because in Haiti death was always around us.
As a little girl, I attended more than my share
of funerals. My uncle and legal guardian was a Baptist minister
and his family was expected to attend every funeral he presided
over. I went to all the funerals he presided over. I went to all
the funerals in the same white lace dress. Perhaps it was because
I attended so many funerals that I have such a strong feeling
that death is not the end, that the people we bury are going off
to live somewhere else. But at the same time, they will always
be hovering around to watch over us and guide us through our journeys.
When I was eight, my uncle' s brother-in-law
went on a long journey to cut cane in the Dominican Republic.
He came back, deathly ill. I remember his wife twirling feathers
inside his nostrils and rubbing black pepper on his upper lip
to make him sneeze. She strongly believed that if he sneezed,
he would live. At night, it was my job to watch the sky above
the house for signs of falling stars. In Haitian folklore, when
a star falls out of the sky, it means someone will die. A star
did fall out of the sky and he did die.
I have memories of Jean Claude "Baby Doc"
Duvalier and his wife, racing by in their Mercedes Benz and throwing
money out of the window to the very poor children in our neighborhood.
The children nearly killed each other trying to catch a coin or
a glimpse of Baby Doc. One Christmas, they announced on the radio
that the first lady, Baby Doc's wife, was giving away free toys
at the Palace. My cousins and I went and were nearly killed in
the mob of children who flooded the palace lawns.
All of this now brings many questions buzzing
to my head. Where was really my place in all of this? What was
my grandmother's place? What is the legacy of the daughters of
Anacaona? What do we all have left to remember, the daughters
of Haiti?
Watching the news reports, it is often hard
to tell whether there are real living and breathing women in conflict-stricken
places like Haiti. The evening news broadcasts only allow us a
brief glimpse of presidential coups, rejected boat people, and
sabotaged elections. The women's stories never manage to make
the front page. However they do exist.
I know women who, when the soldiers came to
their homes in Haiti, would tell their daughters to lie still
and play dead. I once met a woman whose sister was shot in her
pregnant stomach because she was wearing a t-shirt with an "anti-military
image." I know a mother who was arrested and beaten for working
with a pro-democracy group. Her body remains laced with scars
where the soldiers put out their cigarettes on her flesh. At night,
this woman still smells the ashes of the cigarette butts that
were stuffed lit inside her nostrils. In the same jail cell, she
watched as paramilitary "attaches" raped her fourteen-year-old
daughter at gun point.
Then mother and daughter took a tiny boat to
the United States, the mother had no idea that her daughter was
pregnant. Nor did she know that the child had gotten the HIV virus
from one of the paramilitary men who had raped her. The grandchild
the offspring of the rape was named Anacaona, after the queen,
because that family of women is from the same region where Anacaona
was murdered. The infant Anacaona has a face which no longer shows
any trace of indigenous blood; however, her story echoes back
to the first flow of blood on a land that has seen much more than
its share.
There is a Haitian saying which might upset
the aesthetic images of most women. Nou led, Nou la, it says.
We are ugly, but we are here. Like the modesty that is somewhat
common in Haitian culture, this saying makes a deeper claim for
poor Haitian women than maintaining beauty, be it skin deep or
otherwise. For most of us, what is worth celebrating is the fact
that we are here, that we against all the odds exist. To the women
who might greet each other with this saying when they meet along
the countryside, the very essence of life lies in survival. It
is always worth reminding our sisters that we have lived yet another
day to answer the roll call of an often painful and very difficult
life. It is in this spirit that to this day a woman remembers
to name her child Anacaona, a name which resonates both the splendor
and agony of a past that haunts so many women.
When they were enslaved, our foremothers believed
that when they died their spirits would return to Africa, most
specifically to a peaceful land we call Guinin, where gods and
goddesses live. The women who came before me were women who spoke
half of one language and half another. They spoke the French and
Spanish of their captors mixed in with their own African language.
These women seemed to be speaking in tongue when they prayed to
their old gods, the ancient African spirits. Even though they
were afraid that their old deities would no longer understand
them, they invented a new language our Creole patois with which
to describe their new surroundings, a language from which colorful
phrases blossomed to fit the desperate circumstances. When these
women greeted each other, they found themselves speaking in codes.
How are we today, Sister?
-I am ugly, but I am here.
These days, many of my sisters are greeting each other away from
the homelands where they first learned to speak in tongues. Many
have made it to other shores, after traveling endless miles on the
high seas, on rickety boats that almost took their lives. Two years
ago, a mother jumped into the sea when she discovered that her baby
daughter had died in her arms on a journey which they had hoped
would take them to a brighter future. Mother and child, they sank
to the bottom of an ocean which already holds millions of souls
from the middle passage the holocaust of the slave trade that is
our legacy. That woman's sacrifice moved then-deposed Haitian President
Jean Bertrand Aristide to the brink of tears. However, like the
rest of us, he took comfort in the past sacrifices that were made
for all of us, so that we could be here.
The past is full of examples when our foremothers and forefathers
showed such deep trust in the sea that they would jump off slave
ships and let the waves embrace them. They too believed that the
sea was the beginning and the end of all things, the road to freedom
and their entrance to Guinin. These women have been part of the
very construction of my being ever since I was a little girl. Women
like my grandmother who had taught me the story of Anacaona, the
queen.
My grandmother believed that if a life is lost, then another one
springs up replanted somewhere else, the next life even stronger
than the last. She believed that no one really dies as long as someone
remembers, someone who will acknowledge that this person had in
spite of everything been here. We are part of an endless circle,
the daughters of Anacaona. We have stumbled, but have not fallen.
We are ill-favored, but we still endure. Every once in a while,
we must scream this as far as the wind can carry our voices: We
are ugly, but we are here! And here to stay.
Edwidge Danticat, from Haiti, published Krik? Krak (1995)
and Breath, Eyes, Memory (1995). She won a Pushcart Prize for
a story in the Caribbean Writer in 1994 and also was a recipient
of the Canute A. Brodhurst Prize for fiction.