Philippe Girard is the author of the new biography Toussaint Louverture: A Revolutionary Life. His other books include Haiti, and he has edited and translated The Memoir of Toussaint Louverture. He is a professor of history at McNeese State University, and he lives in Lake Charles, Louisiana.
Q: You write, “The challenges that the biographer of
Louverture faces are many.” Why did you decide to write about him, and what
were some of those challenges?
A: My initial interest in Toussaint Louverture simply comes from the fact that I was also born in the French Caribbean (Guadeloupe), where Louverture, as the leader of the only successful slave revolt in Caribbean history, is a towering historical figure.
A: My initial interest in Toussaint Louverture simply comes from the fact that I was also born in the French Caribbean (Guadeloupe), where Louverture, as the leader of the only successful slave revolt in Caribbean history, is a towering historical figure.
But I would not have spent 10 years of my life studying him
if he had been a one-dimensional figure; his complex personality, akin in many
ways to his contemporaries Napoleon and Jefferson, is what brought me back to
him every time.
As for the challenges, they are of two types: logistical and analytical. Louverture wrote thousands of letters and memoirs, but they are scattered in archives on both sides of the Atlantic: France, Haiti, the U.S., Cuba, Britain, Spain... Piecing together his papers, which have not been published or even cataloged, was a monumental endeavor.
Analytically, he was a secretive person who kept his cards
close to his chest. His contemporaries acknowledged that they could never truly
get "inside his head." Doing so two centuries after the fact was even
more difficult!
Q: How did you research the book, and what surprised you most in the course of your research?
Q: How did you research the book, and what surprised you most in the course of your research?
A: I researched the book over many years. Most of the work
took place in France, which I visit every year as I have family there, but I
also had to make trips to Philadelphia, Puerto Rico, New York, Cap Haïtien, and
London, among others.
Altogether, I visited over 20 archives. Luckily, these are
all very nice places!
I was also fortunate to be awarded a semester-long research
fellowship at Harvard’s Hutchins Center, which gave me enough time to complete
my research and finish the manuscript. Professor Henry Louis Gates Jr. has created
a wonderful research center on black history there.
When I began the research, my image of Toussaint Louverture
was quite traditional: like everyone else, I saw him as an idealistic hero of
slave liberation.
I was quite surprised to read in contemporary accounts that
in his time he was seen as a complex and even devious character, and research
in primary sources confirmed this. Among other things, Louverture had been free
prior to the Haitian Revolution and even owned and rented some slaves.
The single biggest surprise occurred when comparing research
notes with those of my colleague Jean-Louis Donnadieu in the spring of 2012: it
suddenly dawned on me that Jean-Jacques Dessalines, the first leader of
independent Haiti, had once been employed as a slave by Toussaint Louverture!
This contradicted everything I thought I knew about
Louverture. It took me years to fully comprehend his pragmatic worldview and
understand the rationale behind some of his decisions.
Q: In the book, you write, “And the more we learn of
Louverture, the harder it is to pin him down.” Can you say more about the
contradictions that you see in his life?
A: The main issue of his time was slavery: whether it was right
for a person to own and exploit another—but also, should slaves be freed,
whether Haiti’s plantations would survive emancipation.
Let’s not forget that Haiti was the leading producer of
Europe’s sugar and coffee when the revolution broke out. He spent his life
trying to reconcile those two objectives.
He owned and exploited slaves as a freedman, but he also
bought the freedom of his relatives. He launched the greatest slave revolt in
world history, but then he forced former slave to continue working under a very
strict labor regime.
He wanted to protect the interests of both slaves and
planters (he had been both), and the tragedy of his life is that he never fully
succeeded to square that circle.
Q: How would you describe Louverture’s legacy today?
Q: How would you describe Louverture’s legacy today?
A: In Haiti, he is obviously a hero: the national airport
and countless monuments are named after him, and writing anything that could be
interpreted as a criticism of his record is highly controversial.
I learned that from personal experience in the fall of 2013,
when I attended the Haitian Studies Association meeting in Port-au-Prince. My
paper was published ahead of time in the national daily, and some of my
findings did not go well with the general public, to say the least!
But Louverture’s complex record is precisely what has made him so interesting to me and to people around the world. His legacy is so disparate that it has been appropriated by seemingly everyone. In the 19th century U.S., both proponents and opponents of abolition cited him as an example.
When visiting Besançon in France (a city near the prison
where he spent his last months), I was surprised to find his portrait adorning
the local trolleys: the French now see him as a hero of their revolution even
though Napoleon was responsible for his death.
Louverture has also been coopted throughout the Caribbean as
a leading figure of the struggle against colonialism, even though he never
declared Haiti’s independence from France.
Louverture saw himself more as a Frenchman and a Caribbean
Creole than an African descendant, but the people of Benin, where his parents
came from, have erected a statue to honor him as a shining example of the
African Diaspora.
Q: What are you working on now?
Q: What are you working on now?
A: More biographies of Haitian revolutionaries! In October
2015, Professor Gates invited me back to Harvard to give the Huggins lecture
series. I chose to focus on four remarkable individuals from the revolutionary
era.
Jean-Baptiste Belley was a former slave who convinced the
French national assembly to abolish slavery in 1794 and then became France’s
first black deputy.
Isaac Sasportas was a Jewish idealist who died trying to
export the Haitian slave revolt to Jamaica.
Joseph and Marie Bunel were a bi-racial couple that played a
key role in Louverture’s regime (he was Haiti’s first ambassador to the U.S.).
I’m working on turning these four mini-biographies into a
book. The Haitian Revolution was so multifaceted that the best way to retrace
it, I have found, is to tell the stories of its main actors.
Biography has fallen out of favor among many professional
historians because they see it as a form of top-down, “great men” history; but
I find biography to be a tool that is both useful and compelling.
Q: Anything else we should know?
Q: Anything else we should know?
A: Everyone knows of the French and the American revolutions;
the Haitian revolution tends to be less studied even though it was the most
radical of the three.
Similarly, people like Jefferson, Washington, Robespierre,
and Napoleon are better known to the public than Dessalines or Rigaud.
My goal is to bring people’s attention to this momentous
revolution, and especially to the fascinating figure at its center: Toussaint
Louverture. I hope this book will achieve my goal!
--Interview with Deborah Kalb
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