CONCLUSION
HAITI INMUNE TO WESTERN UNIVERSALISM
Color cannot be understood except in relation
to the person who perceives it, physicist Pierre Demers wrote
in the Foreword to this book. He clearly confirms the relevance
of this essay. First of all, in fact, we thought it would be useful
to consider the civilizational (politico-religious) attitude of
the West toward the Blacks, before pointing out the deficiencies
of present-day science, which is predominantly Western, in its perception
of the Black Universe.
The Western political attitude toward the Blacks
has for many centuries been determined by the perverse ruler-servant,
master-slave, exploiter-exploited relationship. In order to normalize
its policy of enslaving Blacks, Judeo-Christian civilization went
so far as to use Christianity to legitimize what today we generally
call crimes against humanity, such as the racist slavery
peculiar to the West. That situation was facilitated by the fact
that the monotheistic religion, which had originally been universalist,
soon limited its horizons to the boundaries of the Western world,
while the other peoples which it thought it had attracted
seemed to find themselves there in spite of themselves. Some
might wonder whether the abandonment by the West of Christian universalism
does not explain that inability of Judeo-Christian civilization
to adopt a universalist attitude, not only in the political but
also in the scientific realm.
As a matter of fact, present-day science, dominated
for a few centuries by the West, can hardly claim to be universal,
since it is so deeply affected by the Westerners who perceive it.
These people have as we all know lost any authentically
universalist dimension. Did they not, by using and misusing the
Bible, attempt to prove the superiority of Western Whites over Blacks
and other colored peoples, limiting there too the vast universalist
horizons of science to the very boundaries of the West? Everything
seems to indicate that science is no longer universal; it is Western,
with all the consequences that implies for humanity and, in particular,
for the Black world.
In other words, the Western approach, the Western
way of thinking, is far from being scientific, neutral and objective;
it is subjective and distorting. Such subjectivity and distortion
manifest themselves still more obviously, as we have seen, in the
realm of colors, and more specifically when dealing with the concept
of black. One must therefore bring into play the social
sciences history, sociology, psychology, psychoanalysis,
political science, etc. to understand that Western handicap.
Indeed, as soon as it has to deal with black, Western
reasoning vacillates, making room for the irrational and its array
of fantasies.
The author of the Foreword to this book, a physicist,
under went a conversion in 1974, where by he would from then on
wholly devote himself to the study of colors. He says that he has
been attracted more and more strongly by the multidisciplinary and
deeply human nature of the study of colors. He states that the rational
comprehension of colors cannot have the necessary depth, unless
all the sciences are called upon: chemistry, biology, physiology,
physics, and mathematics. He even insists: Once more
the human aspect intervenes. Man is both the creator and the necessary
vehicle of all sciences. It is doubly true that there is no rational
knowledge of color outside of mankind. He thus admits, as
we do, though in a roundabout way, that the present understanding
of colors leaves much to be desired. Is it not strongly influenced
by the dominant contemporary civilization, polluted so long by prejudices
against peoples of color, especially Blacks?
Such a serious Western handicap obviously hinders
the forward march of universal science as well as that of all mankind.
Both are victims of a racist and therefore anti-scientific,
selfish and limited vision of the world. The case of Haiti,
to use an example with which we are very familiar, is a symptom
of the non-universalistic attitude of those who rule the world
the Westerners. Although it may still be possible to scientifically
correct the erroneous vision of blackness fairly quickly,
it is much more difficult to improve human behavior from one day
to the next, since mentalities evolve rather slowly. In the meantime,
we cannot help being aware that the West keeps dragging around its
heavy burden of anti-Black prejudice, and that attitude is detrimental
to both the Western and Black worlds.
That unfortunate situation has already been
denounced by the legitimate President of Haiti, Jean Bertrand Aristide.
Reacting courageously to the position of Pope John Paul II vis-à-vis
the Haitian problem,with a feeling of indignation, in his speech
at the United Nations General Assembly on September 29, 1992, he
reproaches the fact that being rejected by all the states
of the world, these criminals the Haitian putschists
have nevertheless been recognized by the Vatican, the only state
that has elected to give its blessing to crimes it should have condemned
in the name of the God of Justice and Peace. He also appropriately
asks a rather legitimate question: What would the Vaticans
attitude be, had Haiti been inhabited by white people? He
also wonders: What would the attitude of Pope John Paul II
have been, had Haiti been Polish? Better still, in another
speech delivered in Washington in January 1993, he unambiguously
denounces the perpetuation of the political and economic domination
of his country:
Will Haiti, at the threshold of the 21st
century, two hundred years after the Declaration of Human Rights,
keep living, as it did in the 18th century, in a master-slave relationship,
only the appearance of which has really changed, since 80 percent
of the people live in abject conditions, being deprived even of
the right to education, without speaking of the most basic freedoms?
How profound and serious these questions are!

Has not the West, in its relations with the
peoples of color, always supported rulers who are docile
slaves to itself, but tyrants to their own peoples? This was the
case in Haiti, first of all with the dictatorship of the Duvaliers,
and today with the military putschists of the September 30, 1991
coup. Obviously, Aristide does not at all correspond to the master-slave,
slave-tyrant model. Therein lies the explanation of the Wests
ambiguous attitude regarding his return to perform his legitimate
presidential functions
The
Western attitude concerning President Aristide and his country is
doubtless characterized by the deep hypocrisy which dictates the
behavior of the Western leaders. In fact, after paying lip service
to the exiled leader and his cause while still consolidating the
illegitimate military power in Haiti, all of a sudden Westerners,
fearing a possible massive Haitian immigration, showed a serious
interest in the return to power of the legitimate President, Jean
Bertrand Aristide. Nobody was fooled: the sudden humanitarian gesture
of the American President, William Jefferson Clinton or more
precisely, of the American establishment far from having
been dictated by universalistic principles, seems rather to have
resulted from what we call Western politico-cultural fantasies
concerning Blacks. The Haitian refugees or Boat People
were landing on American shores in increasing numbers. Were not
those refugees seen by American politicians as a veritable black
tide about to pollute the American whiteness?
The so-called humanitarian considerations claimed on that occasion
undoubtedly are due more to cultural fantasies than politics.

Suddenly, the legitimate Haitian leaders
charisma and credibility were perceived as a last hope against that
black tide which White America prefers to
keep in Haiti, away from U.S. shores. Is that not a prelude to irrational
behavior with regard to Western policies toward world migrations
and the inevitable meeting of the colored peoples with
the civilization of Judeo-Christian societies?
Be
that as it may, like present-day science, whose universalism is
now quite questionable, does not the reality of Western world politics
distance itself from universalism to plunge into a quasi-particularism
aiming only at the promotion and supremacy of the White world? President
Aristide is right when he quotes the universalist Greek philosopher
Anaxagoras, who states that the visible opens our eyes to
the invisible. Science, just like color, cannot be understood
outside of the person who perceives it.
Lucien Bonnet
This article was first published in the Montreal
daily, Le Devoir, on March 30, 1993, under the title: Science et
RÉalitÉ (Science and Reality). It was also published
in its entirety in La Presse, another Montreal daily, on April
23, 1993, under the title: Haiti versus les phantasmes politico-culturels
occidentaux (Haiti versus Western Politico-Cultural Fantasies).
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