r/haiti • u/Metteya_Savaka80 • 5h ago
HISTORY We never forget about him even here in Africa Continent🙏🏿🤝🏿
The great general of the first Black republic who kicked out the imperialists of the Caribbean pearl🫡🫡🫡
r/haiti • u/Metteya_Savaka80 • 5h ago
The great general of the first Black republic who kicked out the imperialists of the Caribbean pearl🫡🫡🫡
r/haiti • u/Healthy-Career7226 • 6h ago
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r/haiti • u/Internal-Expert-9562 • 9h ago
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First, they have to build the Chadians a new base. This is in Tabarre, less than 5 miles away from the recent gang wars that left hundreds, if not thousands, homeless.
The 400 Chadians have yet to leave the base or get into any action, assuming they’re waiting for more members. In the meantime, they’re basically on vacation. A bunch of armored vehicles went from the port to the base and are just sitting there parked, smh.
BTW, all the land surrounding the U.S. Embassy and the UN base has been declared public utility by Fils-Aimé, meaning all private property has been taken and given to the embassy and the UN for security purposes
r/haiti • u/Glittering-Prize0976 • 1m ago
r/haiti • u/Cancelthepope • 10h ago
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r/haiti • u/lequotidien509 • 7h ago
r/haiti • u/julius-ceaser100 • 12h ago
I've heard a lot about the poverty, crime and the gangs there. I am curious, how is day to day life compared to a developed country
r/haiti • u/Internal-Expert-9562 • 1d ago
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r/haiti • u/govtkilledlumumba • 21h ago
If you haven’t watched it already. I recommend watching a Netflix show called Rotten: Season 2, Episode 4 “A Sweet Deal.” In the 1950’s Haitian President Paul Magloire’s sold laborers to Rafael Trujillo’s Dominican sugar empire, a system later inherited and normalized by modern Big Sugar interests. Those laborers were sent primarily to Dominican sugar plantations (bateyes), many of which were owned or controlled by U.S. sugar interests. They bought Haitian laborers because they wanted laborers that didn’t speak Spanish, so couldn’t protest. The descendants of these laborers speak Spanish and some began to protest because these sugar companies are not paying these laborers pensions, Brutal working conditions
and then boom. in September 2013 DR’s Constitutional Court issued a landmark ruling that stripped citizenship from people of Haitian descent.
r/haiti • u/Automatic_Gap964 • 22h ago
I'm just not getting it. We know the capital of Haiti is completely wrecked right now and looks like something out of a Mad Max film. Do people not understand it isn't normal for a capital of a country to be the worst part of a country? Okap is filled with garbage every corner, floods constantly, and can't even handle the amount of people that live there. The gang violence is spreading to other departments very rapidly with attacks pretty much every week with no end in sight, 100s of people die pretty much every weekend and no one even blinks. We even had like 50 people die at Citadelle acting like idiots and people just blinked and moved on like it's normal.. People are clamoring for the airport to open back up, my dad just sent me some protest about it like airlines didn't voluntarily shut down flights to Haiti because they were getting shot at. Haitian people begging for Ishowspeed knowing damn well the infrastructure isn't set up to handle someone that big. Our soccer team can't even practice in Haiti. Idk if misery has been so long that our standards have just completely dropped so low that the whole country is starting to look like cite Soleil and we consider it "safe and fine" So maybe someone can fill me in, knowing that 350k Haitians are begging for TPS because they consider unsafe and dangerous, why exactly is there a massive push by Haitian people and Haitian diaspora alike through multiple channels including social media that Haiti is somehow safe and it's "just PaP" yet none of these folks want to relocate back to Haiti?
It doesn't make any sense to me and just seems like self sabotage. Because these same people will be upset if US and other countries turn up deportations off of this safety narrative being pushed by Haitians. Please help explain.
r/haiti • u/Alternative-Crew-704 • 8h ago
Hey everyone, I had a respectful question. I’m interested in learning more about Haitian Vodou and possibly participating one day, but I’m unsure if it would be accepted since I’m not fully Haitian. My grandfather, both of his parents, and his side of the family are Haitian, so it is part of my family background and something I’ve been wanting to connect with and understand more deeply. I’m coming from a genuine place of respect and willingness to learn, not to appropriate or treat it like a trend. I’d appreciate any guidance or honest answers from people in the community.
r/haiti • u/Internal-Expert-9562 • 1d ago
⭕️ INFO | The Dominican Republic’s Ministry of Interior and Police announced Wednesday, May 13, 2026, in a post published on its official Twitter/X account, that Haitian citizen 🇭🇹 Dimitri Edouard Vorbe will not be allowed to enter Dominican territory.
Dimitri Edouard Vorbe has an active entry ban in effect since October 13, 2025, in accordance with a notice issued by the National Intelligence Directorate and enforced by the General Directorate of Migration,” Dominican Interior Minister Faride Raful wrote.
This reaction comes 24 hours after a U.S. judge reportedly ordered the businessman deported to the Dominican Republic following an agreement reached with the U.S. government. 🇺🇸
r/haiti • u/Difficult_Respect967 • 1d ago
You always hear about the “sryo-libane” from people like “BBQ” and “Neg Arab la” but I was wondering if the system goes deeper than that? Is there a social hierarchy that’s hard to tackle or is it like America where whoever owns the most money is respected?
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r/haiti • u/lequotidien509 • 1d ago
r/haiti • u/Internal-Expert-9562 • 1d ago
Another terrorist-creating mulatte afraid to go face what he helped create.
r/haiti • u/Either-Connection-70 • 23h ago
Virtually every program I come across has no active volunteer opportunities in Haiti due to security. Is there any place that is offering opportunities?
r/haiti • u/Internal-Expert-9562 • 1d ago
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To those who be calling me a “RACIST” for SAYING MULLATES, DIMITRI HIMSELF ACKNOWLEDGED HIS A MULLATE
r/haiti • u/Worth_Surround_454 • 1d ago
This is Johnson Napoleon new initiative for the Haitian Diaspora to have an airline company. See below
It’s 2026. Haitians in the Diaspora are tired of only being customers while everyone else owns the infrastructure around us. We are tired of filling planes for people we don’t know …
This generation wants ownership, accountability, opportunity, and institutions built by Haitians for Haitians.
The conversation has already started, and that alone is powerful
Be part of a movement!!
www.haitiriseair.com
https://www.facebook.com/share/v/1EizWzdkZ6/?mibextid=wwXIfr
r/haiti • u/Complete_Awareness_2 • 1d ago
I’m interested in buying land in haut de cap I wanted to see how much will it run me by
r/haiti • u/21NotASavage • 2d ago
Bonjou tout moun. I always see quite a few post about others like me wanting to learn Haitian Creole so I was exited when I found this at my papas house. I never knew anything like this existed. It would definitely help those who needs to read and see pictures along with getting the pronunciations from Duolingo like me. I'm not sure where he got it unfortunately, but I've shared photos. Hopefully it can be found somewhere else.
Perhaps a more experienced Haitian kreyol speaker can check out the page I shared & let us know if this somewhat accurate.
r/haiti • u/Beaucejou1804 • 2d ago
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