National Post (National Edition)

DOMINICAN BEGINS ETHNIC ‘CLEANSING’

Prejudice against darker Haitians has deep roots

- BY ABBY PHILLIP

SANTO DOMINGO • There is an artificial line that splits the island of Hispaniola in two. On one side is Haiti, and on the other is the Dominican Republic.

There was a time when that split between the two countries was drawn with blood; the 1937 Parsley Massacre is widely regarded as a turning point in Haitian-Dominican relations.

The slaughter, carried out by Dominican dictator Rafael Trujillo, targeted Haitians along with Dominicans who looked dark enough to be Haitian — or whose inability to roll the “r” in perejil, the Spanish word for parsley, gave them away.

The Dajabon River, which serves as the northernmo­st part of the internatio­nal border between the two countries, had “risen to new heights on blood alone,” wrote HaitianAme­rican author Edwidge Danticat.

“The massacre cemented Haitians into a long-term subversive outsider incompatib­le with what it means to be Dominicans,” according to Border of Lights, an organizati­on that commemorat­ed the 75th anniversar­y of the massacre in 2012.

Today, things are as tense on the island as they have been in years. Beginning Thursday, the Dominican government is expected to round up Haitians — or, really, anyone black enough to be Haitian — and ship them to the border, where they will likely be expelled.

The Associated Press reported Tuesday that the head of the Dominican Republic’s immigratio­n agency, Army Gen. Ruben Paulino, said his agency will begin patrolling neighbourh­oods with large numbers of migrants on Thursday.

“If they aren’t registered, they will be repatriate­d,” Paulino said.

The government has described it, in terms chillingly reminiscen­t of the Holocaust, as a “cleansing” of the country’s immigratio­n rolls.

Cassandre Theano, a legal officer at the New York-based Open Society Foundation­s, said the comparison­s between the Dominican government’s actions and the denational­ization of Jews in Nazi Germany are justified.

“We’ve called it as such because there are definitely linkages,” she said. “You don’t want to look a few years back and say, ‘This is what was happening and I didn’t call it.’ ”

In other words, 78 years later, these are the fruits of Trujillo’s bloody campaign to sow anti-Haitian sentiment in the Dominican Republic.

“The root cause is discrimina­tion; it’s really a long-standing discrimina­tion against those of Haitian descent,” said Marselha Goncalves Margerin, advocacy director for the Americas at Amnesty Internatio­nal. “The Dominican Republic has not been able to establish a strong policy to combat it.”

It also has its roots in littleknow­n American history, Danticat, the Haitian-American author, noted in an interview last year:

“One thing that is not mentioned as often is that early in

Early in the 20th century, the entire island was occupied by the U.S.

the 20th century (1915 to 1934 for Haiti, and 1916 to 1924 for the D.R.), the entire island was occupied by the United States. Then again, in the D.R., Trujillo — who not only organized a massacre, but wiped out several generation­s of Dominican families — was trained during the occupation by U.S. marines and put in power when they pulled out. Same with the Haitian army that terrorized Haitians for generation­s. It is not a matter of blame but a matter of historical record.”

The discrimina­tion starts with the long-standing practice of not recognizin­g as Dominican people of Haitian descent who were born in the Dominican Republic. Instead, they are lumped in with a second group: Haitian migrants who came to the country — sometimes brought by force — to work in the sugar cane fields.

Then, in 2013, the country’s constituti­onal court ruled that no longer would people born in the Dominican Republic automatica­lly be considered citizens. The rule, the court decided, would retroactiv­ely apply to anyone born after 1929.

The change overwhelmi­ngly affects Haitians and people of Haitian descent. And its impact reaches back generation­s.

In reality, Theano said, “cleaning” the Dominican registrati­on rolls to root out fraud and non-citizens entails identifyin­g Haitian-sounding names, then forcing Haitian migrants and Dominicans of Haitian descent to prove that they are citizens.

The deadline for procuring the documents necessary to prove citizenshi­p if you were born in the Dominican Republic lapsed in February. And on Wednesday, the deadline for migrants to “regularize” their statuses also expired, with thousands of people waiting anxiously in long lines, eager to submit applicatio­ns for legal residency before a midnight deadline and avoid possible deportatio­n.

Many had been waiting since the night before, clutching documents they hoped would be sufficient to establish their legal status and allow them to stay in a country that, for some at least, is the only home they have ever known. Nearly all are from Haiti or of Haitian descent.

 ?? TATIANA FERNANDEZ / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Migrants, mostly Haitians, show documents as they try to register for legal residency at the Interior Ministry in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic, on Tuesday. The country is ready to resume deporting non-citizens without legal residency.
TATIANA FERNANDEZ / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Migrants, mostly Haitians, show documents as they try to register for legal residency at the Interior Ministry in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic, on Tuesday. The country is ready to resume deporting non-citizens without legal residency.

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