Regions with significant populations | |
---|---|
Cazale,Cap-Haïtien,Fond-des-Blancs,Jacmel,La Baleine,La Vallée-de-Jacmel,Port-Salut,Saint-Jean-du-Sud | |
Languages | |
Haitian Creole,French,Polish | |
Religion | |
Roman Catholicism,Haitian Vodou | |
Related ethnic groups | |
otherPolish diaspora |
Polish Haitians[a] areHaitian people ofPolish descent, dating to the early 19th century; a few may bePoles of more recent native birth that have gained Haitian citizenship.
Cazale, a small village in the hills about 30 kilometres (19 mi) away fromPort-au-Prince, is considered the main center of population of the ethnic Polish community in Haiti; however, there are other villages with prominent Polish communities such asLes Cayes andSaint-Jean-du-Sud.[1]Cazale has descendants of surviving members ofNapoleon'sPolish Legionnaires[2] which were forced into combat by Napoleon but later joined the Haitian slaves during theHaitian Revolution. Some 400 to 500 of these Poles are believed to have settled in Haiti after the war.[3] They were given special status asNoir (legally considered to be black, not white despite actual race) and full citizenship under theHaitian constitution byJean-Jacques Dessalines, the first ruler of an independent Haiti.[3]
In May 1802, Napoleon dispatched the3rd Polish Half-Brigade of around 5,200 men to join French forces inSaint-Domingue, who had recently retaken the colony fromToussaint Louverture. The Poles may have been hoping to receive French support in restoring Poland's independence from its occupiers—Prussia (later Germany),Russia, andAustria—whichdivided the country in the late 18th century.[4] Some were told that there was a revolt of prisoners in Saint-Domingue. After the Poles arrived on 4 September, two days after their unit had been renamed the 113th Line Infantry Half-Brigade, they were quickly thrown into battle against Black rebels.
Both French and Polish soldiers in the colony experienced high mortality rates, with more troops dying ofyellow fever than from being killed in action. Approximately 4,000 of the 5,200 Polish soldiers sent to Saint-Domingue died.[5] Surviving Polish soldiers admired their opponents, and some 500 or so of them would eventuallyturn on the French army and joined the rebels.[6] Out of those Polish soldiers who remained alongside the French, some intentionally failed to properly follow orders and refused to murder captured prisoners.[7] The Poles would find kinship with the Haitians and many would come to believe that the former slaves were fighting for the same ideals of freedom and independence to which they, the Poles, aspired.[8]
In return, the Poles would find support from the people of Haiti who sympathized with their shared mistreatment at the hands of the French.[9] One fervent supporter of the Poles wasBoisrond-Tonnerre. He would come to believe that both the Poles and the Haitians shared a history of fighting against tyranny. The shared value of liberty would lead Boisrond-Tonnerre to refer to the Poles as"the white negroes of Europe".[10]Władysław Franciszek Jabłonowski, who was half-black, was one of the Polish generals but died of yellow fever soon after reaching Saint-Domingue.[11][12] Polish soldiers are credited with contributing to the establishment of the world's first free black republic and the first independent Caribbean state.
After Haiti gained its independence, Dessalines recognized the Poles and spared them when he ordered themassacre of most French whites and many free blacks (mulattos) on the island. He granted the Poles classification asNoir (black), who constituted the new ruling class, and in the constitution granted them full Haitian citizenship.[13] Cazale became a center of their community. Descendants of Polish-Haitians were peasants like the great majority of most of the residents on the island. Cazale was sometimes calledhome of Zalewski, as many locals believed that was the source of the name.Zalewski is a common name, and theHaitian Creole word for home (kay) may also have been part of its history.[14]
Haiti's first head of stateJean-Jacques Dessalines would join Boisrond-Tonnerre in calling the Polish people"the White Negroes of Europe" in recognition of their plight. About 160 years later, in the mid-20th century,François Duvalier, the president of Haiti who was known for hisblack nationalist andPan-African views, used the same concept of"European white Negroes" while referring to Polish people and glorifying their patriotism.[15][16]
In 1983, PopeJohn Paul II visited Haiti. He mentioned how the Polish contributed to the slave rebellion leading to Haiti's independence. For this visit, twoCatholic priests went up to Cazale and asked a number of Polish Haitians (though historical sources cannot agree on how many were invited) to dress up in "traditional clothes" and attend the Papal speech and associated ceremonies.[3]
One of the most revered Polish religious symbols is the icon named theBlack Madonna of Częstochowa. It is thought to have been absorbed byHaitian Voodoo asErzulie, orEzili Dantor. This image of a blackVirgin Mary holding the dark-skinnedInfant Jesus influenced the vision of one of the HaitianLoa spirits.[17] It is thought that Polish soldiers may have carried her image to Haiti during the Napoleonic Era.
To this day, Polish Haitians are mixed race and often identified by such European features as blonde or lighter and straighter hair, light eyes, and facial features. Of course, there were other Europeans on the island, including some who arrived after the war. Initially most Poles settled in Cazale,La Vallée-de-Jacmel,Fond-des-Blancs,La Baleine,Port-Salut andSaint-Jean-du-Sud, where they lived as peasants, along with their Haitian wives and families.[18]
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)