The history of Haiti underlines the major contradictions of western liberalism
since its inception in the eighteenth century. Those contradictions
have lasted up to the present and have become evident in four historical
contexts: firstly, the start of the Haitian revolution in August 1791
showed the actual limits of the liberty, equality, and fraternity that French
bourgeoisie proclaimed in Paris. Secondly, when the Dominican Republic
became independent in February 1844, to get Dominican friendship and
control of the area, the United States promised the Dominicans protection
against the Haitians, as long as they denied their own African ancestry.
Thirdly, the United States continued to interfere in Haitian internal affairs
throughout the twentieth century, determining the miserable fate of the
country in the following decades. Finally, western intervention in Haiti
since the 1980s, ostensibly inspired by the wish to guarantee political,
economic, and social freedom, has turned the country into a puppet of
foreign interests. The Haitian case underlines the contradictions of liberalism,
especially in connection to its postcolonial legacies in the Third
World.