Haitian Flag
A reading from Sylvaine Diouf’s well recieved book, “Servants of Allah”: African Muslims Enslaved in the Americas. Pg. 150-153.
The Muslim Factor in the Haitian Revolution
‘What the French did not realize was that their most profitable colony, Saint-Dominique (now Haiti), was fertile ground for Muslim maroons and rebels. The island had always had numerous maroon communities, and an average of a thousand runaways were advertised every year. The notices posted by the plantation owners, who listed the disappeared give a measure of the place of the Muslims among the maroons. Although large numbers of Muslims had been forcibly baptized, some had retained their original names, such as Ayouba, Tamerlan, Aly, Soliman, Lamine, Thisiman, Yaya, Belaly, and Salomon who appear in the notices. Female runaways, such as Fatme, Fatima, and Hayda, are also mentioned.
The Africans fled individually and, more usually, in groups. For instance, twelve Mandingo men, aged twenty-two to twenty-six, fled one night in 1783 from their owner’s house in Port-au-Prince. They were all professionals—masons, carpenters, and bakers.
It is not known if some maroon communities were entirely composed of Muslims, but major communities had Muslim leaders. Yaya, also called Gillot, was a devastating presence in the parishes of Trou and Terrier Rouge, before he was executed in September 1787. In Cul-de-Sac, an African Muslim named Halaou led a veritable army of thousands of maroons.
Part II
These Muslims were well known and feared, but the most famous of the pre-
Revolution maroon leaders was without a doubt Francois Macandal. Macandal was a field hand, employed on a sugar plantation. One day, as he was working the sugar mill, one of his hands got caught on the wheel and had to be severed. As he could no longer cut the cane, he became a cattleman, later running away. For eighteen years Macandal was at large, living in the mountains but making frequent incursions on the plantations to deliver death. He organized a network of devoted followers and taught the slaves how to make poison, which they used against their owners or against other slaves in order to ruin the slaveholders. His reputation was such that a French document of 1758 estimates—with much exaggeration, no doubt—the number of deaths he provoked at 6,000 over three years. In eighteenth-century Saint-Domingue, poison was called macandal.
An African born in “Guinea,” Francois Macandal was in all probability a Mandingo. He came from an illustrious family and had been sold to the Europeans as a war captive. He was a Muslim who “had instruction and possessed the Arabic language very well,” emphasized nineteenth-century Haitian historian Thomas Madiou, who gathered information through the veterans of the Haitian Revolution. Macandal was most likely a marabout, for French official documents describe him as being able to predict the future and as having revelations. He was also well known for his skills in amulet making—so much so that gris-gris were called macandals. In addition, he was said to be a prophet, which indicates that he was perceived as having a direct connection to God. Thus besides being a marabout he may have been a sharif, a descendant of the Prophet Muhammed (Peace Be Upon Him) ; but this is only speculation, as no evidence exists exists to confirm or inform this hypothesis.
Part III
Francois Macandal was much more than simply a maroon leader. He had a long-term plan for the island and saw the maroons as the “center of an organized resistance of the blacks against the whites,” stressed an eighteenth-century French document. He used practical symbolism to explain his vision for Saint-Domingue, Here are the first inhabitants of Saint -Domingue, they were yellow. “Here are the present inhabitants”—and he showed the white handkerchief—“here, at last, are those who will remain the masters of the island; it is the black handkerchief.”
To turn this prophecy into reality, Macandal planned to poison the wells of the city of Cap-Français. Once the slaveholders were dead or in the middle of convulsions, the “old mand from the mountain,” as Macandal was sometimes called, followed by his captains and lieutenants, whould attack the city and kill the remaining whites. Before he could launch his assault, however, a slave betrayed him and he was caught. Tied up in a room with two guards, he somehow managed to escape. If he had killed the men with the pistol that lay on a table between them, Macandal may have been able to remain at large. But he had not. The guards gave the alarm, and he was caught again, this time by dogs.
Part IV
On January 20, 1758, Macandal was burned at the stake. The pole he was tied to collapsed, and the crowd saw this incident as a sign of his immortality. He had told his followers that as he was put to death, he would turn into a fly and fly away. The executioner asked to kill him with a sword as the coup de grâce, but his request was denied by the attorney general. Macandal was tied to a plank and thrown into the fire again.
The maroon leader Macandal can best be described as a marabout-warrior. He used his occult knowledge and his charisma to gain allies to wage war against his enemy, and he participated in the action personally.
Part V
Another popular leader who attained quasi-mythical status in Haitian history was Boukman. Very little is known about him. He was not born in Saint-Domingue but came from Jamaica, smuggled by a British slaver. As a slave, he became professional and rose to the rank of driver, later becoming a coachman. Using a position that allowed him to travel from plantation to plantation, as well as his charismatic personality, he had built a network of followers in the north. He definitely entered Haitian history when he galvanized a large assembly of slaves gathered on the night of August 14, 1791, in a clearing in the forest of Bois-Caiman. During this voodoo ceremony, Boukman launched the general revolt of the slaves with a speech in Creole that has remained famous. He denounced the God of the whites, who asked for crime, whereas the God of the Slaves wanted only good. “But this God who is so good, orders you to seek revenge,” he pounded. “He will direct our arms, he will assist us. Throw away the image of the God of the whites who is thirsty for our tears and listen to freedom which talks to our hearts.”
A week later, two hundred sugar estates and eighteen hundred coffee plantations were destroyed by the slaves, who were said to have cut the throats of a thousand slaveholders. At the beginning of November, Boukman was shot dead by an officer as he was fighting a detachment of the French army with a group of maroons. His severed head was fixed on a pole and exposed on a public square in Cap-Français.
There are indications that Boukman was a Muslim. Coming from Jamaica, he had an English name that was rendered phonetically in French by Boukman or Boukmann; in English, however, it was Bookman. Boukman was a “man of the book,” as the Muslims were referred to even in Africa—in Sierra Leone, for example, explained an English lieutenant, the Mandingo were “Prime Ministers” of every town, and they went “by the name bookman.” It is likely that Boukman was a Jamaican Muslim who had a Koran, and that he got his nickname from this.
Part VI
As many Muslims had done, and would continue to do, he had climbed the echelons of the slaves’ power structure and had reached the top. He was trusted, professional slave. He was also at the top of the slaves’ hierarchy in another way: he was recognized as a priest. He had passed down in history as a voodoo priest, but this does not mean that he was such. Because the Muslim factor largely has been ignored, any religious leader of African origin in the Caribbean has been linked to voodoo or orbeah.
Part VII
There is thus compelling evidence that two major leaders in Haitian history—Macandal and Boukman—were not only Muslims, they did not embark on a jihad, but they were the leaders of the slave population, irrespective of religion. What they provided was military expertise coupled with spiritual and occult assurance that the outcome of the fight would be positive. Both skills were of extreme value, each in its own way; but put together, they conferred on these leaders the aura of mythical figures. Because of their marabout knowledge they could galvanize the masses, push them to action and to surpass themselves.
Other marabouts, and the Muslims in general, played a crucial role in the Haitian revolts and ultimately in the Haitian Revolution through their occult skills, literacy, and military traditions. The marabouts provided protections to the insurgents in the form of gris-gris, as Colonel Malenfant recorded, and the Muslims used Arabic to communicate during uprisings. Through their role and contribution have not been acknowledged, the Muslims were essential in the success of the Haitian Revolution’
P.S. War on Islam, war on Black people…do we see a nexus here?


If only we could get everyone to read brother!
I heard Haiti is a beautiful country.
i need to how is work because iam from haiti to
I from haiti to but i love this country
Haiti is my country
Haiti is the best one
I was born in here and spend all my life into
wathever they say, wathever they think, I will always say it loudly “I’m HAITIAN” and I’m proud of it
All my Haitian people out there dont be shine about where you from and say it loudly where you from
I for one am tired of all the negative talk between the diffrent race’s.
the only way it will ever end, is if we start with love of one another.
May you be a source for the positive.
This is all fabricated, the Muslims issues within the Haitian revolution and whoever is fabricating this to make a case for the Muslims and eventually JIHAD in Haiti. I am advising you to stop this nonsense because, it will not work out here in this region my brother. We have enough on our plate and we will defeat any such intention. Haiti will not because the ground to destroy the United States of America, Boukman did not launch any revolt in Haiti, He was part of the Assembly and as a Voodoo Priest, He then stabbed a Pig and gave everyone to drink the blood as a sign of solidarity to be part of the revolution. Boukman has contributed to the fight but was not any such leader and there was no such thing as Muslims influence and whoever who want to complicate Haitians lives and use Haiti as a hidden ground for terrorist will be defeated.. take it to the bank… We will not be part of the messes created by them folks associated with the killings and destroying lives..
While, I will admit that neither Boukman nor Makandal were muslims. I think that it cannot be denied that people who were at least formerly muslims were there. For example, Gilles Bambara and the many other people from mali and senegal. Also, as you see, countries that are known as islamic countries are doing much better than haiti. For example, Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates, Algeria. Just to name a few. Also, I believe islam is a much better belief for haiti than Koupe tet, boule kay. I believe it to be the perfect religion.
This is all fabricated, the Muslims issues within the Haitian revolution and whoever is fabricating this to make a case for the Muslims and eventually JIHAD in Haiti. I am advising you to stop this nonsense because, it will not work out here in this region my brother. We have enough on our plate and we will defeat any such intention. Haiti will not become the ground to destroy the United States of America, Boukman did not launch any revolt in Haiti, He was part of the Assembly and as a Voodoo Priest, He then stabbed a Pig and gave everyone to drink the blood as a sign of solidarity to be part of the revolution. Boukman has contributed to the ceremony they had in Bois Caiman but, was not any such leader and there was no such thing as Muslims influence and whoever who want to complicate Haitians lives and use Haiti as a hidden ground for terrorist will be defeated.. take it to the bank… We will not be part of the messes created by them folks associated with the killings and destroying lives..
Unfortunately too many have been quick to try to mold Haitian history around their own agendas and as such have remained oblivious to some very clear facts. Boukman was not Boukman, he was Book Man as he came from Jamaica where the language used was English. That means that he was being referred to as the Man of the Book not any French interpretation which some may have inserted to divert attention from the Islamic link. Secondly, Bois=Woods/forest (like Bois Verna; Bois Patate; Bois Moquette; etc…); Kay=house; Iman=Arabic word for faith or Imam=spiritual leader. No water in the area so we’re not referring to Caiman here. Sounds the same but is physically impossible. Third, any cursory investigation will reveal that the north and west coasts of Africa during the era of the slave trade were inhabited by Muslims. There are many Haitian names which are Arabic such as Ademar, Audmar, Saieh, etc… There is also a cemetery in Jacmel which predates the Haitian revolution which is filled with Arabic named deceased individuals. According to the book “They Came Before Colombus,” by Dr. Ivan Von Sertima, there were Black people living on the “new world” islands prior to Colombus landing. There is the story of Mansa Musa which should prove quite informative as to whether there was a Muslim presence here in the New World prior to Colombus. Voodoo or vodun is commonly recognized in Western African nations as being more a series of cultural practices than being a religion. How did it cross the Atlantic and become one then? Do you really believe that Mohammed Atta’s passport could have survived a crash and the resulting fire to be found intact on the street after the planes hit the WTC? Why was that told to the American people and the world? Did you know that cell phone stabilization at 35,000 ft was not made possible until after an experiment in August 2004 done by QUALCOMM and American Airlines? Why were the people made to believe that the passengers aboard the jetliner that went down in Pennsylvania were communicating with family and friends via cell phone? Why did NORAD stand down instead of taking counter measures against at least the 2nd, 3rd, and 4th airplanes? Why was the now recognized to be a lie excuse that Saddam Hussein was in possession of WMD used to justify going to war though the entire world civilian population petitioned that this war not be started? Why were they ignored even in the face of evidence that the excuse was a lie? What world are you living in? During the first Gulf War, Saddam Hussein solicited the U.S. ambassador in dealing with the Kuwaitis slant drilling into his oil reserves. He was told that the U.S. as a matter of diplomatic principle does not interfere in border disputes between sovereign nations. The rest is, as they say, history. Why is there selective acceptance as to what nations hold the right to nuclear power? Why does the biblical story of Abraham, Sarah, Hagar, Ismael, and Isaac portray Ismael as being a little boy when he and his mother left Sarah’s house instead of showing him to be the 16 to 17 year old young man that he actually was? If Moses and David were holy men, why is it acceptable that they waged war but unacceptable that Muhammad waged war? If an Islamist was to attack you, wouldn’t you feel justified in returning the aggression? Well why is it that when Islamists are attacked, they aren’t supposed to retaliate? Get a life and stop bowing your head yes to everything that you hear. It’s not all true even if you’ve read it what you consider the most trusted source. You don’t really have a grip on reality because the reality that you believe in is missing CONTEXT! Keep trying, you will be blessed with truth in knowledge someday….peace be upon you.
I’M FROM HAITI BUT I WAS BORN HERE,BUT I PROUD TO BE HAITIAN,THERE SOME PEOPLE AT THERE ARE AFRAID TO SAY THAT THEY’RE HAITIAN BUT I’M NOT
http://www.shalomisraelite-m-yeh.com/
Haitians are neither voodoo because voodoo are a French devils worshipping, we are not from France. we are neither Christians,nor Muslims nor Jewish,nor any other caucasians devils worshiping religions. People that are doing bad to others are sons of devils. We are the ancestors of “Jesus” the ancient israelites.
I’m from YehremiYAH, Haiti any body from Yahkmel?
hi i love HAITI!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
i love Haiti. I was born there!!!
hello
moslems brother.
http://www.turkfeed.com/forum/index.php
hello http://www.turkfeed.com/forum/index.php
Well I’m a Haitian Muslim i went to school in Haiti. They do not teach this in history class in Haiti. because it’s govern by the french system. Thank you very much brother for the article . As for those who have ignorant comments please keep it to yourself. They are a lot of things that Haitian do that Muslims do, but unless you are Muslim you would not know why you are doing it. like for example we say ” si Dieu vle” (creole) (insha’alah” ) (arabic) by the will of God. Americans don’t say by the will god when they say tomorrow. they French don’t say unless they are Muslim.
this is just one example there are a lot more. all i’m saying is before putting any comments in a board make sure you know what you are talking about or else you will look ignorant. You can take the knowledge and ponder on it or keep it moving.
My love for Haiti is infinite. YES, i am Haitian! I am proud to be part of such virgin beauty, a land that i can call my own. In time of stress or sadness i can always retreat to my hometown. where the lush greenery and blue ocean brings lavender to my scent. “Haiti cherie” YES- The pearl of the Antilles
Its my country of birth and I love it like I love my girl for ever and ever again.
You got it wrong. This is the reverse. Muslims and Catholics went to Africa long before Columbus’ terrorist attack on the island of Haiti. They did so to convert Africans, turn them against families and friends in order to steal African Knowledge and Resources. (Does that sound familiar?)
So, during the time of the slave system, Islam and Catholicism have made some inroad in their conversation attempts in Africa. However, Just like in Haiti. when the bourgeoisie/elite pretends not to practice Vodou, those africans converted to catholicism and islam taken into the slave system in Haiti were still Vodou practitioners. The Haitian Revolution gave them back the freedom to be who they really are. Remember in the Haitian Revolution many Africans nashons were participants and they were all united and the Islamic (Vodousi) africans were the minority
Although those Africans (islamic Vodousi) in Haiti kept some aspect of islam in their music and so on as other nanshon did , islam has nothing to do with the Haitian Revolution. The Haitian Revolution is an African Vodou revolution and it remains as such.
It is appalling in this age of Learning, critical thinking, that some people do not take the time to read their AFRICAN HISTORY written from African people, and they rather dwell themselves in the continuous mental colonization to vomit Haitian history from the views of some christian or muslims colonized mentality that took their ancestors in Bondage in a slsve system.
Sorry Sir, Go back to Africa and realize at last where you came from, where Humanity began, and created the first religion in the world Vodou.
Haiti Chérie still is proud of his ancestral tradition
Ayida Wèdo