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"The Price of Sugar," documentary about Haitians lured into indentured servitude

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A worker carries a bundle of sugar cane in “The Price of Sugar.”
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Published by bana2166- 09-28-07
news "The Price of Sugar," documentary about Haitians lured into indentured servitude

Movie Review: The Price of Sugar (2007)
Sugar Cane's Bitter Harvest in the Dominican Republic
Published: September 28, 2007
"The Price of Sugar," Bill Haney's muckraking documentary about Haitians lured into a form of indentured servitude on sugar plantations across the border in the Dominican Republic, focuses on the Rev. Christopher Hartley, a courageous and stubborn Spanish priest who devoted 10 years to bettering their desperate plight.
The movie visits the workers' shantytowns, known as bateyes, which, according to the film, resembled forced labor camps patrolled by armed guards before Father Hartley's reform movement. Through his organizing and relentless pressuring of the plantation owners in the face of death threats, some bateyes in his parish now have improved living and working conditions and have been visited by American doctors.
A robust, charismatic organizer, Father Hartley is a disciple of Mother Teresa. Born in 1959 to an aristrocratic Spanish-British family, he dropped out of an elite private school at 15, joined a seminary and for much of 20 years, beginning in 1977, worked with her in poor communities around the world. His sojourn in the Dominican Republic began in 1997 when he volunteered as a missionary in the diocese of San Pedro de Macoris, a 600-square-mile parish based in the town of San José de los Llanos. The conditions he found on the plantations, he says, were tantamount to slavery.
Each year, as the sugar harvest approaches, as many as 20,000 Haitian workers are recruited with the promise of steady work at higher pay than they can earn in Haiti, the poorer of the two countries. With the complicity of military and immigration authorities, the movie says, these destitute immigrants are loaded onto trucks, stripped of their identification papers and transported in the middle of the night to the bateyes, where many are housed in concentration-camp-like barracks. Estimates of the population of undocumented Haitians living in the camps range from 650,000 to one million.
Once harvesting begins, the film explains, they work 14 hours a day, seven days a week, earning less than $1 a day with minimal-to-nonexistent health care. Instead of cash, they are paid in vouchers that can be redeemed for overpriced food at company-owned stores. Since they can afford only one meal a day, most of the calories they consume come from chewing sugar cane. Since children born in the bateyee are not recognized as Dominican citizens, they grow up stateless.
Many of the plantations shown are owned by the Vicini family, a dynasty of sugar barons who refused to be interviewed for the film and sent the filmmakers a cease-and-desist letter in an attempt to block its release. The United States, which imports much of the Dominican sugar, is partly culpable, the movie says, because of political contributions from the barons that have helped maintain the price of imported Dominican sugar at close to double the world price.
"The Price of Sugar" is narrated in calm, gravelly tones by Paul Newman. Like most documentary polemics, it simplifies the issues it confronts and selects facts that bolster its black-and-white, heroes-and-villains view of raw economic power.
The film does show how Father Hartley's efforts backfired in sad, unforeseen ways. Once the immigrant laborers were permitted to travel outside the bateyes, they flooded the town of San José de los Llanos, and simmering ethnic hatred of Haitians among Dominicans came to a boil, fanned by bribery and propaganda from the sugar barons.
Father Hartley was reassigned to Ethiopia in August. The future of the bateyes is unclear. He worries that once the pressure is off the Vicini Group (the country's second-largest sugar producer), his reforms will be rescinded and the previous labor conditions will resume.
THE PRICE OF SUGAR
Opens today in Manhattan.
Directed by Bill Haney; written (in English and Spanish, with English subtitles) by Mr. Haney and Peter Rhodes; narrated by Paul Newman; directors of photography, Eric Cochran and Jerry Risius; edited by Mr. Rhodes; music by Claudio Ragazzi; produced by Eric Grunebaum and Mr. Haney; released by Mitropoulos Films. At the Cinema Village, 22 East 12th Street, Greenwich Village. Running time: 90 minutes. This film is not rated.
Source: NYTimes
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By bana2166 on 09-28-07, 05:38 AM
news The Human Cost Of a Sour Industry

The Human Cost Of a Sour Industry
Movies: "The Price of Sugar"
September 28, 2007
The plight of laborers in developing countries is difficult for those of us in the industrialized world to understand. Standards we have come to expect are lacking or otherwise abused, yet millions of people flock to low-paying jobs that Americans regard with disdain. But while the living wage may vary by country, protecting basic human rights must be a minimum standard.
As the documentary "The Price of Sugar" shows, the rights of sugarcane cutters on the Dominican Republic are not being upheld. Bill Haney's film adroitly captures the plight of Haitian illegals working in Dominican sugarcane plantations, even if it occasionally misunderstands the larger situation.
Stocked with Haitian immigrants who have fled across the border in the hopes of finding a better life, Dominican sugarcane shantytowns, or bateyes, are inhospitable destinations for their stranded inhabitants. Stripped of their identification, the Haitians are forced to work 12-hour days, seven days a week. Given no access to health care and offered wages that fail to meet the cost of living, Haitian illegals are often kept on the sugar plantations by armed guards. If they attempt to flee, they are sometimes shot, but more frequently deported. Children born on the bateyes are not given Dominican citizenship.
Mr. Haney's film follows the Spanish priest Christopher Hartley as he agitates for the Haitian cane cutters. Father Hartley has made it his life's mission to ease the plight of the workers and suggested this film project to Mr. Haney as a way to raise awareness of the problem.
It should work. "The Price of Sugar" goes straight into the bateyes to observe the reality, and it is not pretty. Interspersed throughout the film are shots of children with distended bellies, contaminated sources of water, and other scenes of extreme poverty. It is all very moving, though repeated, ominous shots of sugar falling begin to lose their effect, and the lack of opposing voices leaves certain aspects of the debate unclear.
Most of this is because the wealthy Vicini family, which owns many of the plantations depicted in the film, refused to be interviewed for the film. The film also depicts all opponents of Father Hartley and the Haitians as motivated by racism.
While this may be oversimplifying the conflict, racism is a serious problem. Divided by a border, Haiti and the Dominican Republic share an uneasy history. A subset of nationalist pride has risen up against Father Hartley's quest, blaming the Haitians for the bad conditions of native Dominicans.
Subsequently, Father Hartley's work has been met with death threats and violence from industry sympathizers and nativists. While he has made progress in his mission — bringing health care workers to the bateyes, removing the armed guards from the plantations, and raising wages — there have been consequences. Haitians who agitate with him are fired and warned that the priest will not always be present to protect them. In fact, after shooting was completed on the film, Father Hartley was forced out of the country.
Mr. Haney has done a good job in following the plight of undocumented Haitians in the Dominican Republic, though he lays the blame more on the shoulders of globalization than on the real culprit. Without a well-established rule of law, this group of laborers is completely unprotected. As the priest says at one point, "In places where the rule of law does not exist, walls speak much more eloquently than signatures."
Though it is hard to tell if the priest feels the sugar companies have a right to make a profit, Father Hartley has done a giant's work, and drawn worldwide attention to his efforts in the process. With Paul Newman narrating, this film should help shine the light of day into the Dominican bateyes.
Haitians come to the Dominican Republic to find a better life, but they have been met with something closer to slavery. With conditions as dire as they are in Haiti, illegals continue to filter into the Dominican Republic as both nations struggle to address the endless discord between their clashing cultures.
But it is important to note that this is not simply capitalism unbound by government regulation — it is the result of deplorably negligent enforcement of basic human rights. If Mr. Haney's film has gotten only one thing right, it is that drawing the world's attention to the dilemma is the only way to fix the problem. As the sugar industry continues to dwindle, outrage from buyers may be the best way to improve conditions, and to prove that capitalism works.
Source: NYSun
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