Miami Herald

New exhibit showcases the importance of Miami’s historic Little Haiti

- BY C. ISAIAH SMALLS II csmalls@miamiheral­d.com

was just something about Little Haiti that Edouard Duval-Carrié couldn’t escape.

It was the early 1990s and the Haitian artist had decided to move from Paris. A canceled flight allowed him to spend some extended time in Miami, and Little Haiti just enthralled him. He loved that everyone spoke Creole. He loved seeing the spires of the Caribbean Marketplac­e. He loved that it felt like home. Within two years, DuvalCarri­é had purchased the very same studio he currently occupies nearly three decades later.

“I felt like it was the only place in the world that had Haiti attached to it other than Haiti itself,” Duval-Carrié said, surThere rounded by a towering bookshelf and his artwork. He never predicted the gentrifica­tion that would begin in the early 2010s — “I said ‘I’ll be in the ghettos for the rest of my life,’ ” he quipped, “And that’s the idea that I loved” — and has since begun to chip away at the neighborho­od’s identity. Or maybe he did — just subconscio­usly. “I would tell other Haitians that you should be investing here.”

Duval-Carrié is one of the many artists featured in a new exhibition, “I Am Little Haiti,” which seeks to reframe the narrative of the historic neighborho­od. The show, running from May 11-Aug. 10 at Green Space Miami, combines essays, mixed-media art, photograph­y and videos to demonstrat­e not only

Little Haiti’s multilayer­ed

history but also to provoke meaningful conversati­ons about its future amid the ongoing changes.

“There is this need for the people who see the importance of Little Haiti to unite not for their own personal gain but because of what they’ve been given needs to be protected,” exhibit curator and Miami Herald photograph­er CarlPhilip­pe Juste said. The exhibition title itself, he added, is a declaratio­n rooted in “the perpetual existence of this space.”

Juste has a unique personal connection to Little Haiti. It was his father, Viter Juste, who moved to Miami in 1973 and coined the name “Little Haiti.” The senior Juste also played a very active role in Miami’s fight for immigrants’ rights, founding Haitian Florida, the first local newspaper for the growing Haitian community, and successful­ly advocating for the children of undocument­ed immigrants to attend public schools.

And thanks to DuvalCarri­e, the younger Juste was able to rent part of the artist’s studio in 2007, effectivel­y giving him a voice in the changing neighborho­od that his father worked so hard to help build.

“A lot of Haitians are being pushed out because they don’t have long-term leases,” Juste said, later adding that Haitians alone “can’t save Little Haiti.”

The exhibit therefore embodies one of his father’s biggest philosophi­es: Although Little Haiti provided a somewhat familiar environmen­t for many immigrants to start fresh, the neighborho­od is still just a part of the rich tapestry that makes Miami such a magical place.

“My father understood that Miami was cosmopolit­an,” Juste said. “It was a place that was unique. It was not an American city. It didn’t belong to the United States; it belonged to the world. If the Cubans could have Little Havana, the Haitians can have

Little Haiti. He understood the coexistenc­e — that we’re not blending into a soup but we’re more like a salad. We have our distinct ingredient­s, and those ingredient­s needed to be valued.”

Still, it’s no secret that the area’s Haitian population has steadily shrunk as developers pounced. A few aspects made Little Haiti rather desirable: its proximity to popular neighborho­ods like the Design District and Wynwood; high elevation above sea level; cheap land. Small mom-and-pop shops began to move out because of rising rents. Younger relatives began to sell their family homes to start anew elsewhere. Even the future of the beloved Caribbean Marketplac­e was recently in question. The result: the Haitian population of Little Haiti fell by a third between 2000 and 2020, according to the latest census data.

“I Am Little Haiti,” the final chapter in a multiyear initiative funded by the Mellon Foundation through Florida Internatio­nal University’s Commons for Justice:

Race, Risk, Resilience project, thus seeks to coalesce the disparate elements that make the neighborho­od more than just a collection of streets and structures.

“It’s not a matter of saying ‘Hey come in and destroy these iconic, historic structures,’ ” said Rebecca Friedman, who directs FIU’s Public Humanities Lab and helped curate the show. “But rather, ‘Even if you try, we’re still here.’ And the we in that may not be limited to Haitians – it’s them and allies.”

But the places are important: As visitors walk through the gallery, they can read about the importance of Toussaint Louverture Elementary School, Chef Creole and Notre Dame d’Haiti Catholic Church.

“Those are very real things,” Black Miami historian Nadege Green said, referring to the potential loss of Little Haiti’s iconic structures. Green penned an immersive essay that interweave­s Creole and English as she chronicles growing up in Notre Dame, an experience that helped lay the foundation for her work “Black Miami-Dade,” a multimedia history archive. “It’s important not just what’s happening to the neighborho­od but the need to archive these memories. Who do we remember? How do we remember?”

The other elements of the show serve as a time capsule of sorts. There’s a collection of various ornaments that immigrants brought from Haiti to serve as a reminder that nostalgia always played an important role in the neighborho­od’s existence. Duval-Carrié’s portrait of Toussaint Louverture, titled “Toussaint en Saumon,” pays homage to revolution­ary spirit of Haitians. And the collection of photograph­s, many of which show the faces of the community, depict the people who give the enclave its rhythmic heartbeat.

“Little Haiti is a gift to Miami-Dade County,”

Juste said. “It’s a place where Haitians can flee persecutio­n and be in a place where their past and present is valued.”

IF YOU GO

WHAT: “I Am Little Haiti” Exhibit

WHEN: noon-6 p.m. Wednesdays- Sundays through Aug. 10

WHERE: Green Space Miami, 7200 Biscayne Blvd., Miami

TICKETS: Free

Info: https://commons forjustice.fiu.edu

C. Isaiah Smalls II: 302-373-8866, @stclaudeii

 ?? ALIE SKOWRONSKI askowronsk­i@miamiheral­d.com ?? Carl-Philippe Juste measures a photograph selected for the ‘I Am Haiti’ exhibit on Thursday.
ALIE SKOWRONSKI askowronsk­i@miamiheral­d.com Carl-Philippe Juste measures a photograph selected for the ‘I Am Haiti’ exhibit on Thursday.
 ?? ALIE SKOWRONSKI askowronsk­i@miamiheral­d.com ?? Pieces in the ‘What We Bring’ collection, representi­ng Haiti in the home and in daily life, are part of the larger ‘I Am Haiti’ exhibit at Green Space Miami in Little Haiti.
ALIE SKOWRONSKI askowronsk­i@miamiheral­d.com Pieces in the ‘What We Bring’ collection, representi­ng Haiti in the home and in daily life, are part of the larger ‘I Am Haiti’ exhibit at Green Space Miami in Little Haiti.

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