Events & Activities
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Jews and Haitians, a forgotten history
Education
March 10, 2010, 5:30 pm
5151 Cote-Ste-Catherine Road
During the 11th Action Week Against Racism, from March 10th to March 21st, visit the exhibition "Jews and Haitians, a forgotten history". Twenty panels complement the permanent exhibition of the Montreal Holocaust Memorial Museum. This exhibition showcases the history of solidarity between Jews and Haitians and reflects on a shared destiny of the fight to exist.
Jews and Haitians, a forgotten history
The exhibition is divided in four sections which highlight the history of Haiti and the founding principles of the Haitian nation:
- Slavery in Saint-Domingue, the independence of Haiti in 1804,
- Jewish presence in the Caribbean and in Haiti,
- The reactions of intellectuals and of the State of Haiti to Nazism,
- The story of several Jewish survivors who benefited from Haiti's naturalization policies in the 1930s
Haïti and the Holocaust
After the accession to power of Hitler , the majority of Haitian intellectuals, such as Dantes Bellegarde and Jacques Roumain, condemned Nazism. The Haitian state did not only challenge Germany but defined possible actions against the perils faced by Jews. It naturalized Jews in Haitian consulates, accepted them as refugees and proposed to give shelter to 50,000 of them in Haiti.
This exhibition was conceived, designed and created before the earthquake of January 12th, 2010 with the Centre international de documentation et d'information haïtienne, caribéenne et afro-canadienne (CIDHICA), Images interculturelles, the Quebec Jewish Congress, the Alex et Ruth Dworkin Foundation and the coalition Fight Antisemitism Today.