Slavery in Haiti
Talk about a bitter irony: Haitian slaves were among the first to liberate themselves (from ownership by French colonists), and yet, on the island that once stood as a beacon encouraging others to strive toward freedom, children are held as "domestic chattels." From the story in the Telegraph: "Although the restavek system is not illegal, those who work with its victims do not hesitate to brand it slavery. Marline Mondesir, the director of a local organisation which supports child domestics said: 'These children are slaves, because they are the first to wake in the morning and the last to go to bed. They get beaten up and there's nobody to speak up for them. One child we helped had his head cut open with a machete, another had her back slashed with a razor blade, another was burned with hot oil and another had his arm broken.'
"Many are beaten with stiff cowhide whips, known as rigoises, which are designed for use on children and are widely available in shops. More than 70 per cent of child domestics are girls and sexual abuse is so common that restaveks are said to be 'la pou sa'--'there for that.'"
It is to deny one's own human exceptionalism to keep slaves and treat anyone in this manner. May we all support those who work to turn the term "domestic chattels" into an oxymoron.
Labels: Slavery


2 Comments:
Wow! I knew things in Haiti were bad, but I didn't know anything about this. That's just amazing.
The group it named at the end that gives camps and schools to the child slaves. How does that work? I wonder how they ever get the "employers" to let the children go. Or do they just rescue them somehow from the situation entirely? It would be really interesting to know more.
What a horrific mess.
Does schooling cost in Haiti? They don't have public school systems, places where you can report abuse? What kind of punishment is there for anyone caught sexually molesting or beating on kids that they're taking in as domestics?
This is sick. I can understand being poor and working to move ahead - my own grandmother, at age 16, had one baby and was living on her own, working for a family she wasn't related to in order to provide for my aunt - but she was never mistreated, beaten, abused or otherwise molested.
It should NOT be this way, in Haiti or anywhere in the world. Small people don't have the ability to fight back against their abusers the way they ought to be allowed to - they don't have the physical strength and they haven't developed the mentality to protect themselves.
They're small people. They should be given ever respect due to them just because they're people.
This is sick.
Post a Comment
Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]
<< Home