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UNESCO COURIER . K» 2 - 1954
3 AT ONE STROKE
10 CHARTERS AND TRUE. FREEDOM Many are the countries that have resorted to arms to win their
Constitutional liberty and its application.
independence, and on numerous occasions slave peoples have
By Dantes Bellegarde.
risen up to Win their emancipation. But there is no example,
12 HAITI AND THE UNITED NATIONS
apart from Haiti, of a people who achieved both in one single
Plans for greater prosperity.
stroke.
By Jean F. Brierre.
14 HAITI TODAY It is these unusual circumstances and this great example of a
In text and image. struggle for human rights that have prompted the Editors of
The Courier to devote a large portion of this issue to Haiti, in
OTHER ARTICLES AND FEATURES place of the monthly theme devoted to an important world
18 THE GROWTH OF OUR CITIES
problem in education, the arts or science.
Three hitherto unpublished maps and the story of a Haiti has many claims upon the attention of the world: it was
century and a half of urban development. By Charles the first independent Negro state in the modern world ; it was
Morale and Jacques Bertin.
the second free state in the Western Hemisphere ; it has
22 TV PASSPORT TO EUROPE
answered the question often posed in the past whether a nation
Eight countries link up their programmes.
ruled by blacks could long endure ; it has emerged from a long¬
By Henry R. Cassirer.
standing isolation to join the comity of nations, welcome the aid
24 HAWAII: RACIAL CROSSROADS OF THE PACIFIC
of foreign experts, pursue a policy of enlightenment in educa¬
The Islands of racial harmony.
By Harry L. Shapiro. tion, public health improvement, soil conservation, and agricul¬
26 SCIENCE CHRONICLE
tural and general economic development. Haiti is today open
It was colder when we were younger. to the dynamic influences which accompany a changing
By Gerald Wendt. economy.
28 HISTORY BOOKS AND THE VIKINGS As Haiti's President, Paul Eugène Magloire has firmly put
A new look at the "bloodthirsty nomads it : "Haiti has shown by its struggle for liberty and progress
of the North". By Marcel Vanhamme. that the black race and small nations can... achieve a status
29 ASSIGNMENT: SOLOMON ISLANDS equal to that of any other human group. Haiti has given the lie
A teacher's unusual experiences. to those who pretend that certain races are unfit for liberty,
By H. W. Gaudin.
equality and self-government."
34 FROM THE UNESCO NEWSROOM
When in 1947 Unesco launched its world-wide campaign for
Brief notes on education, science, culture.
belter standards of living- through a combined altack on ignor¬
ance, poverty and disease, it was Haiti that ofl'ercd one of
its most desolate areas the Marbial Valley as a testing
Published monthly by
ground. Here, by trial and error, new educational techniques
The Department of Mass Communication of the United Nations
and methods were evolved and new paths broken, through
Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization.
the combined efforts of the United Nations and its Specialized
Editorial Offices
Agencies working directly with Haitian officials and the Haitian
Unesco, 19, Avenue Kleber, Paris 16, France.
people. This was one of the UN's earliest large-scale joint
Editor-in-Chief efforts of its kind, and in a sense served as a forerunner of the
Sandy Koffler. idea which was later to develop inlo the- expanded programme
of technical assistance to the underdeveloped nations of
Associate Editors
the world.
English Edition: Ronald Fenton
French Edition: Alexandre Leventis Haiti is a land of many contrasts. It is a land of poverty, and
Spanish Edition: José De Benito faces enormous problems of education, health improvement and
* rural development. But it is also a happy land. Her people
wear a gay and smiling countenance, love to sing and dance and
Individual articles not copyrighted ma/ be reprinted from THE COURIER but
must be accompanied by the following credit line: "Reprinted from UNESCO
laugh. Although poor in worldly goods, the peasants have three
COURIER". Signed articles reprinted must carry the author's name. priceless possessions : freedom, a home and a plot of land.
Unsolicited manuscripts cannot be returned unless accompanied by an intep-
' national reply coupon covering postage. Time and the exuberance of both the land and its people have
Signed articles express the opinions of the authors and do not necessarily healed many of the deep scars of slavery, devastation and vio¬
represent the opinions of Unesco or those of the editors of THE COURIER.
Annual subscription rates of THE COURIER: 6/-, or S 1.50 or 300 French frs.
lence which darkened Haiti's history for so long. Today the
MC. 53.1 79. A. hard-won peace and freedom are beginning to bear fruit and
give promise of great progress in Haiti in the futu:e.
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From Slave
Colony to
Nationhood
by Alexandre Leventis
WHEN George III, King of England, and described it thus in writing to his Small of stature, the Arawáks were a
asked one of his admirals to de¬ patrons Isabella of Castile and Ferdi¬ sedentary and peaceful people. Al¬
scribe Haiti to him, the admiral nand of Aragon. though they were skilled weavers of
crumpled a sheet of paper into a ball The great navigator had set out from cotton and lived by hunting, fishing and
and, holding it out to his sovereign to Palos in Andalusia with three caravels agriculture, they went about almost
see, said, "'There it is, Sire". The story and ninety-eight companions on August
naked. Columbus described them as
may not be true, for it is also told of "gentle beings, hospitable... curious and
3, 1492, and on December 6, after having
Puerto-Rico, with Queen Isabella asking landed at the Bahamas and at Cuba, he merry, walking. in beauty..." These In¬
a Spanish admiral to describe it. All the sighted the large island which the In¬ dians were already playing a form of
same, it fits the facts; seen from the air dians had told him existed to the east. football using a ball 'made of crude
the island appears a mountainous mass rubber which they called a bastos, and
"Everywhere there you find gold and
furrowed by valleys running in every untold treasure", they said. which they hit mostly with their knees.
direction. Indeed, there is a Haitian
Gold was, in fact, one of the presents On the whole they were cheerful peo¬
saying, "Behind : the mountains there
given to the sailors from the Santa Ma¬ ple, who when not keeping up their
are other mountains" and the name
ria, the Pinta and the Nina by the In¬ gaiety by singing did so just as effect¬
"Haiti" in the language of the Arawak
dians of Arawak stock who inhabited the ively by drinking onycou, - a beverage
Indians means "mountainous country"
island. Welcomed with open arms, made from fermented fruit juice. The
or "high land."
Christopher Columbus and his men had gods they worshipped were the sun, the
Christopher Columbus, dazzled by the no difficulty in taking possession of the moon, the sky, the stars, and they were
beauty of the. landscape when, for the island in the name of the Queen of Cas¬ so fond of mameys, a succulent island
first time, he saw the wonderful bay tile. Columbus called it "La Isla Espa¬ fruit, that their conception of paradise
which he named St.Nicholas, exclaimed, ñola", whose Latinized form "'Hispa- was a place where one did nothing but
"Es una maravilla!" (It is a wonder!), niola" was later adopted in English. eat mameys all day. When the Span¬
iards landed there, Haiti was divided
into five small kingdoms governed by
LIKE A GRIM CYCLOPS, the fortress of King Henri dominates land, sea and sky from its rocky promon¬ "caciques", who combined the roles of
tory called Bonnet à PEvêque (Bishop's Bonnet). It was armed with 365 weighty bronze cannon dragged political and military chieftains, priests
by hand up a winding mountain trail. It once held enough provisions to supply 10,000 soldiers during a and doctors.
year's siege. (Photo Haitian National Tourist Office.)
Christmas Day 1492 was a disastrous
one for Columbus. His flagship Santa .
Maria drifted onto a coral reef in Acul
Bay and was wrecked. But this paved
the way for the founding of the first
American colony. "Because it is certain"
wrote Columbus In his Journal, '"that if
I had not run aground here, I should
have kept out to sea without anchoring
in this place... Neither would I have left
people here on this voyage".
This first colony was founded near
what is_ now the town of Cap Haïtien
and a "fortress was built with salvage
from the Santa Maria. When Columbus
set sail for Spain in January 1493 he left
behind 42 colonists. But when he
returned in November of 'the same year
bearing the titles of Admiral and Viceroy
of the Indies, with seventeen ships and
1,500 volunteers attracted by the thought
of gold and adventure, Columbus found
the fort destroyed and the colonists slain.
However gentle and hospitable the
Arawaks may have been, they objected
to being pillaged and had finally taken
counter measures.
HAITI (Continued.)
ALEXANDRE PETION
He had been a slave for nearly From childhood Dessalines The son of freed slaves, Chris¬ In the first uprisings Pétlon
fifty years when t.'.e insurrec¬ rebelled against his life as a tophe was born In the English became famous for his calm
tion of the slaves broke out In slave. Punishment for disobe¬ West Indies and became one of courage and chivalry. Later he
Saint-Domingue In 1791. In dience merely hardened his Toussaint's leading generals. opposed Toussaint, was exiled
the next eleven years he be¬ resolve tofightagalnsthls mas¬ After the death of Dessalines to France but returned to |oln
came one of the most talked- ters. At the head of the army he was elected president, but Dessalines and ensure final
of men In the world. Self- of Saint-Domingue he helped refused to accept the office, victory and independence. He
educated, he was to show high Toussaint to repulse the Span¬ considering It to be merely became Haiti's first president,
military talents and political iards and expel the English. an honorary one. He therefore gave sanctuary and aid to Bo¬
astuteness. By 1797 he was After Toussamt's fall, Dessa¬ proclaimed himself king and livar In his struggle for Latin
supreme leader In Salnt-Do- lines led the Haitians to final reigned in the north until his America's emancipation, estab¬
. mingue. He was eventually victory and independence. Ap¬ death In 1820. He ruled with lished the basis of Haiti's edu¬
captured and imprisoned in pointed Governor-General for iron discipline but he was cational system, and was the
France where he died in 1803. life, he took the title of emperor an able administrator. He founder of Haitian rural de¬
Wordsworth wrote a moving in 1804. He was killed in an established schools, built mocracy by creating land re¬
sonnet to him for strengthening ambush in 1806 before the ad¬ roads, developed agriculture forms. At his death the entire
human faith In "man's uncon¬ ministrative reforms he planned and industry, promoted arts nation mourned the "little
querable mind." were achieved. and sciences. father" they had lost.
which followed is comparable in horror cres had come to an end. Saint-Domin¬ Dessalines solemnly proclaimed the
only to the butchering of the Negroes gue was making its own laws, main¬ former colony of Saint-Domingue inde¬
which followed the suppression of this taining its own army, and negotiating pendent and the first independent Negro
first rebellion. treaties with foreign powers. A State in the world assumed its former
Whites and mulattoes were sharply committee of seven white planters and name of Haiti.
divided in their loyalties, the former three mulattoes drew up a new consti¬ The Haitian nation, however, still
seeking to hold on to their privileges, the tution abolishing slavery and making remained to be built. But built on
latter inclined to favour the abolition of Toussaint Governor-General for life.
what? On Independence Day the nation
. slavery if only for the sake of their own Napoleon was infuriated at the me¬ was nothing but' a "'herd of slaves who
safety. Some of the more die-hard teoric rise of the "gilded African" as he had suddenly acquired their freedom".
colonists blindly called 'on the English called Toussaint, and resolved to crush No more than 350,000 people remained
then at war with France for support, him. He sent the largest fleet and most out of the 530,000 who had lived in
and the situation was further compli¬ powerful expeditionary force that had Saint-Domingue in 1792. Nothing was
cated by the fact that the Spanish ever crossed the Atlantic to Saint-Do¬
left of Haiti's past wealth and prosper¬
hostile to both the French and the mingue. The war of independence had ity. The rich plantations had dis¬
English were supplying the rebels with begun. appeared in the smoke of the incendiary
arms and poised on the eastern border. torch during the fierce scorched-earth
Three commissioners had been sent Birth of a nation war of liberation.
from Paris to restore order. On August The whole structure of the nation had
29, 1793, one of them, Sonthonax, pro¬ AFTER three months of furious to be built, new institutions established,
claimed the abolition of slavery in the morale, ambition and the desire to work
fighting, marked by epic moments
north in order to pacify the rebels and affirmed. "The master does not work;
of heroism by Toussaint's officers
win support against the invading armies to be free is not to work", was the ter¬
and men, both sides were exhausted and
of Spain and England. The decree was rible gospel bequeathed by the colonial
a truce agreed upon. Shortly afterwards
later extended to the western and system to the freed Negroes. ,
Toussaint was invited to a conference.
southern regions of Saint-Domingue. For over twenty years, until Haitian
In the course of a meal he was seized,
The French would probably have "been bound and swiftly shipped off to France. independence was officially recognized
defeated if help had not come from a Haiti never saw him again. Less than by the French in 1825, Haiti remained in
black ex-slave, Toussaint Louverture, a year later, in April 1803, he died of complete isolation constantly fearing the
who offered his troops to the French cold and starvation in a dungeon high possible return of the French. This
General in the colony and finally drove - in the mountains near the Franco- ' kept the whole nation in arms and
the English and the Spaniards but of Swiss border. seriously retarded efforts at organization.
Saint-Domingue. The fall of Toussaint was followed by It is hardly surprising therefore that
"The First of the Blacks" as Toussaint under such circumstances the unity of
the Terror,, with rebels .executed en
was called had been a slave for over 40 masse. These executions were answered the Haitian people was not achieved
years before the insurrection and lived by guerilla warfare and then by a full- immediately and that several decades
only eleven after it, but in that short scale uprising led by Jean-Jacques Des- were needed to complete the work begun
space of time he became one of the most salines, Henry Christophe and Alexandre by Dessalines on 1 January, 1804.
talked of men in the world. Pétion. Armed with everything from .As one of Haiti's great historians has
By 1797, Toussaint had become the scythes to rifles their troops fought sa¬ pointed out, "there is certainly not one
supreme leader in Saint-Domingue, his vagely. But the French army which had among the modern states which started
authority disputed by only one rival, the been largely consumed in the battle under such adverse conditions. But the
mulatto General Rigaud whom he against Toussaint was now also being Haitian nation no longer presents the
quickly vanquished after a brief conflict. destroyed by disease. In four months aspect of the amorphous mob 'of 1804.
By the time Napoleon came to power two 18,000 soldiers and 50 Generals were It has created its own institutions and
years later he had achieved independ¬ wiped out by yellow fever. The French today it possesses all the elements which
ence from France in all but name. commander, Leclerc fell ill and died. will give it a definite opportunity to de¬
He had taken' over most of the On November 15, 1803, white authority velop. It has planters, skilled workers,
functions of government from the on Saint-Domingue was ended forever. industrial workers, traders, and an intel¬
French; under him anarchy and massa And on the first day of January 1804, lectual class of its own. "
KzjékMâqbe
by Jean Price-Mars
CULTURAL ASPECTS
OF LIFE IN HAITI
AMID the tremendous birth pangs It is therefore clear that the real
of the new world which was wealth of San Domingo resided in the
engendered by the ideological economic power of its slave population.
movement of the eighteenth century and It was, in fact, at once the condition and
found expression in two revolutions the consequence of the slaves', existence.
the American Revolution of 1774 and the When, in 1790, those slaves rose up and
French Revolution of 1789 some of the demanded the unconditional restoration
strangest, most paradoxical and most of their former status as free men, they
unexpected events occurred in the West were, in our opinion, initiating the
Indies. greatest revolution the world had ever
Saint-Domingue, the wealthiest and seen a revolution whose success
most flourishing of the French colonies, depended upon the savage annihilation
rebelled against France. And after a of everything that could serve as a
struggle which lasted 14 years, amid ruin, reminder of the former system of slavery.
destruction and catastrophe, its people
declared their independence.
No virgin soil
But who were these people ?
Were they the owners of the plan¬ "P UT the destruction was only of a
tations where sugar-cane, coffee and JJ material nature. For in any event
indigo were plentifully produced ? Were this new society was born under the spi¬
they the rich aristocrats, the pompous ritual sign of Western civilization, of
bourgeois, the arrogant government which France was at that time the most
officials who had set up sugar factories, brilliant representative ; and to that
rum distilleries, coffee factories and tan¬ civilization it was indissolubly bound.
neries and were drawing enormous From its former mother country it
profits from them ? Were they the rank borrowed, as occasion arose, a super¬
and file of the comparatively poor the structure of language, political consti¬
labourers, tradespeople or craftsmen " tution, administrative organization,
bitterly resentful of their subordination manners, customs, and so on. The
to the privileged classes ? Were they, result was a phenomenal feat of socio¬
in short, the members of the European logical mimetism accomplished by a
minority, which totalled over 30,000 ? magnificent effort of adaptation and
redemption to which Michelet, that seer
Not at all. Those embarking upon this
incredible adventure were the amor¬ among historians, paid tribute by refer¬
ring to the new nation as "black
phous mass of 600,000 black slaves who
France".
had been brought from Africa in the
course of three centuries of slave trad¬ Can it be said however, that this deli¬
berate transmutation took the form of
ing, to be used as tools in promoting
the colony's prosperity. The outstand¬ complete "integration"?
ing fact about their existence was that By no means. And we may be glad of
the fact.
they were regarded, not as human beings
whose individual merits served to For such a course of events would have '
reinforce those of the rest of the com¬ been contrary to reason. We must
munity and so increase its collective remember that we are dealing here with
value, but as mere instruments, whose human beings and that human willpower
only useful purpose was to contribute to alone is not always enough to bring about
the development and exploitation of change simply because it is wanted or
France's wealthiest overseas possession. needed. Besides, the Negro community
In the land of their slavery they had
of Saint-Domingue which in 1804 became
. all, it is true, been subjected to the same
Real wealth the State of Haiti, did not consist of
physical and moral suffering, which
homogeneous elements brought across
ultimately led them to unite their
it was that while, according to the Atlantic en bloc with no past and
demands in a single outburst of rage.
Mr. Barbé de Marbois, the last Fi¬ no history. Thus this was no virgin
nancial Administrator of Saint-Domin¬
That was the miracle resulting from the
soil for experimentation providing -a
revolutionary era which provided' the
gue, the total wealth of the colony convenient foundation for whatever
atmosphere, the opportunity and the
amounted in 1790 to 1,487,840,000 livres artificial structure the fancy of would- moment. But was it not to be feared
tournois equivalent, as calculated be nation builders might conceive.
that, victory once gained, tribal differ¬
by an economic expert in 1938, to It consisted of men scattered through¬ ences would revive ?
5 275,537,487,50 (gold standard) the out the length and breadth of the This did not happen, because the
chief item in this impressive total was colony, men so shackled by their fate of members of the community, whatever
the market value of the Negroes, enter¬ servitude that they could not even their origin, were unconsciously linked
ed in the same account at 1.137.500.000 maintain daily contact and thus agree together by another factor, which acted
livres tournois, or, S 210,648,506.25. on a measure of concerted action.
as a catalyzer of activities and move¬
Moreover, these men were descended ments the similarity between their
Jean Price-Mars is a former di¡ilomat and one from many different Negro races, ele¬ religious beliefs, of which animism was
of Haiti's leading liistorians, ethnographers and ments of which had . been brought to the common denominator. It inspired
sociologists. He is the author of "Ainsi parla Saint-Domingue by slave traders who their actions and outlook and though
l'oncle", a remarkable booh on Haitian life and
other works surveying the intellectual and cultu¬ had operated along the entire western hidden in the depths of the collective
ral achievements of Haiti. coast of Africa. consciousness, penetrated even into the
UNESCO COURIER - N» 2 - 1954
ceremonies of the other religion the conception of' greatness an Ulusory these works and their authors here ;
Catholic, Apostolic and Roman faith conception, because they judge civiliza¬ still less is it our intention to suggest
which had originally been forced upon tions according to a "'scale of values". any order of merit for them. We merely
the community and later became its But the problem exists, and has reper¬ wish to stress the extent to which our
official creed.- As though religious cussions in every sphere of social Ufe. intellectual heritage takes shape in the
belief were a mental attitude which And it is because sociologists, ethnogra¬ externalization of a culture that is pecu¬
could be decreed by officialdom. The phers, historians and psychologists have, liar to ourselves and characteristic of our
result was that between the real outlook in recent years, endeavoured to identify society.
of the people and this officially expres¬ it in the many different externalizations We would mention only a few examples
sed "conformism" there remained a of our community life that they have of this. In the first place, could any¬
discrepancy in time certainly the most ended by engendering a real literary, thing be more truly Haitian than that
arresting and fascinating of all the prob¬ scientific and artistic renaissance move¬ special quality of rhythm in our music,
lems presented by the society based on ment in Haiti. which imprints upon it the indelible
the former slaves of Saint-Domingue. They looked into Haitian folklore and mark of the Negro spirit ?
This problem has not yet been solved, found, to everyone's surprise and delight, As we wrote some 20 years ago, "'There
despite the '"Bovarysm" displayed in a whole galaxy of works which reflected, is no denying that even the slightest of
orthodox circles. and stUl reflect, the different aspects of our gestures reveals this expressive
The more rigidly conventional quarters our culture. Dancing, music, poetry, the sense of rhythm. Rhythm in walking, to
refuse to admit the existence of this story, and works of science all this the "stroke" of arms and shoulders, Uke
duality, closing their eyes to everything belongs to the choicest harvest of the that of oars driving a boat forward.
save the semblance of a Western culture, people's talents. Rhythm in the crushing of grain in
more in line with their plans and their It would be tedious and pointless to Ust (Continued on page 32)
HAITI (Continued)
CHARTERS AND
TRUE FREEDOM
by Dantes Bellegarde
10
UNESCO COURIER - N» 2 1954
PORT-AU-PRINCE was founded by the French in 1749 but two earthquakes and a icore of devastating
fires have left little of the original French colonial city. Among the city's imposing public buildings are the
Palace of Justice (above) and National Assembly (below). (Photos Haitian Tourist Office and Denise Colomb.)
The legislator has striven to protect The experience of over a century has tutional law or international treaties,
these rights by all the necessary guar¬ convinced the Haitian people that, in such measures must be proclaimed in¬
antees. order to guarantee the internal pro¬ valid on the ground that they infringe
Are these guarantees effective in tection of human rights, it is not enough the Constitution.
THE UN
By Jean F. Brierre
The League of Nations at Geneva .the earth; Mrs. Vijaya Pandit, President In an address to the Haitian people,
though founded upon a sincere de¬ of the United Nations General Assembly, delivered on 24 October 1953, the repre¬
sire for peace, could not prevent the knows it and supports its cause ; it uses sentative of the United Nations in Haiti
destruction of peace. Born out of war, it dialects which few can understand and defined the rôle of Technical Assistance
foundered in war. Bringing together none can properly translate ; it is there, as follows :
men of goodwill from every country and alive and strong, despite barbed wire and "In the economic and social field, the
race, it was yet unable to prevent private interdicts, taboos and disparagement. rôle of the United Nations is to discover
egoism and partisan intolerance from The United Nations must take care not how best to improve the standard of
entering its counsels. Designed to to be surpassed by the clear and simple living, establish greater justice for all
smooth off awkward corners, clear up aspirations often voiced from its plat¬ and promote a better use of natural
misunderstandings and establish a pro¬ form by speakers who may lack the resources, so as to create the interna¬
visional code of law, but lacking the international reputation of an - Eden, tional atmosphere requisite for the
means of implementing its decisions, it Stassen, Churchill or Bidault, but who maintenance of peace and co-operation
went from one compromise to another, brush aside prejudices and out-of-date among men."
undermined by unsated imperialism and ideas and speak a new language, searing This clear-cut statement, no longer is
revivals of Caesarism which doomed as a flame, startling as a cry, announcing a mere wish but a concrete policy. As
magnanimous resolutions and impas¬ a new future at our gates, a future that Mr. Seynès, France's representative at
sioned speeches to oblivion. may astound many but cannot be the United Nations, authoritatively said,
The United Nations Organization as questioned or ignored. "the programme of Technical Assis¬
conceived and created at San Francisco All the '"underprivileged" in the tance... has done more than any other
looking out over the Pacific with its world, whatever their" race, colour or programme to bring the message of the
frightful memories of Hiroshima yet -culture, realize the undeniable truth of United Nations not only to governments,
undimmed is, like its predecessor, a Pearl Buck's statement which should but to the whole world." For it is
product of victory. preface every history book that the obvious, even to the uninitiated, that in
It should be recognized, however, that world possesses enough wheat, food and political matters the peoples are surpris¬
United Nations is far better equipped agricultural resources in general to ed to receive messages from the 'great
to deal with the problems that confront¬ prevent any man going hungry. The Federation of Nations which they cannot
ed the League at Geneva than ta settle United Nations knows it so well that in understand because, amid the painful
some of those of the new world. the economic sphere it has its own realities of the moment, such messages
What this new world exactly is has not Technical Assistance organ a body of do not explain the exact meaning of the
yet come to light. Yet it speaks through people who are experts in all branches battle which the United Nations is
different voices in all the languages of of its activity, a "'brains trust" selected assumed to be waging against man's
from among specialists throughout the most terrible enemies.
world, who have a wide knowledge of Technical Assistance on the other
population, feeding and natural hand, which is financed by voluntary
Jean F. Brlerre is<one of Haiti's noted writers resources problems and who know men's contributions from member states,
and poets. For several years he has followed reactions to drought and want, their implies respect for "the minimum obli¬
closely the work of the United Nations and jiarti-
ciiluilij the Technical Assistance ¡iroyramme of
reactions in the presence of birth and gation contracted by the States in
Ihr I iiitrd Rations in Haiti. death. signing the San Francisco Charter.""
W W&
av:
*4>
12
UNESCO COURIER - N° 2 - 1954
»-
"For the first time in the history of the and Mrs. Jean Combaire, resulted in a and Miss Laura Nadal, for the develop¬
report of real scientific value entitled ment of handcraft skills should be men¬
world", Mr. Seynès points out,
struggle against poverty and hunger has "Making a living in the Marbial Valley " tioned. The former, a ceramics expert
been recognized as an international which should have been widely circulat¬ whose high professional standards are
responsibility, and the Technical Assis¬ ed, not only to give an idea of what has known to me personally, has trained
tance programme is the first attempt been achieved in this region, but to others to replace him, both at Lafond
effectively to discharge that responsibi¬ accustom the Haitian to taking thought and at Jacmel ; and many peasant
for his own people by revealing to him families are today using baked clay
lity."
We no longer ask, today, what are the this sombre, unknown figure of the utensils made by their children at the
peasant who is too often victimized by Lukens School.
real causes of poverty and hunger. We
simply affirm that the programme of disease, poverty and ignorance. Miss Nadal, a wickerwork and weaving
technical assistance for the nations of When men who were yesterday ignor¬ expert, has, besides passing on her own
the world is an immense step towards ant and uneducated can today meet skilled techniques, stressed the market-
an exact knowledge and an appropriate and discuss their community problems ; - ing problem and the importance of high
solution of the great problems- of our when one of them can direct the pro¬ quality and standardized products. She
civilization. And in Haiti we have seen ceedings at a co-operative meeting, as is has made her pupils alive to the question
it in action in many fields. done anywhere in the world ; when a of gross cost and profit, and instructors
whole community realizes and then trained by her are now capable " of
combats the dangers of erosion or of calculating cost prices.
microbes ; when it decides to build a The development of industries based
road and starts work on it in no lan¬ on local fibres should infuse new blood
Marbial. A great deal has been written guage can that be called a failure, for into the people's economic life.
about the Unesco pilot project in the the people of Marbial have emerged
Marbial Valley. It has been denounced from the experience regenerated. Some Tanning. The skins prepared by the
,more often than defended in our country mistakes, admittedly, were made. A Jacmel peasants are now among the best
where, in the past, experts have often pottery project was begun in an area in Haiti. Soaking, softening, milling,
been regarded with legitimate suspicion. where there was no clay, and a firing unhairing, finishing and dressing have
oven was bought without regard to the all been taught scientifically. Some of
Many people have asserted that Marbial
local type of electric current. Yet the most valuable work has been that
was a failure, without taking the trouble
to go and see it with their own eyes and Marbial has provided a lesson. It has done by Mr. René Azémar. The ins¬
to discuss the question scientifically. supplied leaders for the locality and for truction he gave with the aid of tools
As the word "pilot project" indicates, the rest of the territory. and hides found locally, has produced
Marbial was an experiment. In a given tangible results. It is to be hoped that
Rural industries. Ours is a country the services of those who have benefited
community one of the poorest and
most heavily afflicted by ignorance, where refuse has never been utilized and from this instruction will be employed
poverty and soil erosion it was planned has served merely to pollute the air. At for the good of the community.
to establish contact with the people and the request of the Haitian Government,
to help them to understand and solve a United Nations expert is now planning Reforestation. The acute problem
the construction of a plant for the of erosion has been attacked with in¬
their problems.
A preliminary enquiry conducted by a conversion of refuse into manure. The creasing success by M. Vinton Burns in
true friend of our people, Alfred Metraux, benefit that our agriculture would derive collaboration with the Department ot
and by Haitians of undisputed merit from such a project is obvious.
such as Dr. Jeanne Sylvain, E. Berrouet The work done by Mr. Glen Lukens (Continued on page 32)
13
Harri today
About 50 miles to the southeast of Cuba, and ranking next in
size among the islands of the West Indies, lies tropical Hispaniola.
Its territory is shared by Haiti and the Dominican Republic (see
map page 2). Haiti's population is estimated at about 3,000,000,
or about 295 persons per square mile, a density greater than that
of China or India, or any other republic in the Americas. About
83 % live in rural areas, noncentrated on the most productive
slopes, valleys and plains. ' About 90 % of the people are Negroes,
the remaining 10 % are mulattoes.
fer couper fer You need iron to cut iron, or, great needs
demand great remedies.
Tit cochon tit sang little pig has little blood, or, from each
according to his means.
Others are: "Rotten teeth are strong only on rotten bananas";
"Experience is the staff of the blind." One Haitian was heard
to say, "Nègue riche li mulatte; mulatte pauv' li nègue" the
rich Negro is a mulatto; the poor mulatto is a Negro." This
is a profound comment on an important social problem in
Haiti even today.
Zombi tales are another important aspect of Haitian folklore.
The belief in the possibility of producing the appearance of
death indirectly through plants and drugs, is very widespread
among the Haitian masses. But even houngans the Vodun
priests assert that the practice is absolutely impossible.
African slaves had brought with them from Africa their pri¬
mitive beliefs and superstitions, some of which were later incor¬
porated into a cult called Vodun or Voodoo. The coexistence
of Catholicism and Vodun in Haiti and the frequent sensational
accounts of Vodun practices by unscrupulous foreign commen¬
tators have produced varied reactions in Haitian writers.
Some such as Georges Sylvain gave historical reasons for its
continuation. Others, like the great writer and poet Jacques
Roumain have attempted to explain it in terms of the Haitian
peasants' isolation, the inaccessibility of church and school.
It would be difficult to deny that Vodun contains a mixture of
charlatanism and superstition.
14
UNESCO COURIER - N' 2 - 1954
2 ;-4J-'
A HAITIAN COMBITE, THE TRADITIONAL CO-OPERATIVE OF NEIGHBOURHOOD PEASANTS, GATHERS TO BUILD A NEW HOUSE.
L
HANDICRAFT INDUSTRY IS EXPANDING. GOODS PRODUCED STRAW HATS, SISAL HANDBAGS, FURNITURE, CARVINGS ETC.
BOB
AT THE FOOD MARKET, RICE, MEAL, BEANS, ARE PILED ON MATS. . USUAL MEASURING DEVICES ARE TIN CANS OR BUCKETS.
15
HAITI TODAY (Cont'd)
Today, therefore, the rural people are learning that " even
though there may not be a dispensary or a doctor within easy
reach there is much they can do to prevent diseases. They
are being shown how to drain swamps where malarial mosquitos
breed. Fundamental education lessons teach them elementary
health precautions as applied to food, water, the prevention of
infection and the disposal of refuse. They are made to realise
too that a full stomach does not necessarily provide sufficient
nourishment to maintain good health.
In the past two years the greatest victory over disease has
been the almost complete wiping out of the loathsome running-
sore disease of yaws. ~ This has been achieved during a nation¬
wide campaign, in which the World Health Organization co¬
operated, by giving one single injection of penicillin to more
than 2,600,000 people. If similarly effective action could be
taken against malaria and hookworm, a major obstacle to
Haiti's' progress would be removed.
hold down the earth. To replace the lost trees he has been
given seedlings which are cultivated in nurseries and then
planted on the denuded hillsides. - The efforts to save the soil
and increase its yield which have been made in Marbial are
also taking place in other parts of Haiti as part of the five year
development plan, stressing agriculture, which was announced
by President Magloire in 1951. Technical aid has been given by
the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization.
The most ambitious feature of the plan is the damming of
Haiti's biggest (and only main) river, the central Artibonite,
and the irrigation of some 80,000 acres that are now dusty desert
in the dry season and muddy lakes during the rains. It is
planned to distribute the controlled waters of the Artibonite
through canals so as to better the lives of 160,000 peasants. The
main plan of the Haitian Government also calls for agricultural
schools, the co-operative use of tractors, a farmers' bank, re¬
forestation grain storage and the construction of roads to link-
farmers with the markets.
16
UNESCO COURIER - N» 2 - 1954
DIRT FLOOR, WOOD FRAME AND A THATCHED ROOF. HAITI NEEDS MORE SCHOOLS, -MORE TEACHERS,. A MORE MODERN CURRICULUM
.A TYPICAL FOLKLORE DANCE. HAITIANS DELIGHT IN SINGING AND DANCING. SUGAR-CANE IS ONE OF THE CHIEF EXPORTS. FINE QUALITY RUM IS MADE FROM CANE JUICE-
17
UNESCO COURIER - N» 2 - 1954
MULTIPLYING CITIES
THE SWIFT-CHANGING MAP OF URBAN DEVELOPMENT
by Charles Morazé
HAT is civilization,? A strange question it may seem to one can well ask if the history of the development of cities is
ask in connexion with the three maps published here not practically synonymous with the history of the development
for the first time. But is it really so strange and of civilizations. Centres of religion, centres of art, centres of
unrelated? Is it not true that most of the magnificent and learning and politics, these all bear the characteristic stamp of
fascinating objects of the past that draw millions of ordinary city life.
people to museums every year have come from sites which bear Have cities always had the same importance, and can their
the marks of organized communities? importance be gauged by their size or population ? Who would
Even when an archaeological site of ancient objects is dis¬ venture to say that because Detroit, Lyons and Odessa have
covered in an area now totally desert or completely rural, it more inhabitants they are more important than was the little
always points to a city, a centre of human activity, a converging city of Athens at the foot of the Parthenon ?
point of trade or some social grouping.
The three maps showing the growth of the world's cities give
No one would deny that agriculture and work on the land
us, therefore, no more than a tiny glimpse of a long history, and
have always occupied an enormous and indispensable portion
even this is quite narrow and restricted. Yet there is much that
of human activity and continue to do so today. But urban
these maps can tell us with their round dots charting the surface
centres have been so singularly important in the development of
of our planet in the short span of 150 years.
human intercommunication, in the elaboration of such great
instruments as languages, systems of numeration, calendars, the Leaving to one side the nature of urban influence on civili¬
tools of countless trades, and in the creation of works of art zation which would make a fascinating study in itself, there is
(whether for religion or just for the sake of plain beauty) that one major thing that stands out at a glance ; the tremendous
increase in the number of cities in the past century and a half.
In my opinion' this is a revolutionary development and marks a
stage in man's history as important as were the metal age and
the alphabet at the dawn of civilization. For huge conglom¬
Charles Moraré ¡s a member of the faculty of the Institute of Political
Studies, university of Paris. erations, tentacular cities expanding at amazing speed pose
19
THE NEW PERSPECTIVE. Air
jumbling-together of industrial,
commercial and residential struc¬
(Cont'd) tures.
reduces
The
the
smoke of
sunshine
its
by
factories
almost
40 per cent. Greater New York
comprises today I 2 million people,
the largest population of any urban
region in the world. (World Wide)
STAGES OF URBANIZATION
It is situated harmoniously
J**i > >-*
within the landscape. Roads
connect it with other villages 3 .«f£<Sfc )
and with farms more or less
¿TjL
i nt
-"V!
'vi THE RAILWAYS COME.
Railroads have caused one
bably show no major development in any different symbols because, while Europe of Europe and Asia were essentially conti¬
way comparable to that of the past in 1800 already had some rudimentary nental, indicating that the desert and
150 years. They would show clearly statistics, there was nothing on the same the land routes were, then, more reliable
when certain cities were great in the scale or of the same significance in the channels of civilization than the sea
past "even though they have diminished East. routes. But by 1800, maritime trade be¬
in size and importance in recent times. As early as the 18th century, Europe gan to change ' the emphasis and thus
Thus, Baghdad was no more than a had begun to take an interest in the prob¬ the distribution of important cities.
small town of a few thousand inhabi¬ lems of population trends which was The old inland route city of Trichinopoly
tants in 1800 yet in the great age of to lead to the periodic censuses now in southern India thus saw Madras rise
Islam, it was one of the largest and most considered so essential. But though pre¬ and prosper on the east coast.
fascinating cities in the world. The same cise figures are lacking, certain Eastern This development of large-scale world
is true of Samarkand, or Ispahan and cities must have been much larger than trade, which also accounts for the estab¬
many of the mighty cities which once the great capitals of Europe. Pekin, the lishment of Batavia, Singapore, Hong
dotted the great routes leading from the city of cities, or Tokyo, must have been Kong and Honolulu on the Asian sea¬
East to the West through Central Asia. more densely populated than London or board and in the Pacific was coupled
It is doubtful whether the" ancient Paris. with the amazing growth of cities and
cities of America could rival these in An 18th century French traveller tells the urban way of life in Europe. For,
splendour, except perhaps the extraordi¬ us that China had seven cities larger while Europe shipped people, capital and
nary remains of Chitchen-Itza, in Yuca¬ than Paris. But, while in the West these its economic skills to every corner of the
tan, or Cuzco, in. Peru. Nevertheless, cities were still young and expanding world, its own cities multiplied, espe¬
subject to these reservations, the map rapidly and more or less systematically cially along the broad corridor running
for 1800 would give us a fairly accurate with the development of a new industrial from densely populated England to the
picture of the relative density of cities economy, the great cities of the East head of the Adriatic. The Rhine valley
several centuries ago, if we ,'merely make were already ancient. They consisted of was transformed into a gigantic tho¬
a few additions in the White areas and a number of different quarters carrying roughfare of towns, criss-crossed by
a few deletions in some of the black on a variety of distinct activities, so that powerful railroad Unes, postal and tele¬
areas (particularly in Western Europe). they were more like conglomerations of graph services, which speeded business
large villages than cities proper. In cen¬ transactions and encouraged competition
The spread of urban settlement is a
tral Eurasia, there must have been large and even bitter rivalry.
recent phenomenon, and may be briefly
floating urban populations following the From Europe, the great upsurge of
analysed as follows : there are two great
cities spread across the Atlantic. In 1800,
zones of city development to the West king from city to city, moving along the
roads of religious pilgrimages or the as the map shows, the only great metro¬
and East of the Europe-Asia land mass.
great highways of commerce. politan centre on the American conti¬
This is indicated on the 1800 map by the
nent was Mexico City. By 1900 it had
different shading used for the two zones, We should also note that, between the
lost its proud place (if not its historical
black for the west and grey for the East. Far East, which apparently was mari¬
prestige), to the mighty cities blackening
The cities, in fact, differ very consider¬ time, and the extreme West, which cer¬
ably in type. The cartographer has used tainly was, the towns in the central part (Continued on page 33)
21
PARIS TV AUDIENCES have
One evening in July, 1952, we guage and of frontiers. European tele¬ principal difficulty was that the broad¬
were relaxing in the sitting vision has come a long way since this cast standard in the participating
room oí one of those two- beginning, and international communi¬ countries differs basically. A televi¬
family brick houses which are cation is taking on a new reality as sion picture in England is made up of
plans for future co-operation are put 405 lines. But in France the picture
so typical of London's residential dis¬
tricts. Everything was there, the aspi¬ into practice. consists of 810 lines, while the Nether¬
lands and "Germany have 625 lines.
distra plant in the bay window, the
It had been thought that these differ¬
plush-covered easy 'chairs and, of Breaking a barrier ences would constitute insuperable
course, the television set. The pro¬
obstacles to international television
gramme for the evening: A visit to
Paris. The cameras took us first to the What struck us most, as we broadcasts, just as different railroad
studio of a painter in the artist district watched the broadcast from gauges make it impossible for trains
of Montmartre. Then came a visit to the Louvre, was the ability of to travel from one system to the other
the Louvre. We saw the statues of television to overcome lan¬ without special adaptation.
Michelangelo and religious sculptures guage barriers. Here we saw two But engineers succeeded in "convert¬
of the Middle Ages. To close the visit, commentators, an Englishman and a ing" .the broadcasts. The first suc¬
we went down into one of the "caves", Frenchman (for the programme was cessful conversion took place between
so characteristic of Paris student life,- seen simultaneously in France), who England and France across the Chan¬
alternately described the Works of art. nel in 1051. The second step Was the
where young people danced to the
If this had been ' radio, the English broadcast of a week's programmes'
vibrating rhythm of jazz, and long¬
audience would have felt itself com¬ from Paris to Great Britain, climaxed
haired femmes fatales sang of the lives
and loves of Old Paris. pletely shut out while the French com¬ by the July 14th celebration held in
When we turned the set off, we mentator spoke. But in television, 1052. The third step was the multi-,
kneW that we had witnessed an his¬ viewers 'appreciated having more time national relay of the Coronation cere¬
toric event. We had caught a glimpse to look at the sculptures without having monies from England to the Continent
of a new way for man to communicate to listen to the commentary. While in 1953. . And the fourth step will be
with man, across the barriers of lan- there was some criticism of this the two-way exchange of programmes'
method as being too cumbersome, the between Great Britain, -France, Bel¬
broadcast left no doubt that pictures gium, the Netherlands, Germany, Swit¬
THE CAMERA focuses on sculptures at the Guimet
Museum of Asian Art in Paris. In this French TV can form a bridge between' nations zerland and Italy, and possibly Den-'
programme actors helped to give movement and
where sound alone would have failed. mark, planned for June 1954.
meaning to museum exhibits. A camera coverage The next step forward was taken in
of Chinese figurines, for example, faded into a June 1953 when the Coronation cere¬
How others live
Chinese girl telling one of her country's 18 th monies were broadcast from London
' century fables. (Photo Télévision Française). simultaneously to four countries on the
Continent, to France, Belgium, the Here is an ambitious goal : the
Netherlands and Germany. A million ' establishment of a permanent
French people watched an English (and very costly) relay network
Queen being crowned. Once more which links in two-way com¬
everything became easy to understand munication eight countries speaking
because Frenchmen were doing the between them six different languages,
commentary to the picture, the same- using four different definitions of the
picture seen by television audiences in television picture and having young
England, Holland and Germany and television organizations, many of which
accompanied by commentaries in each are" only learning how to produce pro¬
of their languages. grammes for their own audience, let
alone for other countries.
The temporary relay network which
made this broadcast possible was the The eight countries will each pro¬
fruit of long preparations and- con¬ duce one programme designed to give
siderable engineering ingenuity. The. a picture of their own country, and all
22
UNESCO COURIER - N» 2 - 1954
of them will during the same period What interests viewers in these coun¬ gicians and French singers, as well as
carry broadcasts of the international tries is to see the life of Madame Du¬ British entertainers. The entertainers
football championship games which pont or Mr. Smith, the way they make are introduced by a French girl who
will be played in Switzerland. A new both ends meet, what they can buy on lives in London and Whose French
approach will be tried out this time to the market, what amusements they accent is loved by English viewers.
overcome the language difficulties. In enjoy, how they bring up their child¬ This show is good television in Eng¬
none of the broadcasts will there ap¬ ren, how they work in railroad sta¬ land. But it is also good entertain¬
pear people who speak in their own tions or factories, in fashion salons or ment elsewhere. In fact, it drives
tongue directly to the camera. In¬ on farms. And then, of course, view¬ home, in its own way, that peoples are
stead, the programmes will be narrated ers want to see the best shows each- not so different whatever _ their lan¬
guage.
Pooling Programmes
up such an elaborate network only for a taste of this new feature of interna¬ such is life and such are the relations
the broadcast of national ceremonies tional television When "Cafe Conti¬ between individuals' and nations. If
and spectacular events? Whether you nental", a BBC television show, was television gives us a chance to find Out
talk to British or French, to German or broadcast as part of the programmes more about others, to' adjust ourselves
Dutch producers of television program¬ carried during the Coronation period. better to them, to learn that underneath
mes, you always get the same answer : In this programme English viewers the differences there is an even great¬
we want to see how other people live have seen, for instance, German acro¬ er community, it will have contributed
and show them a slice of our own life. bats and Austrian dancers, Dutch ma its share.
23
Racial
Crossroads
of the Pacific
by Harry L Shapiro
Race mixture has had a expansion. Of course, the balance of power in the Pacific played
field day in Hawaii. a part in preserving Hawaiian independence, but where a strong
Polynesians, aU kinds ' centralized native government was lacking, as in the Society
and degrees of Europeans Islands, the Marquesas and in many other island archipelagos,
and Americans, Puerto Ri¬ these succumbed to French or British control.
cans, Chinese, Japanese, Ko¬
reans, Filipinos, not to men¬ When, therefore, Americans and Europeans began settling in
the Hawaiian islands in the early years of the nineteenth
tion smaller contingents of
-century, drawn there by commerce, adventure or missionary
other populations, have met
enterprise, they were legally foreigners whose advancement and
here and produced a bewil¬
prosperity depended on the goodwill of the Hawaiians. To own
dering array of hybrids. The
and hold land in that feudal society required permission and
extraordinary fact about all
special dispensation or possibly marriage with a daughter of a
this extraordinary in the
chief. To pursue missionary work with any hope of success,
light of conditions in many
other areas of race mixture the Hawaiian chiefs and royal family had to be won over tact¬
is the relative absence fully and their acquiescence sued for with the respect exacted
by a ruling class.
¿j here of friction, prejudice or
Ü social rejection. From the very beginning of this contact with the 'Western
There is no colour bar in World, therefore, the Hawaiians were in the position of autho¬
Hawaii and no legal disability rity. Never having been conquered, they remained the masters.
based on race, although Their chiefs and kings continued to be persons endowed with
contact between the same power and entitled to the respect and evidence of homage that ,
races elsewhere has given rise to them. Why, one might ask, their traditions demanded. Such a situation created a pattern
has Hawaii become the seat of such an amicable arrangement? of relationship to which the Americans ¡and Europeans had to
conform. And racial tolerance toward the Hawaiian had neces¬
The answer it seems to me, lies in the history of the Hawaiian
islands and in their relation to the imperialism of the Western sarily to become an accepted social and official pattern. -
World.
Since the potential and actual wealth of the islands the
When Captain Cook discovered the islands in 1778, he found land remained in the hands of the native famiUes, intermar¬
' them populous and administered by a strong feudal-like system. riage was frequently 'an economic advantage that brought a
He made no attempt to claim them for Britain: in fact he was social position to the white man which he might not otherwise
murdered by the natives and his expedition withdrew. 'By the easily achieve. Has children, therefore, would acquire status and
time Vancouver and subsequent expeditions reached Hawaii, prestige in the beginning not so much from their white ancestry
the islands had become consolidated or were rapidly becoming as from the status and land
so under the rule of Kamehameha I. they inheritedfrom their
native mothers. Enough of
Thus, in the early nineteenth century, when European powers
such marriages took place to
were seizing every scrap of unclaimed territory to which they
entrench halfcastes firmly in
had access, the Hawaiian islands were able to resist these ma¬
the upper social and econo¬
neuvres, since they were governed by a strong monarchical mic levels of the population.
government capable of maintaining its hegemony over the
islands. There was no political vacuum inviting imperial With the native race en¬
joying social and economic
dominance, miscegenation
Professor Harry L. Shapiro is Chairman of the Department of Anthropo¬ with it could not lead to the
logy, American Museum of Natural History, New York. He is one of the social rejection of the -half-
leading authorities in the United States on race 'mixture und the author of
caste since to do so would
the rol nine "Race Muture" just published by Unesco. {Pnce: $.¿j, 1/6, 75 fr.)
pom which the article on this pai/e is taken. also imply an intolerable re-
24
UNESCO COURIER . N» 2 - 1954
When, in 1900, the Hawaiian Kingdom came to an end and waiians, thus, by a
the islands were annexed by mutual agreement to the United steady growth
States, 'the tradition of racial tolerance, established for over a through pri¬
century, was firmly enough implanted in the HawaUan way of mary crosses, ' by
life to withstand continental influences stemming from diffe¬ intermarriage with
rent attitudes. This, at any rate, 'was true up. to World War II, "pure" racial
before the large-scale migration of mainland population . in groups and by their
connexion with wartime activities took place. Some hints have own high natural
come through that the increase, are ex¬
sudden increase of panding at a more
settlers conditioned to rapid rate than
another tradition has any other major
to some extent affected contingent of the
the situation described population. And
above, but these may although it is unli¬
merely be reflections kely that all the
of difficulties from groups will be dis¬
solved into one ra¬
re-adjustement rather
than indications of a cially mixed popu¬
fundamental change. lation in the very
near future, the
While the picture
present trends
drawn here of con¬
suggest that the
ditions in Hawaii repre¬
mixed bloods are
sents an unusually
destined to become
benign resolution of a
one of, if not the,
complex Tacial situa¬
major group in
tion, it should not
Hawaii.
be taken to. imply that
race or race mixture
does not exist as a "If race mixture enjoyed complete acceptance in the modern
factor at all in Ha¬ world, its offsprings would ultimately be absorbed by the society
waiian life. That they into which they were born and consequently no problem would
do is obvious from any exist," says Professor Shapiro, in his study "Race . Mixture",
careful consideration of which has been published by Unesco in the series "The Race
that Ufe. Question in Modern Science". Such, however, is not the case,
It must be remem¬ and one of the world's racial problems arises from the fact that
mixed bloods very often form a special class and an unabsorbed
bered, first of all, that
the various racial element in the populations where they exist. But there are
groups that entered the modern instances of racial mingling that has neither led to a
islands as labour re¬ rigid social stratification nor to any significant friction, preju¬
cruitments, came main¬ dice or social rejection, in the article above, Professor. Shapiro,
ly in fairly considerable has described an interesting case in point.
numbers. As such, they were settled on plantations where they
naturally tended to form cultural isolates, separated from
Hawaiian Ufe by its unfamiliarity. and by barriers of language.
Moreover, their own tendency was to reproduce in this alien
land the familiar elements of their own culture with all its va¬
lues. Later, as the members of these labour groups were able to
free themselves from plantation Work and to establish
themselves in such urban centres as Honolulu, they generally
settled in tight residential sections where they could continue to
enjoy the cultural security that . close association with one's
fellows gives.
Drawings by Tambi Larsen token from " The Children ' a book on Hawaii .an
other island territories in the Pacific.
ARCHIVES
IT WAS COLDER
WHEN WE WERE YOUNGER
THE changes in climate that people tropical conditions prevailed over most past century. In Montreal, Canada, in
think they experience are seldom of the surface. The coal deposits in Britain and in Scandinavia, the increase
real. Extremes of heat or cold, of England, in Siberia and Alaska, and even has been about 2°F (1°C) since 1850.
26
UNESCO COURIER - N» 2 - 1954
ash in the air is the cause of periods of dioxide from the air is greatly increased, larger than is generally reaUzed. The
cooler weather. j This means that the heat rays from the burning of one ton of coal produces
earth can more easily escape into empty about two and a half tons of carbon
Nearly a century ago the British
space and the average temperature falls. dioxide. It is estimated that each year
scientist John Tyndall suggested that
the cause is to be found in the increase The records of the earth's history show six thousand million tons of carbon
that periods of mountain building were dioxide are poured into the atmosphere,
or decrease of carbon dioxide gas in the
followed by periods of glacier formation chiefly by industrial plants. This is a
atmosphere. This theory was recently
a few milUon years later. much larger amount than from any
developed by Professor Gilbert N. Plass
other cause. If all this additional carbon
of Johns Hopkins University in a radio
On the other hand, in those periods dioxide stays in the atmosphere it alone
broadcast.
of the earth's history when the land
could account for a temperature rise of
Normally, the air contains 0.03 per cent was generally flat and marshy and
2°F (1°C) in a century. Strange as it
carbon dioxide. This gas acts somewhat there was less weathering of the rocks,
may seem, this is very close to the rate
like the glass roof of a greenhouse carbon dioxide tended to accumulate and
at which the temperature is actually
because it is .transparent -to the direct the weather during such periods was rising now. » Thus man himself may be
rays of the sun and lets them strike the tropical. The rise and fall of the average responsible for the changing climate.
earth and there change into radiant heat temperature may thus well depend on
waves. These rays are absorbed by the the relative rates at which carbon If this is so, and if no other process
carbon dioxide just ',as they are by a dioxide is removed by weathering or is appears to counterbalance it, then the
greenhouse roof. They do not. escape supplied by springs and volcanoes. climate of the earth will become contin¬
into empty space but remain to warm ually warmer and possibly also dryer
the air and thus the earth itself. . It is interesting that this change in for the next few centuries. This, in turn,
the carbon dioxide content would also means that crops such as grain, or
affect -the amount of rainfall. A cloud grapes which could formerly be grown
Tons of Co2 sheds its rain when there is a consider¬ only in> southern areas, will become
able - difference of temperature between available much nearer to the Arctic.
INCREASES in the amount of carbon
dioxide in the, air would therefore its lower and upper surfaces. With less Already in Finland and Scandinavia,
result in a warmer climate. And the carbon dioxide, the upper surface of the farmers are ploughing fields that had
cloud cools more quickly and thus in¬ lain under the ice for centuries. In
fact is that direct measurements of the
creases the rainfall. Periods of low Canada and Siberia, the area of perma¬
carbon dioxide content of the atmos¬
carbon dioxide are both cooler- and nently frozen ground is retreating
phere tend to show that the. amount has
wetter. Periods of high carbon dioxide toward the Pole at the rate of a hundred
increased by about 10 per cent during
are hotter and dryer. yards to several miles a year. Time was
the past 50 years. That would nicely
account for the increase in the average
when Greenland and Iceland supported
But there is one new factor that would a flourishing culture and grapes could
temperature.
increase the carbon dioxide content of be cultivated in .England. Such times
But the question then becomes: what the air. It is an effect of man's activity: are likely to return and vast areas of
causes the carbon dioxide to vary? the burning of coal and oil. The carbon Canada, Alaska and Siberia may become
There are several possibilities. Green dioxide produced by combustion is much available for food production.
plants absorb carbon dioxide from the
air and water from the earth and under
the action of sunshine combine them to VOLCANIC ACTIVITY is one suggested cause for changes in the
make sugars, starches and cellulose and world's climate. After the gigantic eruption of the East Indian island of
thus to build their structures. About a Krakatoa in 1883 scientists in France noted a 10% decrease in sunshine
million million tons of carbon dioxide apparently due to the thin cloud of volcanic ash which stopped the full
are thus taken out of the atmosphere strength of the sun from reaching the earth. Since then there- have been
every year in the life process of growing no great eruptions so the air may be clearer and the sunshine brighter
plants. and hotter. (Photo American Overseas Lines).
Weathering rocks
ANOTHER influence on the carbon
dioxide content of the air is geolo¬
gical. The weathering of rocks
and their conversion into soil is to a
large extent an attack upon the rocks
by carbonic acid, the weak acid that
forms when carbon dioxide dissolves in
water. The result is a slow change of
the rocks from silicates to carbonates.
This process takes about 100 million tons
of carbon dioxide from the air every
year. But this process is balanced by
another geological process. Hot springs
and volcanoes pour large quantities of
carbon dioxide into the air, approximate¬
ly 100 milUon tons a year. Thus the
' two geological processes normally count¬
eract each other.
27
a new look at the 'Barbaric Nomads of the North'
by Marcel Vanhamme
iEW passages of statements contained in many text¬ Exhibitions of this kind, which allow
history have made books, which suffer from excessive children to "see .history for themselves"
a greater im¬ generalization and over-abridgment, are are becoming more and more common."
pression on the ima¬ in conflict with the facts. This seems to be one of the clearest
gination of schoolchUd- -Students have been amazed at the applications of modern ideas on edu¬
ren than the inroads treasures yielded up by the famous cation, which moves ever farther from
of the Vikings, thanks tumulus of Oseberg, about two miles the exclusive dogmatism of the written
largely to the writers of from the coast south of Oslo, discovered word once so characteristic of it.
history textbooks. Hun¬ by a farmer in August 1903. Professor Thousands of boys and girls, for
dreds . of these books Gabriel Gustafson of the University of example, have travelled great distances
have . dwelt upon the Oslo-, identified the tumulus as a royal to Tournai, the "Cradle of the French
>
terror aroused through¬ tomb dating from Viking times (750-1050 Monarchy", as Louis XTV called the
out Europe by the A.D.). It was in fact the last resting Royal City, to see an exhibition of
"bloodthirsty Norsemen", and "'the place of Queen Assa, known to us from Merovingian art treasures.
barbaric nomads of the North", wearing the sagas, who was the grandmother of Three eventful centuries have passed
their strange winged helmets and Harald Fairhair and died in 850. since the memorable day when Adrien
pursuing their booty with a single- The tomb was in disorder; this was Quinquin, a labourer chanced to drive
minded cruelty and ferocity. Such im¬ probably deliberate, with a ritual pur¬ his pick into the site of the forgotten
pose, to prevent the dead from dis- tomb of Childeric. It contained fabulous
pressions, surely calculated to strike the
imagination of the young, are often in¬ treasures, including
tensified by citing the petition: "From three hundred golden
the fury - of the Norsemen, deliver us, bees from the royal robe
good Lord." and two hundred gold
The Vikings, or "'Children of the coins from the king's
Creeks", did undoubtedly spread terror purse. " Unfortunately
among the harassed people torn by the these priceless historical
dissensions that followed the death of treasures were stolen
28
UNESCO COURIER - N« 2 - 1954
laita Island
MOUN¬
on
perform
Ma- ASSIGNMENT: I boarded a small vessel, the "Nelly",
he to do something for the yaws and
malaria, and I to see what could be done
one of their tradi¬ to help with the education of the
tional dances (above). Malaitans. The doctor did his best to
When . Mr. Gaudin,
SOLOMON
look at the diseased ones and I did mine
newly appointed act¬ to look at the uneducated ones. To tell
ing Director of Edu¬ the truth it was not too easy to have a
cation in the Solo¬ look at either, for the people were so
mons, first visited opposed to government that' they
the island in 1949 thought they would be hurting it by
he found the people
distrustful of "edu¬
I SLA N D S refusing to have their diseases healed
by a government doctor. They preferred
cation". Village feast to die in the bush rather than to come
(below) is being held down and see the doctor. As for this
on Vella Lavella Is¬ new "education" idea, they distrusted
land, some 300 miles by that too.
to the north west of At the beginning of our tour, on the
Malaita. (Photos COI). H. W. Gaudin first sign of our ship coming, a series of
warning fires would spring out from"
each spur on the mountains, running
further and further into the distance,
telling every good tribesman that a
- government ship was on the way. As
that usually meant that the District
Commissioner with all his policemen was
on the way to arrest tax-evaders, the
men merely took to the bush till all was
clear, and only the "marys" (womenfolk)
remained to greet us.
However, I did manage to get a few
, of the chiefs from the bush when they
found that there were no police aboard,
and I got promises of boys for my school.
Not that I put much faith in promises
there had been a lot of promises given
one way and another in the past. Still,
at the end of a three weeks' tour, things
had begun to look up a little, and there
seemed a chance that the new govern¬
ment school would have at least a
nucleus of pupils. And so it turned out.
King George VI School, as it was
eventually named, was a residential
school for about 130 pupils, and was
designed to produce boys for training
colleges. The boys were to come from '
the better mission schools and to have
a knowledge of elementary spoken
English and the other normal subjects
of a school of this type.
A curriculum was provided in which
the following were the main studies:
English, Arithmetic, Writing, Reading,
Social Studies, Nature Study, Music and
29
Assignment: Solomon Islands (Cont'd)
Physical Education. English was a think of any idea to educate the women cheapest and quickest way backward
necessity. In the Solomons, according when it will certainly mean that they areas are given a. minimum standard of
to one anthropologist, there are 50 will have to take over duties formerly education in various aspects of social
languages as different as English and performed by women? life literacy, health and economics are
French. In the school, out of the first There also had to be an - Education the three facets of the one problem.
20 boys there were 12 different lan¬ Regulation promulgated in the Solomons The facet I was interested in, of course,
guages. There was no adequate printed so designed that it would satisfy all was literacy. Here is how I went about
material in any of these languages, so authorities concerned. "Which of ' the my programme.
we were forced to teach in English. problems was most urgent? , A lingua I decided that the principles of Mass
Once the King George VI School was franca? Women's education? Adult Education as being now carried out in
established I had to see what could be education? Economic education? The all backward colonial areas would -be
done about other educational matters, Education Regulation? applicable to the Solomons with certain
and" problems hit me in the eye from As soon as the Education Regulation modifications. To shorten the story I
everywhere. What languages are you to had been hammered into shape not will take you with me on tour to one of
teach the junior and the senior schools? without many struggles and concessions the Mass Education Pilot Schemes which
What about the ilUterate adults? Will on all sides I" decided that the best I helped to inaugurate in the Solomons.
the adults really be enthusiastic about policy for the infant Education Depart¬ My aim was to bring literacy in the
their children going to school while they ment was to establish a nucleus of better native tongue to the adults of the area.
themselves remain ignorant? Won't government schools and to prosecute a The Agricultural Department had
they be jealous even though they profess programme of Mass Education. Mass schemes of rice-growing and so on to
the reverse? And what will the men Education is a technique whereby in the Improve the material well-being of the
MELANESIAN STUDENTS impressed Mr. Gau¬ learned to read and write their language. Mission explorer Alvari de Mendana who sighted landfall
din, who began the first mass education campaigns school (left) is established on Gela Island. Contact at Santa Ysabel Island in I 568. He was convinced
in the Solomons, by the speed with which they with Solomons by white men was first made by he had discovered an El Dorado, the "Isles of King
30
UNESCO COURIER - N° 2 - 1954
real education in an Areare village brief moment it took to soothe the baby
wouldn't hurt him and it didn't either. when he cried: to soothe it in the
At Hauhui we unloaded the ship, for age-old way. No false modesty here.
the coast is open and the ship cannot In a very short time there were enough
stay off-shore to serve as a base; then people in the village who could read
it steamed off; we were alone on the words in their own language slowly and
wildest island of the Solomons with no
it. was now time to produce something
European nearer than several hours interesting for them to ' read. This
steaming. We couldn't speak a word of problem was not nearly so formidable as
the language. We had come to give the might be imagined. To be sure I did not
natives that mysterious "'something" know the language nor did any avail¬
-that the District Commissioner had been
able white person ; nor for that matter,
filling their ears with for months now was there much use in trying to learn
Mass Education.
the multitudinous languages of the
They all know the word. They had Solomons, and there was no printed
been told that . Mass Education was matter available in Areare. But some of
something that would help them, but the men spoke pidgin and so did I.
that they would first have to help
themselves and pay either with money
or work towards it, although, goodness Dog chases cat
knows they have little enough to give in
the way of money. But we did expect To get a story I merely drew a picture
labour from them labour for the new of, say, a dog chasing a cat up a
school, labour for the maternity annexe, tree, and showing it to one of the
labour for the new rice field rice, that more intelligent men, (the women didn't
wonderful food they like so much, but usually speak pidgin) asked him to relate
never grow although the climate is quite the story in language "blong him". This'
suitable. I wrote down phonetically, and in no
We had to teach these people parti¬ time had plenty of simple "'stories".When
cularly the older ones to read and write these stories were tested on another
using the "'each one teach one" techni¬ member of the tribe, who could repeat
opened on Malaita Island in 1950. The boy
que used by some of the more successful to me in pidgin what I had told him in
completing a drawing of an island canoe is a third
organizers of Mass Education projects in his own tongue. I had checked that the
year student ata missionary school on Ugi Island. sentence was correct.While all this was
other Colonial areas. The idea is that
as soon as a man knows, say, the letter goins on mv wife was busy making
people so that they could afford the "a", he is to teach this to another man suitable drawings and reproducing the
luxuries of education that they desired; who is more ignorant than he is, and whole thing on a "'Fordigraph" dupli¬
the Medical Department had plans for so on by a cumulative process. cator.
maternity annexes and elementary That night by the light of the ubi¬ On the momentous night when these
hygiene ' to lower the horrid infant quitous kerosene pressure lamp, seen simple stories were first issued to the
mortality rate of 50 per cent. But I everywhere in the less populous parts of class there was a hushed gaso as the
" won't deal with anything but the facet the colonial empire, in the palpable implications struck home, and then a
I was mainly concerned with. blackness of the equatorial night the steadily erowing roar of voices as
We loaded all our paraphernalia onto villagers, silently on bare feet, padded evervone in the room started to read
our ship. We took food for four or five into the "church" that was to be the aloud, or to help his more ignorant
weeks, our bedding, and my precious centre of our activities. neighbour.
rifle that I used for getting fresh meat For the first time in their history these
pigeons. Then, late at night so as to people had read a storv in their native
have a calm crossing, we set out from " Marys " join the class language. The psychological effect
the war-torn shores of Guadalcanal for seemed enormous, as these adults, who
Malaita. Along the coast we steamed to At the inaugural campaign the vil¬ an their lives had admired the occasional
the village of Hauhui situated in one of lagers were avid to learn and were villager who had been to a mission
the wildest 'parts of a wild island, among prepared to sit by the hour, working school and learnt to read a -few words in
the depressed and dwindling Areare fiercely all the time. All reading was to English from the Bible, realized that it
tribes. My wife came too, and so did be done in the native tongue of the was possible, in fact fairly simule, for
Peter, aged 11, on the theory that a little village, a dialect of the Areare language them to learn 'to read in their own
spoken, as is normal in the Solomons, by tongue. They were visibly excited.
only a thousand or two people. There
Solomon". After this, no Europeans visited the In a month the majority of the adults
were only about 19 sounds that I could
islands for two centuries: Village "green" (right) could read slowly in Areare, and,
distinguish, and probably only 18, as the although writing progressed more
is at- Kia, on - Ysabel Island. (Photos COI). "1" and the "r" which they professed to slowly, all could draw the nineteen
be able to distinguish were interchange¬
letters of the alphabet, and in that way
able. Probably a skilled linguist would slowly make words. The more able
have distinguished more, but whether students even wrote letters and stories.
that would have made the learning easier
I doubt.
Just as in English, the', people soon Melting stone-age
learned to distinguish the look of the
work and did not bother about the indi¬ In my considered view the only hope
vidual letters. But here is a fact that of making this under-privileged peo¬
will amaze those who have never ple melt into the European culture
attempted to make adults start from which 'is fast enveloping its stone-age
scratch and learn to read in less than one, is to get a basic minimum of literacy
a week the more able members of the instilled into the people, particularly the
group were able to read simple words in adults. It is little use expecting the
their own language, which is completely young generation to accomplish much in
phonetic, and these were using the "each a village ruled entirely by the older and
one teach one" technique to instruct completely ilUterate generation.
their neighbours. First of all let the people be able to
. The women were there too. This was read and write, at least in their own
a minor triumph, as women normally tongue. This is not a long business, at
took little part in .the social life of the any rate the reading part of it, and then
village, and it had .taken a long time to it will be easier to bring to the villages
persuade the men that -it was a good propaganda so that the old agricultural
thing for the "'marys" to be educated. methods will be improved; so that that
When the women did get into class they modern marvel, the hoe, will take the
were jso fiercely proud of the honour that place of the digging stick ; so that
they were considerably better students schools and hospitals will be built by
than the men, in spite of the fact that community effort, and money subscribed
they usually had babies hanging round for their operation ; in short, so that the
their necks in a sort of shawl. The only peoples of under-developed areas may
time they stopped working was in the make haste to join the new culture.
31
should' benefit from the advice of a
Kaleidoscope Haiti and the U. N.
fishery expert, who could also assist us by
introducing new methods of curing.
(Continuée/ from page 9) (Continued1 from page 13)
' Again, we should consider introducing,
wooden mortars, to the accompaniment Agriculture. His knowledge of the Hai- .
even as a school subject, practical pro¬
of a melancholy chant. Rhythm in the tian and his respect for human values
cesses for preserving meat, fruit and
have enabled him to talk with the pea¬
'work songs' sung by the groups of food in general.
sants and convince them of the need,
peasants, the combites, as their picks Whether on questions of grain storage
strike down in unison into the rich soil, not only for themselves but for their
children and their children's children, and methods of silo building, of estab-
preparing it for the coming seed time". Ushing a school for hotel keeping, of
All this, surely, forms part of the law to prevent the soil from disappearing
beneath their feet. It is obvious to aU technical training, stockbreeding, audio¬
and essence of our Negro life.
who travel about the country that im¬ visual education or statistics, there
Again, could anything be more typi¬ are certain methods of approach which
portant work has been done, not only
cally Haitian than the passion for must be observed. Everything must be
by the State but through the voluntary
dancing shared by the great mass of the seen, discussed and considered on a
and clear sighted help given by indivi¬
population, in town and country alike Haitian scale. Where a carpenter is to
dual people.
for ths religious dances of voodoo and be trained, it is unnecessary, for example,
Fish breeding-. For some time now
for the secular dances of the rara (1),
fish breeding ponds have existed more for an apprentice to start by learning to
the mahi and the congo ?
or less throughout the country. Some operate an electric saw, which he wiU
Even the least observant onlooker is rarely have occasion to use. In building
are on private property, but everyone
struck by the infectious delight displayed who has the necessary means will soon a silo, there may in a given region be
by the spectators during the sacred be able to take part in the fish breed¬ reasons economy, transport, etc.
dances in which, as we have written for using easily avaUable material. In
ing programme, if the experts' advice
elsewhere, "the gods may, on occasion, about the nature of the land is followed. rural education, the teacher must be able
usurp the bodies of mortals and borrow Only salty land, unsuitable for cultiva¬ to chat with a man who is said to be
their voices to proclaim, with delirious tricky, backward and superstitious but
tion, is used for fish ponds. Specimens
excitement, their right to share in the whose conscience and dignity are very
of fish, sent to us from Africa and Israel,
ecstatic performance". Dances of en¬ have been able to adapt themselves to much alive; whose mind is ready to show
chantment, where the frantic beating of local conditions. Living as we do on the appreciation, and his heart to give
the drums and the deafening clamour of affection.
edge of an ocean abounding in fish, we
voices communicate to the spellbound
audience the madness of crazy, fantastic
motion. Hypnotic dances, where the
performers are so agile and supple that the Haitian people a tool for the
their bodies seem jointless. Exhausting Charters and Freedom
building of a free, peaceful and prosper¬
dances, where intoxication of sound, ous civilization based on collaboration
combined with' Bacchic uproar of the (Continued from page il)
between the social classes and co-op-
"possessed", smites the quivering, dust- - eration between the nations. It gives the
enveloped audience with what would Meeting at the "'sacred city" of
Gonaives in November 1950 for the great Government a legal and social pro¬
appear to be mass dementia. gramme for transforming Haiti into a
Another thing too, must be recognized task of giving the Haitian people a
democratic Constitution "'safeguarding modern State. As the Message from the
as an expression of the collective spirit Constituent Assembly to the Haitian
the new manifestations of "primitive" its rights and freedoms", the Constituent
Assembly, followed the liberal ' tra¬ people stated: "'the State must seek
painting and sculpture which, thanks to to improve public health, raise the
dition of lour, first legislators land
the initiative ' of the American, Mr. De
endeavoured to model the new Consti¬ living standards of all sections of the
Witt Peters, have won recognition as part population, and organize an educational
of our spiritual heritage.
tution, so far as possible, on the demo¬
cratic ideal - proclaimed in Abraham system based on the principles of liberty,
The work of the Haitian primitive morality, civic responsibUity and human
Lincoln's famous words: "Government
painters has developed along extraord¬ solidarity and providing equal oppor¬
of the people, by the people,- for the
inarily realistic, and zestful lines, bright tunities for aU, so that every individual,
people."
colours and simplicity of design im¬ according to his gifts and merits, may
parting- a special feature to this fresh The Assembly granted Haitian women share in the advantages offered by his
evidence of the Haitian people's marked the right to vote and drew up detailed national community and enjoy the
artistic gifts. regulations on such matters as marriage, benefits of the intellectual, literary,
All this establishes the dazzlingly - the family, children, family property, the artistic, scientific and technical progress
varied nature of Haitian culture, which provision of education at all levels, the made throughout the world."
even the most superficial observer cannot protection of agricultural and urban The Government of Mr. Paul E. Ma-
ignore and in which the tourist seeking workers, rural public order, rural branch
gloire has, since December 6 1950, been
"local colour" cannot but delight. banks and banks for urban workers,
striving earnestly for the implementa¬
In my- Father's house ,are many social security, pubUc health and poor
tion of this programme which is so com¬
mansions, said the Nazarean. law administration.
pletely in line with the United Nations
The Constitution of 25 November 1950 Charter. In this task it relies on the full
(I) Peasant carnival. now in force is designed to give collaboration of the United Nations.
between 1800 and 1900. But what a dif¬ will be used to illustrate a new history
City Development ference there is when we come to the of mankind.
(Continued1 from page 2/) next fifty years. ! The 20th century is The preparation of this history
the Eastern sea-board of the United marked by a veritable profusion of urban has been entrusted by Unesco to
States and spreading inland as far as development despite "the havoc wrought the International Commission for a
Chicago. by the two most terrible wars mankind Scientific and Cultural History of Man-
Meanwhile great Atlantic and Pacific has ever known.- In spite of all the kind. The Commission considers the
ports were being established on the destruction, the map presents the 20th three maps as still in the "working docu¬
coasts of South America with the arrival century as constructive, as if the increase ment" stage, and they are therefore
of increasing settlers from Europe. On in destructive power were but the reverse being circulated to specialists in different
the coasts of Africa, too, the same was side of man's new capacity for buUding. parts of the world for possible revision
happening. First, Cape Town was built What is particularly striking is the and completion.
by the white man as a beacon of beauty enormous eastward expansion of the
European city belt. The great Russian Similarly, for the text of the History,
to shipweary seamen, then, perhaps as a
cities date back only to the 19th century the Commission is publishing the "Jour¬
consequence of the deplorable slave-
but, in the 20th, they developed into a nal of World History", a quarterly review
trade, the Negro constructed the gigan¬
series of great conglomerations strung in English, French and Spanish edited by
tic town of Abeokuta in Nigeria a
otit along the major routes crossing Sibe¬ Professor Lucien Febvre of the famed
typical example of the rise of urban
ria, and in a sense are the modern College de France.
development in the "Dark Continent".
At the same time, old Islamic cities, such northern equivalents of the towns on the The History of Mankind will seek to
ancient southern routes of Central Asia.
as Aleppo, maintained their position or, present the scientific and cultural story
like Cairo, revived. But the impact of of the world, free from national bias, and
neighbouring Europe makes this less show the efforts of the men and peoples
surprising. The three maps published on the cen¬ who fashioned the tools of modern
The changes are important therefore tre pages are part of a series which society.
32
UNESCO COURIER - N» 2 - 1954
Until the problem of rural education is satisfactorily solved, fa People's Art Reborn
Haiti seems destined to remain a desperately poor country. r
The converse of this statement is also true, for Haitian eco¬
nomics and education are inextricably linked. Progress has DURING the past decade Haiti has achieved fame by a
been made in recent years but the facts remain that four out veritable explosion of artistic talent which has amazed
of five peasant children never attend school; that teachers' critics from New York to Paris and beyond. The ori¬
salaries are inadequate; that many school buildings are hope¬ ginal exponents of this art were simple men. They included
lessly unsatisfactory; that equipment and textbooks are often a cobbler, a taxi-driver, a voodoo priest, a book-keeper, a
unobtainable. carpenter and a tailor, aU of them making a scant living, but
Only in recent years has real attention been paid to the pro¬ with one thing in common. They were able to translate their
vision of schools. The present five-year plan calUng for an sorrows, their beliefs, their joys, their patriotic and emotional
additional 327 elementary, 12 secondary and 15 professional experiences into pictures of powerful simplicity, .utter sincerity
schools cannot meet the full needs of the people. But to have and enchantingly decorative effect.
established this goal and appropriated $ 5,000,000 is a tremendous
The man responsible for bringing together all this talent,
stride forward in the battle against illiteracy.
guiding it and revealing it to the world was an American, De
Education is compulsory for children of seven to fourteen Witt Peters. When he founded the Centre d'Art, at Port-au-
years but the law is rarely enforced. The reasons: A shortage Prince in 1944 this American painter had only a slight interest
of schools; the dispersion of rural communities; the crowding in the Haiti's contemporary "primitives". Then, foUowing an
of existing schools ; a serious teacher shortage. exhibition in which the works of three of the "popular" paint¬
Moreover, the language problem continues to plague Haitian ers were shown, he began to follow and encourage their work
educators. The official language of the RepubUc is French, more closely. From this has grown a powerful movement of
but all Haitians understand, and most Haitians speak, Creole. popular art in Haiti in which the names of men like Hector
Creole is now becoming a written language for the first time, HyppoUte, a former voodoo priest, Philome Obin, Louverture
but there are four different spellingsand a great lack of Poisson and Wilson Bigaud stand out.
textbooks for teaching it. Haiti has produced an interesting body of Uterature, parti-
Another major problem has been the transformation of the îularly in the field of poetry. Haitian poets have been influenced
teaching methods and subject matter. Today such subjects by French styles, but their rich local colour gives their poetry
as health, sanitation and home economics are being given a distinctively .national character. Oustanding poets are
equal emphasis with the three R's. Schools in both urban Jacques Roumain, Léon Laleau. The MarceUn brothers Pierre
and rural areas serve as adult centres in the evening. Students and PhiUppe Thoby won fame in 1943 when their peasant novel
may range in age from 12 to 75. Canapé-Vert was awarded first prize in a Latin American Novel
What have these efforts achieved so far? Superficially the Contest and was translated into English.
3i
From the Unesco Newsroom
ic SCREENS FOR FARMERS: lamic Research, Psychology, tion by 7 states contributing
M. ERIPATETIC JAPANESE TV Clubs in rural France are Fine Arts and Library Archi¬ 75 per cent of CERN'S bud¬
ART : Unesco has organized experimenting with television ves are also to be established. get will bring the Convention
travelling exhibitions of 17th to as an aid to better farming. into force.
19th century Japanese wood¬ Programmes prepared by The European Organisation
prints. These are now touring Unesco, the French TV net¬ for Nuclear Research was set
14 countries in Europe, Asia and
the Americas.
work and Education and Agri¬ Si
Siamese centre: a up under Unesco's auspices
culture authorities are being "Thailand-Unesco Fundamental last year to proceed with the
tried out on rural audiences, Education Centre" is to be set up construction in Geneva of an
BARGING INTO CLASS : and results are being follow¬ international laboratory for
in Ubol, Thailand, following a re¬
Holland has set up 10 schools ed closely. nuclear research and to de¬
cent technical assistance agree¬
and 21 special classes on the velop co-operation between
ment. Four specialized agencies
country's network of water¬ existing laboratories in theo¬
and the TJ.N. will co-operate in
ways to cater for children of retical studies. The research
the project. They will survey
bargemen who are "passing w HERE'S TEACHER? The social and economic conditions, will be of a non-military na¬
through". ture and none of it will be
teacher shortage in the United train local educators and field
secret.
States is growing according to workers in health, agriculture,
CINEMAS ON WHEELS:
* ARABIC RAISED DOTS:-
Mobile cinemas now pay reg¬
The first Braille lending li¬
ular calls to seven hundred
brary in the Middle East is
villages in Norway. Twen¬
being created as part of a new
ty-eight of these are touring
rehabilitation centre for the
the countryside permanently, '
blind of this region recently
four by boat and the others
set up near Cairo by Egypt
. and the U.N.
by car. In two years
1,200,000 people have attended
20,000 shows.
Country teachers:
The problems of preparing rural
Translation acade¬
teachers for their jobs is the sub¬
ject of a new Unesco book, "The my: The State of Madhya Pra¬
desh, m India, has decided to
Training of Rural Teachers",
with detailed studies written by set up a translation academy
educators from Brazil, Gold which will translate important
HELP HAS NO NATIONALITY. The International Work Camp Move¬ books from other languages into
Coast, India and Mexico. The
ment is growing. Volunteers are now active in the Greek Ionian islands Hindi and Marathi. A sum of
book is inspired by Unesco's con¬
cern with rural education, - the (photo) struck by earthquakes last August and in the Netherlands 100,000 Rupees (about $20,000)
fight against illiteracy and the following last year's floods. Others are at .work on projects in India, has been set aside for the project
from state funds.
spread of compulsory primary Pakistan, Algeria, Italy and elsewhere. Seventy organizations, whose
education .generally. Price: work was co-ordinated by Unesco after the last war, now sponsor the
$ 1.25; 7/6r 350 fr. frs. movement in 35 countries. FILM. HISTORY: As part
of its Fourth Centenary cele¬
NO MORE TAXES: The brations, Sao Paulo is now
United Kingdom has joined 16 holding an international Film
other nations in applying the Festival. Unesco is participat¬
Unesco-sponsored internation¬ the International Bureau of home industries, social welfare ing -with a photographic
al agreement which abolish¬ Education. Over 1,500,000 child¬ and rural education and prepare exhibition tracing the history
es ~ import duties on educa¬ ren entered school last autum new teaching materials. of the cinema from its first
tional, scientific and cultural requiring a total of at least intimation, in the drawings of
materials such as books, news¬ 116,000 new teachers to meet ATOMS FOR PEACE: Leonardo da Vinci, to its la¬
papers, magazines, works of both the increase in enrollment The Government of the Unit¬ test manifestation in the cine¬
art, music scores and articles and replace retiring teachers, ed Kingdom, is the first to. mascope, invented by Profes¬
for the blind. but less than half were avail¬ ratify the Convention setting sor Henri Chrétien. Publi¬
able. up a European Organization cations connected with Unes¬
for Nuclear Research (CERN), co's programme for films are
EDUCATION BUDGET approved last July by 12 Unes¬ being displayed at the exhi¬
w OMEN ADMITTED: Wo¬ UP: Pakistan will spend co Member States. The im¬ bit. A selection of films from
men's rights in Jordan have £130,000,000 on education at portance of CERN and the many countries is being
marked a new step forward with all levels from primary school peaceful uses of atomic ener¬ shown during the Festival
the opening of the first women's to universities according to a gy were dealt with in a major week, and the Unesco film
teachers' training college at Ra¬ new six - year development portion of the December 1953 "World without End" is in¬
mallah, near Jerusalem. plan. Special centres for Is- issue of the Courier. Ratifica- cluded in the programme.
U
Z
Unesco's National Distributors from whom the <
New Zealand : Unesco Publications Centre,
English edition of THE COURIER can be obtained NATIONAL DISTRIBUTORS 7 De Lacy Street, Dunedm, N. E. 2.
are listed below Other Unesco Distributors are
Nigeria: C.MS Bookshop, P.O. Box 174,
listed in the French and Spanish editions of THE Lagos.
COURIER. Egypt : La Renaissance d'Egypte, 9, Adly Indonesia : G.C.T. van Dorp & Co. NV., Norway : A/S Bokh jornet, Stortingsplass 7,
Pasha Street, Cairo. Djalan Nusantara, 22, Djakarta. Oslo.
Finland : Akateeminen Kirjakauppa 2, Kes- Iraq : McKenzie's Bookshop, Baghdad. Pakistan : Ferflzsons Ltd., Karachi, Lahore,
kuskatu, Helsinki. Peshawar.
Israel : Blumstein's Bookstores Ltd., 35, Al-
Australia : Oxford University Press, 346, Formosa : The World Book Company Ltd., Philippines : Philippine Education Co., Inc ,
lenby Road, Tel-Aviv,
Little Collins Street, Melbourne. 99, Chung King South Rd, Section I, Taipeh. I 104 Castillejos, Quiapo, Manila.
Jamaica : Sangster's Book Room, 99, Harbour
Austria : Wilhelm Fnck Verlag, 27, Graben, France : Sales Division, Unesco, 19, Avenue Surinam : Radhakishun and Company Led ,
Vienna I. Street, Kingston ; Knox Educational Services,
Kléber, Pans- I 6e. (Book Dept.), Watermolenstraat 36, Para¬
Spaldings.
Burma : Burma Educational Bookshop, 55 1-3 Germany : Unesco Vertrieb für Deutschland, maribo.
Japan ; Maruzen Co, Inc., 6 Ton-Nichome,
Merchant Street, P O. Box 222, Rangoon. R. Oldenbourg, München. Sweden : A.B.C E. Fnztes Kungl Hovbok-
Nihonbashi, Tokyo.
Canada : University of Toronto Press, To¬ Greece : Elefthéroudakis, Librairie Interna¬ handel Fredsgatan 2, Stockholm 16.
ronto. tionale, Athens. Jordan : J I. Bahous and Co., Dar-UI-Kutub,
Thailand : Suksapan Panit, Arkarn 9, Rçj-
Ceylon : Lake House Bookshop, The Asso¬ Hong Kong : Swindon Book Co., 25 Nathan Salt Road, Amman.
Damnern Avenue, Bangkok.
ciated Newspapers of Ceylon, Ltd., Co- . Road, Kowloon. Malayan Federation and Singapore : Peter Union of South Africa : Van Schaik's Book¬
lombo 1 Chong and Co., P.O. Box 135, Singapore.
India : Orient Longmans Ltd. Bombay, "Cal¬ store, Ltd., P.O. Box 724, Pretoria.
Cyprus : M. E. Constantinides, P.O.B. -473. cutta, Madras : sub-depots : Oxford Book Malta : Sapienza's Library, 26, Kingsway, United Kingdom : H M. Stationery Office,
Nicosia. & Stationery Co , Scindia House, New Valletta. P.O. Box 569, London, S.E.I.
Denmark : E|nar Munksgaard Ltd., 6 Norre- Delhi; Rajkamal Publications Ltd., Himalaya * Netherlands : N. V. Martinus Nijhoff, Lange U.S.A. : Columbia University Press, 2960
gade, Copenhagen. House, Bombay 7. Voorhout 9, The Hague. Broadway, New York.
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