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15272: (Arthur) The Guardian on Toussaint Louverture (fwd)



From: Charles Arthur <charlesarthur3@hotmail.com>

The limits of generosity

Toussaint L'Overture fought slavery to enjoy freedom; 200 years after his
death his legacy feels as relevant as ever

Gary Younge
Monday April 7, 2003
The Guardian

"The aristocracy of birth and the aristocracy of religion have been
destroyed," announced a member of the revolutionary French parliament in
1794. "But the aristocracy of the skin still remains. That too is now at its
last gasp and equality has been consecrated."

And so, to rousing applause, three new representatives - one black, one
mulatto, and one white - were welcomed from the Caribbean island of San
Domingo, now known as Haiti. The man who had overthrown that aristocracy of
skin in Haiti was Toussaint L'Ouverture, the leader of the most successful
slave rebellion in history. The French revolution had already established
the notion of liberté , egalité , fraternité ; Toussaint's uprising would
test just how universal the rights of man really were, and just how
enlightened its European sponsors would be.

With revolutionary France as an ally, he led his nation against British and
Spanish invasion. But what has been consecrated can also be desecrated. When
France went from revolution to reaction under Napoleon Bonaparte, it also
went from being an ally of San Domingo's black-led government to being an
enemy. Toussaint was captured and shipped to France on Bonaparte's orders.

For some, even then, Toussaint was a cause celebre . "There is not a
breathing of the common wind that will forget thee," wrote William
Wordsworth of the imprisoned leader. "Thou has great allies; thy friends are
exultation, agonies and love and man's unconquerable mind."

Two months later, on April 7 1803, Toussaint died in a French prison. It was
not just a man Bonaparte was trying to kill, or even a nation he was eager
to conquer. It was the very notion of liberation itself he was trying to
crush.

"The freedom of the negroes, if recognised in St Domingue and legalised by
France," he told one of his ministers, "would at all times be a rallying
point for freedom-seekers of the New World."

Two hundred years to the day after Toussaint's death, as US troops wonder
why the Iraqis they have bombed in southern cities are not rushing out to
embrace them, his legacy feels more relevant than ever. He fought slavery so
that he could enjoy freedom, not so that he could swap a domestic slave
master for a colonial one. He welcomed foreign solidarity, but understood
that only the people of San Domingo could be the architects of their own
liberation.

As US troops encircle Baghdad for the final swoop, you get the impression
that, in the eyes of US President George Bush and British Prime Minister
Tony Blair, freedom is not a banner to which oppressed people flock, but
rather a state that must at times be inflicted on the reluctant. To them the
Iraqi people cannot be trusted to be subjects in their own emancipation and
so must resign themselves to be objects in the "liberation" the carpet
bombers have in store.

The most generous explanation they have advanced for why we have yet to see
any dancing in the streets of Basra is that so long as war is in play,
Saddam may be alive and the Ba'ath party exists, ambivalence offers the best
promise of survival pending an uncertain outcome.

"They cannot be sure in their own minds yet that we mean what we say," Blair
said. "In their own minds, they have to be very circumspect until they're
sure the regime's gone."

This is generous only because it endows the Iraqi people at least with
memory and cognitive faculties rarely assigned to brown-skinned people under
occupation. The Shia remember rising against Saddam in 1991, with US
encouragement, only to be abandoned and massacred by the regime.

Extend that generosity back a few more years, however, and Iraqis will also
remember that those who seek to disarm Saddam today armed him yesterday -
that those who come to liberate them today enslaved them yesterday,
suppressing international criticism as Saddam gassed and tortured. Extend
their memories beyond Iraq's borders and they may also remember Jenin or the
massacres at Sabra and Shatila and wonder how the countries who bankroll
oppression in Palestine can bring freedom to Iraq.

But the limits to this generosity are imposed by the west's own poor memory.
Led by the United States of Amnesia, the past is an inconvenience. Instead,
we live in the ever-evolving present and its ever-changing enemy.

More consistent and more repugnant is the missionary position, which is best
articulated by the home secretary, David Blunkett. Like a 19th-century
crusader, Blunkett genuinely believes that while Iraqis don't know what's
best for them right now, they will understand, after they have been
conquered, colonised and thoroughly humiliated, that all of this murder and
destruction is in their best interests.

"We know that for the moment we will be seen as the villains," he said. But
he promises that views would change "once this is over and there is a free
Iraq, with a democratic state, building the affluence that can come from an
educated people with enterprise and capability".

At that stage, he said, "the population as a whole will say that we want a
free country, we want a state to live in where we can use our talent to the
full". The trouble is, if Iraq is to be truly free, there will be no place
for Americans or British troops to occupy it.

There is no doubt that Iraqis want rid of Saddam. But it does not follow
that they want to be ruled by an American viceroy. That is a choice imposed
on them by Bush and Blair in defiance of international will. But it is not,
nor has it ever been, the only option. Having been "liberated" from a
domestic tyrant, the Iraqis will then have to liberate themselves from a
foreign one. The notion that the British or Americans will withdraw as soon
as democracy is restored defies all understanding of history and is betrayed
by the very actions and methods of the soldiers on the ground.

"It's a similar situation to Northern Ireland," said platoon Sgt Barry
Little, who spent five and a half years there. "It's a terrorist threat more
than an enemy threat." The parallel is as instructive as it is
disconcerting. For once Saddam's regime is definitively crushed, ordinary
Iraqis may well pour out onto the streets just as there were accounts of
Catholics greeting British troops when they arrived in Northern Ireland in
1969. But the antagonism that underpinned the British presence in the
province soon reasserted itself. The result was a war that spanned more than
25 years and claimed hundreds of lives, underpinned by economic inequality,
social injustice and the loss of civil liberties throughout the UK.

Toussaint's life taught us that liberation cannot be imposed from above, let
alone be imported from outside, and that the rights of man are universal or
they are meaningless, and irrepressible once they are understood.

"In overthrowing me, you have cut down in San Domingo only the trunk of the
tree of liberty," he told his French captors as he was led away. "It will
spring up again by the roots for they are numerous and deep."



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