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OUR HISTORY
Brief History of Haiti
Haiti
shares
with the
Dominican
Republic
the
island
located
between
Cuba and
Puerto-
Rico.
The word
Haiti
comes
from an
Indian
word
that
means
"high
ground".
Christopher
Columbus
arrived
on the
island
in 1492
and
established
a
Spanish
base.
When the
Spanish
settlers
learned
that
there
was much
gold on
the
island,
they
rushed,
forced
the
Indians
to mine
and
raise
food for
them.
They
treated
all
Indians
so badly
that by
1530
only a
few were
still
alive.
Then,
they
brought
slaves
from
Africa
to
replace
the
Indian
work
force.
The
Spaniards
became
riche
and
moved to
Peru,
Mexico
and
neglected
Haiti.
French,
English
and
Dutch
pirates
took
over the
northern
and
western
coast of
the
island.
France
named
its new
colony
Saint-Domingue.
By 1778,
the
500,000
African
slaves
worked
and
made
Haiti so
prosperous
that it
became
more
important
to
France
than its
colony
in
Canada.
During
the
French
revolution
in 1791,
the
African
slaves
took
advantages
of
political
instability
and
rebelled
against
their
masters.
They
destroyed
everything:
towns,
plantations,
properties…
Toussaint Louverture,
a former
slave
took
over the
control
of the
government
of the
island.
When
Napoleon
I took
power in
France
in 1799,
he sent
an
important
army to
Saint-Domingue
to
arrest
and
deport
Toussaint
to
France
where he
was
imprisoned
and
died.
However,
the
slaves
of
Saint-Domingue
continued
their
fight
against
the
French
army and
general
Jean-Jacques
Dessalines
became
the
leader
of
rebels
and
proclaimed
Saint-Domingue
independent
on
January
1st
1804. He
named
the
country
Haiti
Historical foundation of the Haitian community in New York
City.
Dr.
Duvalier
was
elected
president
of Haiti
in 1957
and
declared
himself
president
for life
in 1964.
Before
he died
in 1971,
he named
his 19
year-old
son
Jean-
Claude
to
replace
him upon
his
death.
Jean-Claude,
like his
father
ruled as
a
dictator
until
1986
when
unrest
forced
him to
abandon
the
power
and flee
to
France
in
exile.
Since
1960’s
thousands
of
Haitian
realized
that
there
was no
hope
under
Duvalier.
They
started
leaving
the
country
to go to
France,
the
United
States,
Canada
and many
other
counties.
Among
those
who have
decided
to come
to the
United
States,
many
came to
New York
City and
during
the last
three
decades,
they
have
formed a
large
Haitian
community
in the
Big
Apple.
This
Haitian
community
in New
York
City
continues
to grow
because
after
the
departure
of Jean_
Claude
Duvalier
in 1986,
Haiti
became
more
unstable
politically.
A
Catholic
priest,
the
Reverend
Jean
Bertrand
Aristide,
was
elected
President
of the
country
in
December,
1990 and
was
ousted
in
October,
1991. He
was the
first
freely
elected
President
of the
country
since
its
independence
in 1804.
Sixty-seven
percent
of
Haiti’s
voters
voted
for him.
He took
office
in
February
1991 and
left
Haiti in
October
of the
same
year.
More
than
40,000
people
have
tried to
enter
the
United
States
since
1986 and
more
than 10,
000 were
eventually
allowed
into the
United
States
to
continue
to
pursue
their
claims
for
asylum.
In June
1993,
Lt.Gen.
Raoul
Cedras
who
represented
the
government
of Haiti
and the
Ousted
president
Jean
Bertrand
Aristide
met with
Mr.
Dante
Caputo,
the
United
Nation
envoy,
In New
York
City, to
try to
resolve
the
political
and
economic
crisis.
Aristide
is back
in power
since
October
1994.
Haitians
will
continue
to leave
Haiti to
come to
the
United
States
because
the
damages
made to
Haiti
during
four
decades
can not
be
repaired
overnight.
The first Haitian Missionary in New York City.
The
American
Baptist
convention
founded
the
first
Baptist
Seminary
with the
help of
Pierre
Ludovic
St.
Phard in
1947.
St.
Phard
had just
returned
from
Jamaica
where he
studied
theology.
When he
was
called
to the
ministry,
there
was no
training
school I
Haiti.
He
became a
well
known
minister
in Haiti
and
served
many
churches.
He left
Haiti in
1960’s
with his
family
when the
Haitian
exodus
started.
He
joined
the
First
Baptist
Church
of
Brooklyn
with his
wife
where
David
Morgan
was
pastor.
Morgan
and St.
Phard
had met
years
before
in
Jamaica
as
students
at the
same
Bible
Institute.
St.
Phard
and his
wife
Emma
became
the
first
Haitian
missionaries
paid by
the Home
Missions
Board of
the
Southern
Baptist
Convention
in New
York
City.
The
First
Haitian
Baptist
Church
in New
York
City
The
First
Baptist
Church
of
Brooklyn
was a
Southern
Baptist
Church.
When St.
Phard
joined
the
church,
he
became a
Southern
Baptist
minister.
The
membership
of the
First
Baptist
Church
did not
include
only St.
Phard as
Haitian.
Pastor
Morgan
asked
St.
Phard to
form a
Haitian
congregation
in the
Haitian
community
in 1965.
That
congregation
was born
in
living
room of
pastor
and Mrs.
St.
Phard in
February
1965,
constituted
in
church
in June
1966,
incorporated
in the
state of
New York
in May
1967. In
August
1965,
the
living
room was
too
small;
we
rented a
larger
room inYMCA
building
located at 55
Hanson Place and
bought
our own
building
at
81 Hanson Place
in 1968.
The New Leadership
Pastor
St.
Phard
resigned
in
October
1969.
Jean-Baptiste
Thomas
became
pastor
of the
church
the same
month.
From
1965 to
1969, he
was the
minister
of
Education
of the
mother
church
and
pastor
of the
chapels
at
Asbury
Park and
in
Manhattan.
He is a
graduate
of the
Baptist
Theological
Seminary
of Haiti
who
attended
the
State
University
Law
School
of
Haiti.
He is
also a
graduate
of the
City
University
of New
York who
earned a
Doctor
of
Ministry
from
Drew
University
of
Madison,
New
Jersey.
His wife
Eliane
who
attended
the
School
of
Teachers
in Haiti
earned a
Bachelor
of
Science
Degree
from the
State
University
of New
York.
Both
worked
for
Manufacturer
Hanover
trust
Company,
then the
fourth
largest
Bank of
America.
After
twenty
years of
service,
he left
the Bank
as an
Accountant
Senior
Analyst
at the
Comptroller
Division
and she
left
retirement,
they
become
full
time
minister
serving
the
Metropolitan
New York
Baptist
Association,
the
Baptist
Convention
of New
York,
the
Southern
Baptist
Theological
Seminary
in
Louisville,
Kentucky,
the
National
Leadership
Conference
of the
Home
Mission
Board of
Southern
Baptist
Convention
and of
course,
the
French
Speaking
Baptist
Church
(Eglise
Baptiste
d’Expression
Française).
The
labor
was not
in vain.
1978, we
bought
the big
temple
located
at
209 Clermont Ave Clermont
because
81
Hanson
Place was too
small.
Our
congregation
has
given
birth to
more
than
thirty
churches
in
Connecticut,
New
York,
New
Jersey,
Pennsylvania,
Maryland,
Florida,
Missouri,
and
Haiti…
In 1987,
the
Southern
Baptist
Theological
Seminary
has
planted
Boyce
Bible
Center
directed
by Dr.
Jean-Baptiste
into the
Haitian
Community
of New
York
City.
After
seven
year of
service,
we can
find the
graduates
of Boyce
as
pastors,
evangelist,
teachers,
speakers,
writers
in many
states:
Connecticut,
New
York,
Pennsylvania
Florida,
and
Haiti…
In
Florida
for
example,
many
churches
are
pasturing
by
former
members
of our
church.
Among
those
competent
leaders,
we like
to
mention
Rev.
Wilfrid
Lubin,
Rev.
Antoine
Michaud,
Rev.
Maurice
Louissaint,
Rev.
Jacques
Dumornay,
Rev.
Yvon
Delinois,
Rev.
Rene B.
Jacques,
Rev.
George
Daleus,
Rev.
Inginac
Theodore,
Rev.
Emmanuel
Cesar,
Rev.
Renaud
Balzora…
In
Chicago,
we
encourage
the
pastors
to form
an
association
of
pastors
and
churches;
In
Nassau ,
Bahamas,
we
encourage
the
churches
to
establish
a
center
for the
Haitian
community;
in
Paris,
we
minister
with the
Association
of
churches;
in
Haiti,
more
than
eight
centers
are
organized
and
managed
by
members
of our
churches.
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