Women in the Haitian Revolution

During the Haitian Revolution (1791–1804), Haitian women of all social positions participated in the revolt that successfully ousted French colonial power from the island. The 1791 revolt of enslaved individuals in Saint-Domingue was the most extensive and prosperous slave rebellion in recent times.[1] In spite of their various important roles in the Haitian Revolution, women revolutionaries have rarely been included within historical and literary narratives of the slave revolts.[2] However, in recent years extensive academic research has been dedicated to their part in the revolution.

Women in pre-revolutionary Saint-Domingue

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In the French colony of Saint-Domingue, enslaved Black women suffered particular forms of gendered violence in addition to the standard abuse and mistreatment of slaves. Rape and sexual abuse of enslaved women commonly occurred in the colony; part of the logic of slavery was that since slaves were property, they could be used as sex objects by slave owners.[3] Due to high infant mortality and a low fertility rate, slave women were kept from engaging in monogamous family relationships and instead treated as objects of reproduction.[4] Many of these women resorted to suicide.[5]

Women's roles in the revolution

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The Haitian Revolution was instigated by slaves in an attempt to not only liberate themselves but to remove the French from the island entirely. Rebels used a variety of tactics to meet this goal; women participated in all levels of the revolt.

Labor organising

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As laborers, enslaved women began to organize and refuse to perform life-threatening work. In one such case, women who worked the night shift in a sugarcane mill protested working with machinery in the dark that could seriously injure or kill them.[6]

Vodou

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The practice of Vodou was a tool of the Haitian Revolution. Enslaved women who escaped their slave owners to live as maroons were able to return to their roles as practitioners of Vodou because they would not be punished for rejecting French Catholicism. Communities of escaped slaves turned to Vodou mambos, or priestesses, which radicalized them and facilitated the organization of a liberation movement.[7] Vodou mambos were also typically knowledgeable of herbal remedies as well as poisons, which were weaponized and used against French slave owners and their families during the revolution.[8] Ideologically, the image of a Haitian Vodou priestess inspired insurgents to fight the colonial government in order to not only liberate themselves but to serve a higher, spiritual purpose.[9]

The most famous mambo in Haitian revolutionary history is Cécile Fatiman. Born of an enslaved woman and a slave owner, she is remembered for having performed a Vodou ceremony for hundreds of rebel slaves the night before the revolution began, inspiring them through ritual song and dance to take up the fight for freedom.[10] She reportedly lived to be 112 years old, never ceasing to practice Vodou.[11] Another woman, Dédée Bazile, has a similar legacy as a mystic of the revolution. Although Dédée was not known as a mambo, she became known as Défilée-la-folle, or Défilée the Madwoman. Born to slaves, Dédée had several children conceived by rape committed by her master. Her “madness” was allegedly caused by the murder of her parents by French soldiers as well as the many instances of sexual violence she endured. After the murder of revolutionary leader Jean-Jacques Dessalines, she is said to have been responsible for gathering his decomposing remains, reassembling the pieces of his mutilated body, and ensuring that he be buried with dignity. Today, Dédée is hailed as an icon of the Haitian Revolution, a symbol of the “madness” of the Haitian people's commitment to their land.[12]

Combat

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1954 Stamp commemorating the 150th anniversary of Haitian independence featuring Marie-Jeanne Lamartinière and her husband.

Women also took up arms and served in the anti-colonial Haitian military, participating at all levels of military involvement. Some scholars attribute the widespread participation of women in combat to West African traditions of allowing women to actively serve in battle.[13][14] Some progressed as high up the ranks of the military as possible; Marie-Jeanne Lamartinière, for example, served in Toussaint L'Ouverture's army.[15] She led the insurgent forces in the famous Battle of Crête-à-Pierrot.[16] From 1791-2, Romaine-la-Prophétesse and wife Marie Roze Adam led an uprising of thousands of slaves and came to govern two main cities in southern Haiti, Léogâne and Jacmel.[17][18][19] Romaine was assigned and often regarded as male, but dressed and behaved like a woman,[20] prominently identified as a prophetess[21][22] and spoke of being possessed of a female spirit[21][23] and may have been transgender,[24][25] and is counted by Mary Grace Albanese and Hourya Bentouhami [fr] among the women who led the Haitian Revolution.[25][26]

Women also assisted in carrying arms, cannons, and ammunition. They served as military nurses, relying on herbal and folk medicines to treat rebels in remote areas with little to no resources. In addition, women worked as spies, posing as sex workers and merchants in order to deliver messages and gain information about the French.[27] Some women are reported to have used sex to obtain money, weapons, resources, military intelligence, manumission, or mercy for themselves or loved ones. These incidents were rarely the choices of the women involved; rather, women's bodies were used by Haitian military forces to further the revolution, which reinforced the pre-revolutionary patriarchal exploitation of women.[28]

French women

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An 1806 engraving of Jean-Jacques Dessalines from a Spanish translation of a French biography. It depicts the general, sword raised in one arm, while the other holds the severed head of a french woman.

In 1804 the revolutionary leader Jean-Jacques Dessalines led a campaign of massacres against the remaining European population, many of whom were unwilling to live in peace with the formally enslaved Black population. An overwhelming number of Europeans killed were French; excluded from the massacre were surviving Polish Legionnaires, who had defected from the French legion to become allied with the enslaved Haitians, as well as the Germans, who did not take part of the slave trade. They were instead granted full citizenship under the new Haitian government.[29]

In parallel to the killings, plundering and rape also occurred.[30] Women and children were generally killed last. French women were "often raped or pushed into forced marriages under threat of death."[30] Dessalines did not specifically mention that the French women should be killed, and the soldiers were reportedly somewhat hesitant to do so. In the end, however, the women were also put to death, though normally at a later stage of the massacre than the adult males.[31] Dessalines's advisors had argued for the killing of French women, arguing that the French would not truly be eradicated if French women were spared to give birth to new Frenchmen.[32]

Punishments for Haitian women

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Because of the high involvement of Black Haitian women in the Haitian Revolution, colonial French military forces let go of their plans to institute gender-specific punishments. When captured, women revolutionaries were executed alongside men, only occasionally receiving special treatment on the basis of their gender.[33] Sanité Bélair, a Black freedwoman who served as a lieutenant in the army of Toussaint L'Ouverture, was sentenced to death following her capture. At the moment of her execution, she refused to be blindfolded by her executioners and is documented to have stared them in the eyes as she died.[34]

Sexual Assault

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The sexual brutality Black women faced in Haiti consisted of continual rape by plantation owners oftentimes leading to infertility. Female slaves were seen as equal opportunity victims for the French during the revolution and they suffered continual attacks and rapes. The absolute harshness faced by these slave women pushed them to see the revolution as an important opportunity to participate in the fight directly. [35] In the Pacific women’s bodies, specifically native and slave women, were commodified resulting in sexual violence that intertwined with colonial capitalistic pursuits. The sexual desire Creoles and Parisian people had for black women and native women in Saint-Domingue left these men vulnerable to being manipulated by the women they were sexually exploiting. This made it possible for these women to serve as concubines and spies for the revolution. Blinded by an “exotic” desire for the slave women in Haiti these men were open to manipulation by these revolutionary women. [36].This was because the Creoles desired for a time when it was easier to pursue their sexual desires so they were facile for these women to manipulate for intel or espionage. Sexual violence is a large part of the Haitian Revolution that has been un-discussed and continues as a cycle of sexual violence in contemporary Haiti. [37]

Intersectionality

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Black women in Haiti were in the most unique position because of the intersection of both their race and their gender. As they were oppressed for being black and being female, they had different abilities and motives for fighting in the Haitian Revolution. Because of this intersection Black women in Haiti bore the full brunt of Haitian violence and oppression during the revolution. Black women’s bodies before, during, and after the revolution were being controlled, and so the burden of motherhood was put upon these slave women, whether it be motherhood forced upon them or motherhood forcibly taken from them. This contributed to an act of resistance unique to black slave women, the resistance of performing abortions to reclaim their fertility and the autonomy of their bodies.[38]

References

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  • Girard, Philippe R. (2011). The Slaves Who Defeated Napoleon: Toussaint Louverture and the Haitian War of Independence 1801–1804. Tuscaloosa, Alabama: The University of Alabama Press. ISBN 978-0-8173-1732-4.
  1. ^ "Research Guides". guides.loc.gov. Retrieved 2024-05-04.
  2. ^ Braziel, Jana Evans (2005). "Remembering Defilee: Dedee Baziles as Revolutionary Lieu de Memoire". Small Axe: A Caribbean Journal of Criticism. 9 (2): 59. doi:10.1215/-9-2-57.
  3. ^ Boisvert, Jayne (2001). "Colonial Hell and Female Slave Resistance in Saint-Domingue". Journal of Haitian Studies. 7 (1): 63.
  4. ^ Boisvert, Jayne (2001). "Colonial Hell and Female Slave Resistance in Saint-Domingue". Journal of Haitian Studies. 7 (1): 66.
  5. ^ Boisvert, Jayne (2001). "Colonial Hell and Female Slave Resistance in Saint-Domingue". Journal of Haitian Studies. 7 (1): 64.
  6. ^ Boisvert, Jayne (2001). "Colonial Hell and Female Slave Resistance in Saint-Domingue". Journal of Haitian Studies. 7 (1): 65.
  7. ^ Boisvert, Jayne (2001). "Colonial Hell and Female Slave Resistance in Saint-Domingue". Journal of Haitian Studies. 7 (1): 69.
  8. ^ Boisvert, Jayne (2001). "Colonial Hell and Female Slave Resistance in Saint-Domingue". Journal of Haitian Studies. 7 (1): 70.
  9. ^ Boisvert, Jayne (2001). "Colonial Hell and Female Slave Resistance in Saint-Domingue". Journal of Haitian Studies. 7 (1): 71–72.
  10. ^ Watkins, Angela Denise (2014). "Mambos, priestesses, and goddesses: spiritual healing through Vodou in black women's narratives of Haiti and New Orleans". Iowa Research Online Repository: 2.
  11. ^ Dayan, Joan (1995). Haiti, History, and the Gods. Berkeley: University of California Press. p. 47. ISBN 9780520089006.
  12. ^ Braziel, Jana Evans (2005). "Remembering Defilee: Dedee Baziles as Revolutionary Lieu de Memoire". Small Axe: A Caribbean Journal of Criticism. 9 (2): 65–68. doi:10.1215/-9-2-57.
  13. ^ Boisvert, Jayne (2001). "Colonial Hell and Female Slave Resistance in Saint-Domingue". Journal of Haitian Studies. 7 (1): 73.
  14. ^ Girard, Philippe (2009). "Rebelles with a Cause: Women in the Haitian War of Independence, 1802-1804". Gender and History. 21 (1): 68. doi:10.1111/j.1468-0424.2009.01535.x. S2CID 55603536.
  15. ^ Boisvert, Jayne (2001). "Colonial Hell and Female Slave Resistance in Saint-Domingue". Journal of Haitian Studies. 7 (1): 73.
  16. ^ Braziel, Jana Evans (2005). "Remembering Defilee: Dedee Baziles as Revolutionary Lieu de Memoire". Small Axe: A Caribbean Journal of Criticism. 9 (2): 59. doi:10.1215/-9-2-57.
  17. ^ Terry Rey, The Priest and the Prophetess: Abbé Ouvière, Romaine Rivière, and the Revolutionary Atlantic World (2017), p. 30, 137.
  18. ^ Colin A. Palmer, Encyclopedia of African-American Culture and History (2006), p. 1972
  19. ^ Matthias Middell, Megan Maruschke, The French Revolution as a Moment of Respatialization (2019), p. 71
  20. ^ Maria Cristina Fumagalli, On the Edge: Writing the Border between Haiti and the Dominican Republic (2015), p. 111; and Maria Cristina Fumagalli et al. (eds.), The Cross-Dressed Caribbean: Writing, Politics, Sexualities (2014), p. 11
  21. ^ a b Terry Rey, "Kongolese Catholic Influences on Haitian Popular Catholicism", in Linda M. Heywood (editor), Central Africans and Cultural Transformations in the American Diaspora (2002), pp. 270-271
  22. ^ Terry Rey, Bourdieu on Religion: Imposing Faith and Legitimacy (2014, Routledge, ISBN 9781317490883), pp. 119-120
  23. ^ Jeremy D. Popkin, A Concise History of the Haitian Revolution (2011), p. 51
  24. ^ Terry Rey, The Priest and the Prophetess: Abbé Ouvière, Romaine Rivière, and the Revolutionary Atlantic World (2017), p. 52-53.
  25. ^ a b Mary Grace Albanese, "Unraveling the Blood Line: Pauline Hopkins's Haitian Genealogies", in J19: The Journal of Nineteenth-Century Americanists, volume 7, number 2, Fall 2019, p. 234
  26. ^ Hourya Bentouhami, "Notes pour un féminisme marron. Du corps-doublure au corps propre", in Comment s'en sortir? 5, 2017, p. 111
  27. ^ Girard, Philippe (2009). "Rebelles with a Cause: Women in the Haitian War of Independence, 1802-1804". Gender and History. 21 (1): 69. doi:10.1111/j.1468-0424.2009.01535.x. S2CID 55603536.
  28. ^ Girard, Philippe (2009). "Rebelles with a Cause: Women in the Haitian War of Independence, 1802-1804". Gender and History. 21 (1): 67. doi:10.1111/j.1468-0424.2009.01535.x. S2CID 55603536.
  29. ^ Girard, Philippe R. (2011). The Slaves Who Defeated Napoleon: Toussaint Louverture and the Haitian War of Independence 1801–1804. Tuscaloosa, Alabama: University of Alabama Press. ISBN 978-0-8173-1732-4[page needed]
  30. ^ a b Girard 2011, p. 321.
  31. ^ Girard 2011, pp. 321–322.
  32. ^ Girard 2011, p. 322.
  33. ^ Girard, Philippe (2009). "Rebelles with a Cause: Women in the Haitian War of Independence, 1802-1804". Gender and History. 21 (1): 73. doi:10.1111/j.1468-0424.2009.01535.x. S2CID 55603536.
  34. ^ Dayan, Joan (1995). Haiti, History, and the Gods. Berkeley: University of California Press. p. 47. ISBN 9780520089006.
  35. ^ Girard, Philippe. ""Rebelles with a Cause: Women in the Haitian War of Independence, 1802–04."". EBSCOhost.
  36. ^ Burnham, Michelle (2011). ""Female Bodies and Capitalist Drive: Leonora Sansay's Secret History in Transoceanic Context."". Legacy: A Journal of American Women Writers. 28: 177–204.
  37. ^ watkins, Angela. ""Restoring Haitian Women's Voices and Verbalizing Sexual Trauma in 'Breath, Eyes, Memory.'". JSTOR.
  38. ^ Girard, Philippe (13 March 2009). Gender and History (21 ed.). pp. 60–85.