217 years ago today, on January 1, 1804, Haiti became became the first independent Black republic in the world following a 12 year revolution. It changed the trajectory of world history.

In 1893, Frederick Douglass gave a speech outlining why Haiti's revolution was so important:
"Speaking for the Negro, I can say, we owe much to Walker for his appeal; to John Brown for the blow struck at Harper's Ferry...but we owe incomparably more to Haiti than to them all. I regard her as the original pioneer emancipator of the nineteenth century."
"It was her one brave example that first of all started the Christian world into a sense of the Negro's manhood. I was she who first awoke the Christian world to a sense of 'the danger of goading too far the energy that slumbers in a black man's arm.'"
"Until Haiti struck for freedom, the conscience of the Christian world slept profoundly over slavery. It was scarcely troubled even by a dream of this crime against justice and liberty."
"The Negro was in its estimation a sheep like creature, having no rights which white men were bound to respect, a docile animal, a kind of ass, capable of bearing burdens, and receiving strips from a white master without resentment, and without resistance."
"The mission of Haiti was to dispel this degradation and dangerous delusion, and to give to the world a new and true revelation of the black man's character. This mission she has performed and performed it well."
"Until she spoke no Christian nation had abolished negro slavery...Until she spoke the slave ship, followed by hungry sharks, greedy to devour the dead and dying slaves flung overboard to feed them, plouged in peace the South Atlantic painting the sea with the Negro's blood."
"Until she spoke, the slave trade was sanctioned by all the Christian nations of the world, and our land of liberty and light included. Men made fortunes by this infernal traffic, and were esteemed as good Christians...and representations of the Saviour of the World."
"Until Haiti spoke, the church was silent, and the pulpit was dumb. Slave traders lived and slave-traders died. Funeral sermons were preached over them, and of them it was said that they died in the triumphs of the christian faith and went to heaven among the just."
"It will ever be a matter of wonder and astonishment to thoughtful men, that a people in abject slavery...have had left in them enough manhood...to organize, & to select for themselves trusted leaders & with loyal hearts to follow them into the jaws of death to obtain liberty."
Happy Haitian Independence Day. You can read Douglass' speech in full here:

faculty.webster.edu/corbetre/haiti…
As an addendum, read this great piece by @JuliaGaffield: "From the first day of its existence, Haiti banned slavery. It was the first country to do so. The next year, Haiti published its first constitution. Article 2 stated: “Slavery is forever abolished.” washingtonpost.com/outlook/2020/0…

• • •

Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to force a refresh
 

Keep Current with Clint Smith

Clint Smith Profile picture

Stay in touch and get notified when new unrolls are available from this author!

Read all threads

This Thread may be Removed Anytime!

PDF

Twitter may remove this content at anytime! Save it as PDF for later use!

Try unrolling a thread yourself!

how to unroll video
  1. Follow @ThreadReaderApp to mention us!

  2. From a Twitter thread mention us with a keyword "unroll"
@threadreaderapp unroll

Practice here first or read more on our help page!

More from @ClintSmithIII

29 Dec 20
The best teachers I know teach their students to critically interrogate *every* text they read. They teach both Morrison & Shakespeare. Baldwin & Frost. Contemporary YA & 19th century novels. They reject the idea that they are mutually exclusive. They build & imagine a new canon.
So much of what we've been taught is "valuable" literature comes from a consensus that kept many ppl out of the room. There is enormous value in a lot of canonical work, there are also enormous problems. Who is included? Who isn't? The best educators name & address that directly.
One of the things that I've found most encouraging over the past several months are the ways so many educators have reexamined what books they are teaching. Who have thought more critically about how to use literature to help their students see themselves, and to see others.
Read 4 tweets
10 Dec 20
Brandon Bernard is scheduled to be executed tonight. The crime was 20 years ago. He was a teenager. He didn't pull the trigger.

The Trump administration is on track to execute 13 people before he leaves office. It would be more federal executions than the past 67 years combined.
Five of the nine people who served on his jury, the majority, have come out in favor of commutation saying they do not think Bernard should be killed. People who say they weren't originally presented with all of the information they should have always had

helpsavebrandon.com/jurors-who-now…
It is categorically *absurd* that someone should get the death penalty (at all) but *especially* for something they did when they were a teenager. Research shows our brains aren't fully developed until our mid-20s.

And they want to *kill* him for something he did when he was 18.
Read 10 tweets
4 Dec 20
I truly don't think enough can be said about the work teachers have done over the past several months. Some teaching online *and* in person. Making lesson plans for both. Some caring for their own children and relatives while they teach. They deserve both praise and better pay.
Some folks underestimate the extent to which online teaching demands that teachers upend and revamp years of work they have put into their pedagogy. Teachers have to both learn new technology for themselves and also have to teach their students how to use these tools effectively.
And the teachers who are still going into schools, while rates are low relative to other indoor settings, are still putting themselves and their own families at risk by doing so. And in some places if these districts have decided to mandate they come in, they don't have a choice.
Read 6 tweets
28 Oct 20
Very excited to share the cover of my new book, How the Word Is Passed. It’s my first book of nonfiction and I’m really proud it. It’s coming out June 1, 2021 and is now available for preorder. I hope you’ll consider getting a copy and spreading the word.

littlebrown.com/titles/clint-s…
I worked harder on this than anything I’ve ever done. Traveled across the country (and an ocean) to try and understand how different places reckon with, or fail to reckon with, their relationship to the history of slavery. To try and understand how these places tell that story.
This book began after watching the major Confederate monuments come down in my hometown of New Orleans in 2017 and realizing I had grown up in a city where there had been more homages to enslavers than to enslaved people. I wanted to understand how something like that happened.
Read 5 tweets
4 Sep 20
We're in a moment in which more and more teachers are incorporating the texts of people of color into their classrooms, and my hope is that teachers present these writers not merely as sociological or anthropological tour guides, but also as composers of beautiful literature.
Frederick Douglass, for example, should be read as much for the shape of his sentences as he is for what his life tells us about slavery and the historical moment he lived in. His work should sit alongside Melville and Whitman and Dickinson as central to the American Renaissance.
When teaching Zora Neale Hurston, are educators teaching students to find value in the way Hurston captures and employs language, or *only* to show students what Black life was like during a certain period of time in a certain region in our country's history?
Read 5 tweets
29 Aug 20
It's been 15 yrs since Hurricane Katrina struck New Orleans, my home. Thinking of those who were in the Superdome, convention center, or waiting on their roof for help. Thinking of everyone who went back and tried to rebuild, and everyone who left home and never got to come back.
I was 3 days into my senior yr of HS when we packed our car and evacuated. Came back to a house that had been submerged in almost 10 feet of water. We never moved back into that home, just tried to salvage what was left. It was an entire city just trying to salvage what was left.
I finished high school in Houston and then went off to college. My family moved back to New Orleans, but to a different home in a different neighborhood. It was always strange thing, to go home to a place that isn't the home you grew up in. To a city that could never be the same.
Read 8 tweets

Did Thread Reader help you today?

Support us! We are indie developers!


This site is made by just two indie developers on a laptop doing marketing, support and development! Read more about the story.

Become a Premium Member ($3/month or $30/year) and get exclusive features!

Become Premium

Too expensive? Make a small donation by buying us coffee ($5) or help with server cost ($10)

Donate via Paypal Become our Patreon

Thank you for your support!

Follow Us on Twitter!