Read Avengers of the New World: The Story of the Haitian Revolution Online
Authors: Laurent Dubois
was put on trial on the basis of the slaves’ denunciations. He defended
himself by arguing that if slaves saw planters punished on the basis of their testimony, there would be a breakdown of authority and, ultimately, a slave
revolution. Others agreed, and one man even suggested that each of the
slaves who had denounced Le Jeune should receive fifty lashes. The inves-
tigating officials who took over the case, on the other hand, argued that
punishing brutal planters was the only way to prevent an outbreak of revo-
lution: if the violence of planters was not kept in check, and if slaves found no recourse from the administration, they would have no option but violent vengeance. Ultimately, however, the officials bowed to pressure from
the planters, and Le Jeune was never punished.49
For fearful masters, Makandal came to symbolize the danger of a mass
uprising that would destroy the whites in the colony. One famous account
of his life described a speech he made to slaves, during which he placed
three scarves in a vase full of water—one yellow, one white, and one black.
The first symbolized the original inhabitants of the island, the second the
“present inhabitants.” Pulling out the third, he declared: “Here, finally, are those who will remain masters of the island: it is the black scarf.” A 1779
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memoir presented Makandal as a “Mohammed at the head of a thousand
exiled refugees” who, imagining “the conquest of the Universe,” had
planned to massacre all the whites in the colony. All that was lacking to
bring about a “general massacre” and “a revolution similar to that of Suri-
name or Jamaica” was a leader, “one of those men, rare in truth, but who
can emerge at any moment,” like Makandal, “whose name itself” made the
inhabitants of the Northern Province “tremble.” In 1801, in a “grand new
spectacle” presented in London, the romantic hero was a rebellious slave
named Makandal who declared himself “one unawed by fear.”50
Writers in France also prophesied the imminent emergence of a black
revolutionary leader. In his 1771 fable of time travel, Louis Sebastien
Mercier imagined waking up after a 672-year nap and finding himself in a
changed and perfected world. In one plaza he saw on a pedestal “a negro
his head bare, his arm outstretched, with pride in his eyes and a noble and
imposing demeanor.” Under the statue were the words “To the Avenger of
the New World!” Mercier learned that “this surprising and immortal man”
had delivered the world “from the most atrocious, longest, and most insult-
ing tyranny of all.” He had “broken the chains of his compatriots” and
transformed those “oppressed by the most odious slavery” into heroes. In
an “instant” they had “spilled the blood of their tyrants.” “French, Spanish, English, Dutch, Portuguese all fell prey to iron, poison, and flame. The soil of America avidly drank the blood that it had been awaiting for so long, and
the bones of their ancestors, murdered by cowards, seemed to stand up
and shake with joy.” The “Avenger” became a god in the New World and
was celebrated in the Old. “He came like a storm spreading across a city of
criminals that is about to be destroyed by lightning.” He was an “extermi-
nating angel,” granted power by justice and by God.51
The Abbé Raynal’s famous history of European colonialism, which went
through many printings in the 1770s and 1780s, contained a passage that
drew on Mercier’s vision. After critiquing the institution of slavery, the
work warned readers that the slaves did not need their masters’ “generosity
or advice” to break the “sacrilegious yoke of their oppression.” Already, it
noted, “two colonies of fugitive negroes have been established” in Jamaica
and Suriname and had won recognition of their freedom. These signs were
the lightning that announced the storm. “All that the negroes lack is a
leader courageous enough to carry them to vengeance and carnage,” the
work warned. “Where is he, this great man, that nature owes to its vexed,
oppressed, tormented children? Where is he? He will appear, do not doubt
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it. He will show himself and will raise the sacred banner of liberty. This
venerable leader will gather around him his comrades in misfortune. More
impetuous than torrents, they will leave everywhere ineffaceable traces of
their just anger.” The “American fields,” the text continued, riffing off
Mercier, would get drunk on the blood that they had been awaiting “for so
long,” while the bones buried over the course of three centuries would
“shake with joy.” Monuments to this “hero who reestablished the rights of
the human species” would be erected in the New World and the Old. But
the Europeans might reap what they had sown: “the
Code Noir
will disappear, and the
Code Blanc
will be terrible, if the victors consult only the law of revenge!”52
The passages in Raynal and Mercier were intended as both indictment
and warning. Mercier appended a note to his powerful portrait of the
“Avenger,” spoken from the eighteenth-century present: “This hero will
probably spare the generous Quakers who have just granted liberty to their
negroes in a memorable and touching era that made me cry tears of joy,
and will make me detest those Christians who do not imitate them.” There,
was, then, a way to avoid carnage and revenge. Slavery must be abolished
by the Europeans, before the slaves abolished it—and their masters—
themselves.53
Such warnings developed out of a complex network of colonial adminis-
trators and Enlightenment intellectuals who came during the last decades
of the eighteenth century to believe that slavery had to be reformed and ul-
timately eliminated. Such thinkers saw clearly that the daily resistance of
slaves through poison, suicide, abortion, as well as
marronage
and revolt, and the violent response of the planters formed a cycle that had to be
stopped before it spun out of control. They were not particularly antiracist, and certainly not anticolonial—Mercier’s ideal world was one in which the
wastefulness of slavery in the Americas had been replaced by an empire in
which Africans grew sugarcane next to their own huts—but they believed
that slavery should be gradually replaced by other forms of labor. Enlight-
enment critiques of slavery attacked the institution as a violation of the natural rights that all human beings shared, and the warnings of Mercier and
Raynal suggested that, like all other oppressed peoples, the slaves had the
right to resist their oppressors violently.54
By the time the French Revolution began, both defenders and enemies
of slavery were evoking the specter of a large-scale uprising. As abolitionist activity accelerated in Paris, planters complained that antislavery writings
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would encourage slaves to revolt by making them think they had allies. Ab-
olitionists retorted that in their cruelty and ignorance the planters were
leaving their slaves no choice but to revolt. The masters of the Caribbean,
wrote the comte de Mirabeau, were “sleeping at the foot of Vesuvius.” In
1789 the Abbé Grégoire echoed Raynal, declaring that “the cry of liberty”
was resounding in both the Old and New Worlds; all that was needed was
“an Othello, a Padrejean”—the latter a seventeenth-century slave rebel—
to awaken the enslaved to an understanding of their “inalienable rights”
and push them to violent revolt. But he backed up his claims about the
danger of slave revolt by quoting the words of a planter, an opponent of the
rights of free-coloreds, who wrote that 400,000 slaves in Saint-Domingue
were awaiting their opportunity to rise up. In the political theater, all sides constantly referred to the potential for revolution among the slaves. Yet despite all the talk of revolution, it was a shock when the slaves actually
launched one.55
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c h a p t e r t h r e e
Inheritance
Whatearthlypowercangiveitselftherightto
create unjust laws, when the Eternal itself has abstained from
doing so?” So asked Julien Raimond in a 1791 pamphlet trac-
ing the “origin and progress” of prejudice against free people of color in
Saint-Domingue. In unveiling this history, Raimond hoped to end it. Free
people of color, many of them wealthy planters, others serving in colonial
military or police units, had proven their value and loyalty to the French
regime, he argued. And yet they were being prevented by whites from par-
ticipating in the political assemblies of the colony. This act of racial prejudice went against everything the French Revolution stood for. Even Louis
XIV’s 1685 Code Noir had recognized that once they were no longer slaves,
free people of color had the “the right to citizenship.” “Will the National
Assembly be less just than a despot?”1
Raimond was educated, wealthy, and passionate in his struggle against
racial discrimination. Starting in the 1780s, he mounted a political struggle on behalf of the free-coloreds of Saint-Domingue by petitioning the head
of the Colonial Ministry in Paris. He remained a major political figure
through the turbulent years of the Revolution. He was also, in his own way,
a despot. Like many of those whose rights he was defending, he owned
slaves. His struggle for rights and the stubborn rejection of his proposals by the white planters of Saint-Domingue show both the absurdity and the
power of racial prejudice in the colony. Raimond and many other planters
had some African ancestry. Economically, culturally, and socially, they and
the white planters were in many ways natural allies. Yet white colonists,
convinced that slavery could be maintained only through discrimination
against free people of color, rejected their requests for political equality.
Julien Raimond’s father, Pierre, was born in the Languedoc region of
France and emigrated to Saint-Domingue in the early eighteenth century.
He settled in the south and married Marie Bagasse, the daughter of a local
planter. Bagasse was of mixed European and African descent, but when
the couple was married in 1726 she was not distinguished from Pierre in
terms of race. Throughout the early eighteenth century, many individuals
of African descent in the Southern Province were counted as white in cen-
suses, and when they drew up legal documents they were rarely described
with racial terms. This state of affairs changed in the 1760s. Bagasse began
to be identified consistently as a
mulâtresse
(mulatto) in notarial documents, while the young Julien Raimond was described as a “quadroon”—a
person of one-quarter African ancestry. In the parish of Aquin, where the
Raimond family lived, there was a remarkable surge in the free-colored
population not because of a baby boom or migration, but because adminis-
trators began applying racial terms where they had not done so before. In-
dividuals and families were in effect transformed from white to mulatto or
quadroon.2
The emergence of racial terminology in the legal sphere was part of
the broader progress of racial discrimination during the decades before
the Haitian Revolution. The 1685 Code Noir declared that emancipation
was the legal equivalent to “birth in our islands,” and therefore granted
the
affranchi
—the freed individual—the same rights as those born in the kingdom, even if they had been born in “foreign lands.” Still, certain stipulations differentiated the
affranchis
from other free individuals. They were enjoined to show respect to their former masters, and they could be reenslaved as punishment for certain crimes. These provisions, however, ap-
plied only to the individual who had been freed, not to his or her children;
they were linked to the person’s legal trajectory from slavery to freedom,
and not to their ancestry. There was, in principle, no discrimination solely
on the basis of African descent or skin color. Although they probably expe-
rienced racial discrimination in their day-to-day lives, free people of Afri-
can descent could buy land and slaves, live in any neighborhood in the
towns, educate themselves in any school, and practice any profession they
wished.3
The Code Noir’s stipulations about emancipation, however, like those