Read Avengers of the New World: The Story of the Haitian Revolution Online
Authors: Laurent Dubois
had acquired his own slave, an African-born man named Jean-Baptiste,
whom he freed in 1777. Toussaint tried his hand at agriculture, renting a
small coffee plantation near the town. After two years, when he ended his
lease, he owed the owner the cost of two slaves, one women and one child,
who had died during his tenure.1
In the mid-nineteenth century one of his sons, Isaac Louverture, wrote
a brief account of his father’s early life. Toussaint’s father, he wrote, was an African prince, the second son of an Arada king, who had been captured
and sent to Saint-Domingue as a slave. In the colony the exiled prince
sometimes met other Aradas, the former subjects of his father. They “rec-
ognized him as their prince” and saluted him according to the “customs of
their homeland.” The sorrows of exile, wrote Isaac, were softened by the
kindness of his master, who gave Toussaint’s father a plot of land and “five
blacks” to cultivate it. The African prince converted to Catholicism, mar-
ried a woman of his “nation,” and had several sons. The oldest of them was
Toussaint. He learned the African language of his Arada parents and, after
their death, was also educated by his godfather Pierre Baptiste, a free black living in Le Cap, who had been educated by missionaries. He studied ge-ometry, French, and some Latin under his tutelage. Drawing on Isaac
Louverture’s description of his father Toussaint’s education, another nine-
teenth-century biographer claimed that the future revolutionary leader
had read the writings of the Abbé Raynal. This assertion inspired C. L. R.
James to pen a passage describing the slave Toussaint reading about the
prophesied “black Spartacus” and seeing in himself the answer to the ques-
tion “Where is he?”2
As with the Bois-Caïman ceremony, it is difficult—probably impossi-
ble—to separate reality from legend in the story of Toussaint, including
how he took on the name Louverture—“the opening.” Isaac Louverture
attributed the name to a comment by Etienne Polverel. After Louverture
conquered Dondon and Marmelade for the Spanish in late 1793, Isaac
wrote, the commissioner admiringly noted that his enemy could make “an
opening anywhere.” As another early biographer who repeated this story
put it, the “public” had given him his nickname to celebrate his successes,
and “history had left it to him.” Perhaps, though, rather than tracing its origin to the comment of a white administrator, it is safer to assume that the
man who ultimately made it famous chose it for himself and that, with “its
cryptic connotations of a new beginning,” it had a particular, still hidden,
meaning for him.3
“Judged according to the interests of the moment, through the prism
of passions,” wrote the French general Pamphile de Lacroix, “Toussaint
Louverture has been represented in turn as a ferocious brute, or as the
most surprising and the best of men, as often as an execrable monster as a
saintly martyr: he was none of these.” Louverture was a brilliant political
and military leader who, over the course of his career, gathered around
him individuals from all walks of life, from white planters and officers to
creole and African-born slaves. He “greatly impressed most who met him,”
and although whites sometimes privately made fun of him, “in his presence
no one laughed.” He had this effect even on some of the most powerful
personalities of the revolution; one contemporary wrote that Jean-Jacques
Dessalines “didn’t dare to look him straight in the face.” He was “a leader
of acute intelligence” who was “totally adept at confusing his opponents.”
He was “both ruthless and humane, capable of making barbarous threats
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av e n g e r s o f t h e n e w w o r l d
but of sparing even those who had double-crossed him.” Throughout his
career he would regularly invoke the possibility of brutal punishment, both
human and divine, but also show a remarkable tendency to forgive, evok-
ing the teachings of Catholicism as his inspiration. He was a consummate
politician who cultivated personal loyalty and effectively used secrecy and
trickery as he sought and found openings in his rise to power. He was also a
great political thinker, not only the “first and greatest of West Indians,” as C. L. R. James put it, but also one of the towering figures in the political
history of the Atlantic world.4
Louverture’s extensive correspondence allows us to explore his actions
and ideals. These letters were not written by his hand. Indeed, Lacroix re-
called that he “spoke French poorly” and often turned to creole in commu-
nicating his ideas. “Nevertheless a divine instinct enlightened him about
the value of words” in French. He kept his secretaries working constantly,
with several of them writing different versions of a letter until they had
found “the turn of phrase that was the appropriate expression of his
thought.” He never stopped thinking: “Journeying across the colony on
horseback at lightning speed, seeing everything for himself, he prepared
his actions. He meditated as he galloped; he meditated as well when he
pretended piously to pray.” He had much to think about, for the challenge
he faced was enormous: channeling the only successful slave revolt in his-
tory, overseeing the first great transition from slavery to freedom in the
Americas, and redefining the political terms of empire.5
From the time he joined the French Republic in 1794, Louverture
took on the task of protecting, and defining, the liberty the slaves of Saint-Domingue had won. As he managed the daily details of military and civil
administration, he struggled to lay the foundation for a kind of order that
had never been seen or even really imagined. His problems were those
faced by subsequent generations of administrators overseeing the transi-
tion from slavery to freedom in the British Caribbean, the United States,
and Cuba. Though he differed from most of these later administrators
in one crucial way—he had himself experienced slavery—his post-
emancipation policies were similar to those of the administrators who fol-
lowed him. Intent on maintaining and rebuilding the production of sugar
and coffee, he sought to limit the liberty of the ex-slaves, responding to
their attempts to move freely, acquire land, and escape plantation labor by
constructing a coercive legal order. His administration marked the begin-
ning of a longer story of how emancipation ultimately failed to bring true
t h e o p e n i n g
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[To view this image, refer to
the print version of this title.]
“Toussaint Louverture.” There are numerous, and startlingly
diverse, images of Louverture from the period. This well-
known engraving was first published in Marcus Rainsford
, A
Historical Account of the Black Empire of Hayti
(1805).
Courtesy of the Bibliothèque Nationale de France.
equality and independence to former slaves. Though his ultimate inability
to construct a multiracial, egalitarian, and democratic society in Saint-
Domingue might strike us as particularly tragic, given his origins, this was a failure he shared with the leaders of every other postemancipation society
in the Atlantic world.
The situation Louverture faced was particularly challenging. He came
to power in a colony devastated by insurrection and war, inhabited by
a fragmented and diverse population, and for much of his time in power
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av e n g e r s o f t h e n e w w o r l d
[To view this image, refer to
the print version of this title.]
Portrait of Toussaint Louverture on horseback, circa 1800.
Private
collection.
received little support, either material or political, from metropolitan
France. As a black officer committed to the participation of men of African
descent at the highest levels of administration, he confronted a lingering—
and eventually resurgent—racism within the French government. And as
he sought to assure the preservation of liberty in Saint-Domingue, he had
to navigate a complicated set of imperial conflicts and relationships that
placed constraints on his social and economic policies.
Toussaint Louverture was, as one novelist has suggested eloquently,
the “master of the crossroads” of the Haitian Revolution. Descendant of
West African royalty, but also raised Catholic and educated in European
t h e o p e n i n g
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arts and sciences, he emerged from the crossing of these two traditions,
though as a leader he would emphasize the virtues of Catholicism and re-
press the African traditions of his colony. But as he faced the political challenges of the postemancipation colony, the other part of his education was
perhaps more important. He had been in his life both a master and a slave.
He would draw on both experiences in governing the evolving colony of
Saint-Domingue.6
“I am Toussaint Louverture. My name is perhaps known to you. I have
undertaken vengeance. I want Liberty and Equality to reign in Saint-
Domingue. I work to bring them into existence. Unite yourselves to us,
brothers, and fight with us for the same cause.” With these words,
Louverture announced his emergence as an independent political force in
Saint-Domingue. He issued the proclamation on August 29, 1793, the very
day Léger Félicité Sonthonax abolished slavery throughout the Northern
Province. Although he was calling for liberty, he was not announcing his
alliance with the Republic. Instead, he was positioning himself against
Sonthonax as the true defender of liberty in Saint-Domingue. In a letter
written at the same time, he declared that he had been “the first to stand
up for” the cause of emancipation and had “always supported” it. Having
started the battle for it, he promised, he would finish it.7
The insurgent leader Bramante Lazzary, having just issued a call for the
“three colors” of Saint-Domingue to unite behind the Republic, wondered
why Louverture was still fighting for the wrong side. “Father Sonthonax,”
the “representative of the will of all of French,” had issued a decree of general liberty, which Lazzary had sent to Louverture. If Louverture sup-
ported freedom, why was he still fighting for the king of Spain, embracing
the “old regime” instead of joining the Republic? Lazzary addressed his
letter to “Citizen Toussaint Louverture,” but added sarcastically “supposed
General of the Armies of his Most Catholic Majesty today, yesterday sup-
posed General of the King . . . perturber of the order and the tranquility of our brothers.” He hoped, however, that they would soon be fighting side by
side for their “three colors.” In this, he was to be disappointed.8
Louverture’s actions and motives during this period and the months that
followed remain shrouded in mystery. Since his moderating participation
in the negotiations between the insurgents and administrators in late 1791,
he had become an increasingly important figure within the insurgent army.
During these negotiations—and again in 1792—he participated in and
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av e n g e r s o f t h e n e w w o r l d
supported plans meant to end the insurrection by bringing the majority of
the insurgents, minus some leaders who would receive freedom, back to
the plantations. He did not sign the July 1792 letter in which Biassou and
Jean-François proposed an end to slavery in the colony. In June of 1793, a
few weeks after Jean-François and Biassou joined the Spanish, Louverture
followed them to serve as an “auxiliary.” He therefore agreed to the terms
initially presented by the Spanish: liberty, along with land and other re-
wards, for those men who fought against the French.9
Sometime in May or June 1793 Louverture made contact with the Re-
publican officer Etienne Laveaux in Le Cap. Unfortunately, there is only
one enigmatic trace of the communication that took place between the two
men. A year later Louverture reminded Laveaux that “before the disaster
at Le Cap”—that is, before its destruction in June 1793—he had pro-
posed “avenues of reconciliation” that had been “rejected.” The surviving
letter does not say what these were. One of Louverture’s early biographers
thought he knew, and when he reprinted Louverture’s 1794 letter, after the
words “avenues of reconciliation” he inserted the phrase “the recognition
of the liberty of the blacks and a full amnesty.” Historians from Victor
Schoelcher to C. L. R. James have taken these words as Louverture’s own.
In fact, however, there simply is no concrete trace of what he put forth in
1793. All we know is that there was, in 1793, no reconciliation. It would be
another year before Laveaux and Louverture would become allies instead
of enemies.10
Once Louverture issued his proclamation in favor of “liberty and equal-
ity” in August 1793, why did he keep fighting for Spain? Louverture had
good reasons to be suspicious of the solidity of the Republic and its policy
of emancipation. Sonthonax’s hold on the Northern Province was tenuous,
and, like many others in mid-1793, Louverture probably thought that the
French Republic was heading toward defeat in Europe as well. There was