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Authors: Bernard Diederich,Richard Greene

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Unlike Catholicism, Voodoo has no heaven or hell. Graham's soul would be free to wander. Perhaps he would even return to Haiti.

After Lolotte left I remained for a long time reflecting inside the cool
Voodoo sanctuary. Just as had happened at Graham's memorial Mass in Westminster Cathedral, memories of the man flooded back to me. Paradoxical as he often was, I believed Graham would have been more at home with this simple Voodoo tribute in Lolotte's
hounfor
than at high Mass at Westminster. The Voodoo priestess's prayer would have been less embarrassing for him. He was easily embarrassed.

I left the offering of Stolichnaya to repose in Lolotte's
bagui
and then wondered if I should have bought a larger bottle. The Voodoo gods liked to be abundantly pleased. When I walked out the light was fading. I said goodbye to Mambo Lolotte and noticed the irony that her
peristyle
was a neighbour to Pont Beudet, Haiti's ancient but still functioning insane asylum.

Not far down the road was what remained of Jean-Claude Duvalier's ranch. As I passed it on my return to Port-au-Prince I noticed the entrance gate to the property was broken and hanging on its hinges. The unmanned rusty guard turrets and high concrete wall were all that was left standing of the once-elaborate country retreat. Vegetation rotted in the swimming pool and cows and goats grazed in the garden. Peasants in the area said that the army had looted the ranch and then set it alight, blaming the local people. Even the mounds of lead from spent bullets on Jean-Claude's private shooting range had been collected for scrap.

Four years later, on Friday 26 May 1995, there was a rare official homage to Graham Greene in Port-au-Prince. The tribute was being offered by grateful Haitians who believed that with
The Comedians
Graham had managed to lift the shroud and expose Duvalier's tyranny to the world. The white walls of the newly established non-governmental Info-Service lecture hall, located in an old, renovated Port-au-Prince gingerbread mansion, were covered with posters (provided by the British Council) illustrating Graham's long and productive life. While carrying out his book research at the height of Papa Doc's terror in August 1963, Graham, travelling by taxi, often passed this house on Avenue Charles Sumner in Turgeau, a residential section of the capital, as he returned from the Hotel Sans Souci to the venerable Grand Hotel Oloffson. Now, thirty-two years later, Graham's niece Louise Dennys was present as a guest to represent the Greene family.

The republic's new Minister of Culture, Jean-Claude Bajeux — the former exiled priest who had accompanied Graham and me on our 1965 border trip — lectured on ‘La Metaphysique du Mal Chez Graham Greene' (‘The Metaphysics of Evil as Seen by Graham Greene'). The young university students in the audience craned forward in their seats. They shared an eagerness for knowledge of the lost decades in which the dictatorship had turned their country into an intellectual wasteland. They were all too familiar with the metaphysics of evil, their country having only just emerged from
three bloody years of post-Duvalierist military repression during which many of these same students were forced to flee for their lives in boats or seek refuge in rural Haiti, becoming exiles in their own country. Many of their fellow students had been killed.

In his ninety-minute lecture Bajeux outlined Graham's literary form, emphasizing the author's belief in human value and purpose. He defined at length Graham's treatment of good and evil and stressed that through his anti-heroes such as the whisky priest in
The Power and the Glory
and Pinkie the murderer in
Brighton Rock
he showed that good and evil coexist within all of us. ‘It is a lesson to all of us,' Bajeux said, ‘to be reminded that good and evil coexist in our own souls, and that is where we have to look, not outside ourselves.'

Bajeux explained that when Graham stated that he had found evil (hell) in Duvalier's Haiti, what the author meant was that he had found some evil characters in Haiti — whom he later portrayed in
The Comedians.
The lecture ended with a discussion among professors attending the
hommage
on the origins of violence in Haiti, without reaching any conclusion. Nevertheless Bajeux made reference to the suggestion that a Macoute lies in all of us.

Haiti was no longer Graham's nightmare republic. Haitians were enjoying — at least for the moment — hope of a better future. A force of twenty-two thousand American troops had made a soft landing in Haiti in September 1994 and restored democratically elected President Father Jean-Bertrand Aristide to power after he had spent three years in exile. On 31 March 1995 President Bill Clinton, from a reviewing stand in front of the National Palace, watched the change of command from US to UN peacekeepers. It was a historic sight: an American President seated on a reviewing stand on the steps of what was once a palace of terror. As the bagpipes of a battalion of peacekeepers from Bangladesh wailed, the regimental colours and country flags of the various foreign troops and nations involved in the peacekeeping mission fluttered like colourful Voodoo flags (beaded Voodoo flags carry images of their gods in many colours) on the palace lawn.

Of Haiti and
The Comedians
Graham had written:

I would have liked to return yet a fourth time before completing my novel, but I had written in the English press a description of Doctor Duvalier's dictatorship, and the best I could do in January 1965 was to make a trip down the Dominican and Haitian border — the scene of my last chapter [of
The Comedians]
— in the company of two exiles from Haiti. At least, without Doctor Duvalier's leave, we were able to pass along the edge of the country we loved and to exchange hopes of a happier future.

On the Monday following the lecture, Louise Dennys, her husband Ric, our friend Father Alberto Huerta, a Jesuit professor of literature from the University of San Francisco who had corresponded with Graham over his religious beliefs, and I were escorted to the Palace by Bajeux. I couldn't help thinking how pleased Graham would have been — a Greene in Papa Doc's palace! Graham's request for an interview with Dr Duvalier in 1963 had been refused. The closest he had come to the Palace was the Casernes Dr François Duvalier.

There were no military sentries at the Palace gate that Monday. In fact, Haiti no longer had an army. President Aristide had dissolved the armed forces upon his return from exile. The Palace itself had undergone several transformations since the hurried departure of Jean-Claude Duvalier nearly a decade earlier. One short-lived military-backed president had even called in a Voodoo priest to exorcise the place of Duvalier evil.

At our meeting with Aristide he talked amicably and enthusiastically to Ms Dennys about his hopes for a literacy campaign. A self-described voracious reader, Aristide said he had read
The Comedians
while studying at a seminary in La Vega, in the neighbouring Dominican Republic. (When I presented him with a first-edition copy of
The Comedians
while he was in exile in Washington, DC, he promised to read it.)

When Aristide, himself an author, learned that Ms Dennys once had her own publishing business and currently represented a prominent American publishing firm in Canada, the president invited us into his adjoining workroom to show off his books and to present her with a beautiful painted box — a modest but simple tribute to Graham. ‘There is nothing inside the decorative box,' Aristide said, ‘just the air of Haitian freedom.'

Later, as we sat relaxing on the balcony of the Grand Hotel Oloffson, I mentioned how I had left Graham's favourite midday aperitif, a bottle of Stolichnaya vodka, at Mambo Lolotte's
hounfor.
Louise loved the idea and asked if I could take them to meet Lolotte, so the following day we drove out from Port-au-Prince to the Cul de Sac plain. When we arrived the priestess was officiating with a group of faithful at prayers. We were given chairs, and we waited until the prayers ended. Mambo Lolotte greeted us and graciously agreed to open her
bagui
with its offerings. To my pleasant surprise, Graham's bottle of Stolichnaya had been elevated to repose on a red cushion on a miniature rocking-chair. Father Huerta asked the priestess whether he could say a prayer, to which she readily acceded. The four of us stood before the small altar with the Mambo, and Father Huerta led us in a silent prayer. It was the ultimate ecumenical act.

Graham would have understood.

|   AFTERWORD

On 5 August 2011 Jean-Claude Bajeux's infinite weariness from his fight for a better Haiti ended with his death. He fought and had never surrendered. His Calvary had ended. His soul was finally at peace, and his wishes for no religious service were respected. His body was cremated, and a small informal service was held at a funeral home in Port-au-Prince. He had helped many, having devoted his life to human rights in the human sense. His struggle for justice, transparency and an end to impunity never faulted — no one gave so much to fight for a new Haiti as he sought to extirpate the vile beast of despotism and its moral corruption from the country. All I could think of on the morning of his service was that he, for those who were privileged to know him, would live on for ever. I loved a dear friend.

|   INDEX

Adams, David,
299

Allen, Larry,
30

Allende, Salvador,
160
,
252

Amador, Carlos Fonseca,
200–1

Ambler, Eric,
Epitaph for a Spy
,
84

Amis, Martin,
250

Amory, Mark,
The Letters of Evelyn Waugh
,
218
,
222

Anaya Montes, Mélida,
268–9

Andropov, Yuri,
263

Argentina,
160
,
163
,
180
,
210

Arias, Arnulfo,
158
,
177
,
180
,
191

Arias, Harmodio,
228

Arias, Roberto E.,
228

Aristide, Jean-Bertrand,
148
,
298–9
,
303

Aspinwall, William Henry,
173

Augustus, Emperor,
138

Baboun, Rudy,
133

Bahamas,
33

Bailey, Pearl,
86

Bajeux, Albert,
69

Bajeux, Anne-Marie,
69

Bajeux, Jean-Claude,
47
,
58
,
61
,
62
,
63
,
65–70
,
71
,
73
,
76
,
77–81
,
83
,
96
,
110
,
112
,
121
,
139–40
,
149
,
292
,
302–5

Bajeux, Maxim,
69

Bajeux, Micheline,
69

Balaguer, Joaquín,
44
,
65
,
98
,
101
,
120
,
133
,
193

Bancroft, Anne,
21
,
26

Banville, John,
12

Baptiste, Fred,
38
,
42
,
43–4
,
45
,
46
,
69
,
77
,
80
,
99
,
100
,
111
,
120
,
133
,
140
,
141–5
,
147
,
278

Baptiste, Renel,
99
,
120
,
140
,
141–5
,
147

Barbot, Clément,
25
,
28
,
52
,
61

Barbot, Harry,
25

Barletta, Nicolás,
281

Barral, Milton,
88–9

Batista, Fulgencio,
46
,
79
,
87
,
89
,
94

Baudelaire, Charles,
103

Bazalais, Laurent, General,
53
,
98

Beauvoir, Daniel, Captain,
35

Belize,
187
,
207–8
,
209
,
227–8
,
251
,
297

Bennett, Michèle,
147

Bennett, Philip,
296

Benoît, Clément,
33
,
52

Benoît, François, Lieutenant,
52
,
159

Benoît, Rigaud,
92

Blackmun, Harry A.,
148

Blain, Pierre,
93

Blanchet, Paul,
114
,
143

Blocker, Vince,
40

Borge, Tomás,
16
,
199
,
233
,
235
,
237
,
239–40
,
241
,
243
,
263
,
282–3
,
285

Borges, Jorge Luis,
160

Bosch, Juan,
44
,
49
,
52
,
60
,
72
,
98
,
193
,
297–8

Boss Justin,
49

Boss Paint,
49

Boston Globe
,
296–7

Bourget, Caroline,
22
,
175
,
215
,
300

Boyer, Jean-Pierre,
56

Bradbury, David,
268

Bragg, Melvyn,
Rich: The Life of Richard Burton
,
120

Brando, Marlon,
21

Brazil,
165
,
190

Brezhnev, Leonid,
227

Brook, Natasha,
84–5

Brook, Peter,
84–5
,
86

Bunker, Ellsworth,
164
,
165
,
182

Burt, Al,
98
,
100–1

Burton, Richard,
16
,
119
,
127
,
129
,
132

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