Haitian Cuban
Total population | |
---|---|
300,000 Roman Catholicism | |
Related ethnic groups | |
Haitians, Haitian Americans, Haitian Brazilian, Haitian Canadians, Haitian Chilean |
Haitian Cubans (
ancestry.Origins
Haitian culture and
By 1804, some 30,000 French were living in Baracoa and Maisí, the furthest eastern municipalities of the province.
Haitian immigrant workers (1912-1939)
Due to the United States occupation of Haiti, many Haitians left to find work as laborers in neighboring countries like Cuba. These immigrants lived a fine line trying to maintain their Haitian culture and assimilating enough to be able to work and live in a foreign society. In 1937, over 25,000 Haitians were forcibly removed from Cuba and sent back to Haiti.[2] This different treatment of migrant laborers is due to several factors. Cuban racists beliefs combined with economic concerns were a direct catalyst for this drastic Haitian exodus.[3]
Revolution
Cubans feared a repeat of the Haitian Revolution, which was not quelled by the current guerrilla warfare in Haiti by the caco forces against the Americans. Similarly, black Haitians were stereotyped as being violent and rife with crime.[4] Being the subject of stereotypes wasn't uncommon in Cuba, as black Cubans were often stereotyped the same way.[5]
Religion
Haitian practice of vodou, was often mistaken for "witchcraft."[6]
Language
The vast majority of Haitians spoke Haitian Creole, which created a language barrier forcing Haitians to remain in agricultural labor.[7]
Housing practices
Haitians lived in small communities near the sugar cane plantations, very rural and removed from populous cities.[8]
Education
Economic restraints amongst Haitians kept education informal and contained in their small communities, as such, very few of these Haitians had anything above a basic level of Creole literacy. This enabled Haitians to keep control over the cultural values their children received.[8]
Haitian religion
Majority of Haitians are Catholic but vodou is also present behind the scenes. Vodou is decentralized and flexible. The rituals involved in vodou strengthen community ties and help the oppressed Haitians deal with their suffering.[9]
Recent years
Haitians have continued to come to Cuba to work as
Notable Haitian Cubans
- Benito Martínez, claimed to be the world's oldest living person
See also
References
- ^ a b "Haiti in Cuba". www.afrocubaweb.com. Retrieved 9 December 2023.
- ^ Marc C. McLeod, "Undesirable Aliens: Race, Ethnicity, and Nationalism in the Comparison of Haitian and British West Indian Workers in Cuba, 1912-1939." Journal of Social History (1998): 599-614., 599
- ^ McLeod, 603
- ^ McLeod, 601
- ^ "A Lesson From Cuba on Race". 17 November 2013. Retrieved 1 April 2014.
- ^ McLeod, 602
- ^ McLeod, 607
- ^ a b McLeod, 609
- ^ McLeod, 610
- ^ Finesurrey, Samuel (10 December 2020). "Contesting Circuits of Empire: Afro-Caribbean Migrant Labor in Cuba, 1899-1958". CUNY Academic Works. Retrieved 9 December 2023.
External links
- "Creole Language and Culture: Part of Cuba's Cultural Patrimony", by Susan Hurlich, 21 May 1998
- "Haitian Heritage In Cuba ... As Heard Through Song", National Public Radio, February 20, 2012
Further reading
- Sklodowska, Elzbieta. Espectros y espejismos: Haití en el imaginario cubano. Iberoamericana Editorial (2009). ISBN 9788484894438.