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Voodoo and quakes in Haiti - Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

THE EDITOR: This year, African History Month is dedicated to understanding Haiti because there is so much misjudgment imposed on our Caricom neighbour. Imagine some otherwise intelligent people have assumed that Haiti suffers from natural disasters such as severe earthquakes because the country is a nation of voodoo devotees.

In fact, voodoo or vodun is an ancient West African faith that is still practised in Benin, formerly Dahomey. A BBC report in 2011, during the visit of Pope Benedict XVI, reported, 'Voodoo is more than a belief system, it is a complete way of life, including culture, philosophy, language, art, dance, music and medicine...Voodoo Day is a public holiday and there is a national Voodoo Museum.

'It has none of the negative connotations it has in the West and many of those who are officially Christian or Muslim also incorporate some voodoo elements into their beliefs, especially in times of crisis.

'People across West Africa, especially Togo, Ghana and Nigeria, hold similar beliefs but in Benin it is recognised as an official religion, followed by some 40 per cent of the population.'

And so too is voodoo highly regarded in Haiti. Christians, Roman Catholics in particular, move comfortably between the two faiths. It is the Hollywood-type portrayal of voodoo which has tainted our regard for that West African religion which played a major part in the movement for emancipation in Haiti.

Now in dealing with Haiti's earthquakes we have to look at the Haitian geology as well as the people's building practices. We may not be aware of these physical situations because in our school curriculum sufficient emphasis is not placed either on geography or geology.

Former ambassador Reginald Dumas commented on my recent Facebook post and noted, 'Where earthquakes in Haiti are concerned, the average Haitian knows nothing about tectonic plates, and in any case cannot afford an earthquake-resistant dwelling. In TT, we know that God is a Trini and will protect us, and in any case we also know nothing about tectonic plates.'

I remind readers that in 2004 the late United Nations secretary-general Kofi Annan appointed Dumas as his special adviser to help tackle Haiti's escalating political, economic and social turmoil.

In explaining the frequency of earthquakes in the area, the Miami Herald (August 16) stated, 'The island of Hispaniola, home to both Haiti and the Dominican Republic, straddles four tectonic plates in the Caribbean Ocean...Earthquakes occur along the boundaries of these tectonic plates, which make up the Earth's crust. These borders are called faults. Haiti lies at the intersection of the Caribbean plate and the Gonâve, Hispaniola, and North Hispaniola microplates...And it's 'caught in the crunch' between the Caribbean and North America plates, where sudden releases of energy in the crust as the two plates grind together cause earthquakes.'

The earthquake on January 12, 2011, which struck Port-au-Prince with a magnitude of 7.0,

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