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"The Father of Racism": A Slap in the Face of a Dominican Hero (Juan Pablo Duarte)

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Published by bana2166- 09-02-07
news "The Father of Racism": A Slap in the Face of a Dominican Hero (Juan Pablo Duarte)

September 2, 2007
Upper Manhattan
A Slap in the Face of a Dominican Hero
For four miles, the No. 1 train rumbles through Washington Heights and Inwood, two of the city's most heavily Dominican neighborhoods. As it passes above Inwood, its noise causes a lull in the chatter of the fruit vendors below, and dust from the tracks drifts into street-corner milkshake joints and travel agencies offering cut-rate fares to Santo Domingo.
So whoever posted anonymous fliers through the train's cars one day in July denouncing Juan Pablo Duarte, a founding father of the Dominican Republic, was clearly someone with a sense of political theater. "The Father of Racism," the fliers read in Spanish, in inch-high letters superimposed over Duarte's mustachioed face. The posting of the fliers, which have since been taken down, was reported in El Diario, the Spanish-language newspaper.
The fliers, which called Duarte a "white devil," shocked many Dominicans, who regard Duarte as a hero for helping the country win independence from neighboring Haiti in 1844.
"This is the reckless act of an ignorant person," said Justo Luperón, a spokesman for the New York branch of the Instituto Duartiano, a group dedicated to fostering Dominican patriotism. "It's reprehensible."
The Dominican Republic has long had a tense relationship with Haiti, the poorer neighbor with which it shares an island and which sends migrant workers to the Dominican Republic. In the past two years, at least three documentary films have chronicled the laborers' poor working conditions, and David Cordero, a vice consul at the Dominican Consulate in New York, speculated that the fliers and the movies were linked. "It's too much of a coincidence," he said.
Seemingly everyone agrees, though, that Duarte is an ill-chosen target. Experts in Dominican and Haitian history said they knew of no precedent for the accusation.
"There's no element that I remember once reading, in anything Duarte said or wrote, that could be interpreted remotely as racism," said Anthony Stevens, assistant director of the CUNY Dominican Studies Institute. "It's one of those things that you see and you wonder, ‘Is this somebody nuts, who took Duarte's name out of a bag in a raffle and decided to use it?'
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By bana2166 on 09-02-07, 02:23 PM
news Juan Pablo Duarte

Juan Pablo Duarte
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Juan Pablo Duarte y Diez was born on January 26, 1813 in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic during the period of (in Spanish called) España Boba. Duarte, along with Francisco del Rosario Sanchez and Ramón Matías Mella, is considered as one of the founding fathers of the Dominican Republic.
After the troops of the Haitian Toussaint L'Ouverture arrived to the Dominican Republic in 1801, Duarte's parents, Juan José Duarte and Manuela Diez Jiménez, left to Mayagüez, Puerto Rico, where it is assumed their first son Vicente Celestino was born. The family returned to the country after the war of the Reconquest in 1844, when the Dominican Republic was again a Spanish colony. His family resided on the western side of the Ozama river, in the La Atarazana zone.
Due to the neglect of the Spanish authorities, the colonists of Santo Domingo, under the leadership of José Núñez de Cáceres, proclaimed what came to be called the Ephemeral Independence. The neighboring Haitians (Haiti is a former French colony) who had already gained independence were fearful the French would mount another expedition from Spanish Santo Domingo to re-establish slavery, (as they had threatened to do), Haiti's president Jean-Pierre Boyer sent an army that invaded and took over the eastern portion of Hispaniola. Haiti once again abolished slavery and incorporated Santo Domingo into the Republic of Haiti. After this event Duarte's parents sent their son to study in Europe.
On April 20, 1838, Duarte and others established a secret dissident society called La Trinitaria, shaped after the Carbonari, which helped undermine Haitian rule. Some of its first members included Juan Pablo Duarte, Juan Isidro Pérez, Pedro Alejandro Pina, Jacinto de la Concha, Félix María Ruiz, José María Serra, Benito González, Felipe Alfau and Juan Nepomuceno Ravelo. Later, he and others founded another society, called La Filantrópica, which had a more public presence, seeking to spread veiled separatist ideas through theatrical stages. All of this, along with the help of many who wanted to be rid of the Haitians who discriminated against white Dominicans and return to Spanish rule (and not to create an independent nation), led to the proclamation of independence on February 27, 1844 (Dominican War of Independence). However, Duarte had already been exiled to Caracas the previous year for his insurgent conduct. He continued to correspond with members of his family and members of the independence movement. Independance could not be denied and after many struggles, the Dominican Republic. A republican form of government where a free people would hold ultimate power, through the voting process, a democracy where every citizen would be equal and free. Therefore with its flag and beautiful coat of arms, declaring "God, Fatherland and Freedom", all of these inspired, evoked and expressed by Duarte came into being a country that would soon owe this one man its existence, who gave his fortune and the very best of his life to the cause he fervently believed in.
Duarte was supported by many as a candidate for the presidency of the new born Republic. Mella, wanted Duarte to simply declare himself president. Duarte never giving up on the principles of democracy and fairness he lived by would only accept if voted in by a majority of the Dominican people. However the reactionary forces of those favoring Spanish sovereignty (or any superpower's protection), led by general Pedro Santana a large landowner from the eastern highlands, took over and exiled Duarte. In 1845, Santana exiled the entire Duarte family. Santana was awarded the hereditary title of Marqués de las Carreras by the Spanish Queen Isabel II and died soon after.
Juan Pablo Duarte, then living in Venezuela was made the Dominican Consul and provided with a pension to honor him for his sacrifice. But even this after some time was not honored and he lost commission and pension. He, Juan Pablo Duarte, the poet, philosopher, writer, actor, soldier, general, dreamer and hero died nobly in Caracas, Venezuela, at the age of 63. His remains were transferred to Dominican soil in 1884, ironically by president (dictator) Ulises Heureaux,(of Haitian descent) and were given a proper burial with full honors. He is entombed in a beautiful mausoleum at the Count's gate alongside Sanchez and Mella, who at that spot with Duarte fired the rifle shot that propelled them into legend. His birth is commemorated by Dominicans every January 26.
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