Haiti Jews tell tales of earthquake destruction
For over 500 years a small Jewish community from Lebanon, Brazil, Syria and Egypt has been in Haiti.
By The Forward and Gabrielle Birkner Tags: Israel newsEach year on Yom Kippur, Rudolph Dana locks himself in his Pétionville, Haiti, home - protected by guard dogs and security personnel - and passes the Day of Atonement fasting, praying and reciting the traditional liturgy of repentance and forgiveness.
Up until about 10 years ago, Haiti's tiny Jewish community would gather in a home on Yom Kippur and pray alongside a video recording of a Yom Kippur service that Dana?s brother-in-law, a cantor at a New Jersey synagogue, had mailed to him. But in recent years, the community has become too small and disjointed to warrant even such modest holiday gatherings.
When the catastrophic, 7.0-magnitude earthquake shook Haiti on January 12, Dana happened to be in Miami on business. In the days since the quake - which leveled much of the Haitian capital of Port-au-Prince and the surrounding areas, including P'tionville - Dana, 61, who owns a propane-distribution company, has been on the phone and Internet around the clock, trying to make contact with friends and his nearly 500 employees.
Most, but not all, of the people who work for him survived the quake, but many of them lost loved ones. Dana says hundreds of his friends and acquaintances died in the disaster. "Some were in the supermarket; some were in schools; some were in universities; some were in banks," he said.
Those who survived are, for the most part, homeless. Their homes have been either reduced to rubble or, like Dana's house, suffered major structural damage, rendering them unsafe. The more fortunate Haitians are living out of their cars, and the less fortunate ones are sleeping outside on tarps, Dana said.
"All of the hotels and churches and places that people could gather have been destroyed," he said. "It's not like one is good, and the others are down; they're all down or could collapse at any time. There is no more city."
He has been in touch, via an Internet-enabled satellite phone that he kept in his Port-au-Prince office, with many of his employees, who have managed to set up a makeshift office, outside of the badly damaged building that housed his company.
These days, they're not dealing in propane, but in rice, beans and cooking oil. Dana said he managed, through his business connections, to get a shipment of food staples, and that his company has been distributing meals - cooked with firewood - to some 300 people camped out near the office park.
Dana said he is not sure when he will return to the country where his grandparents settled at the turn of the 20th century, and where he was born and has lived for most of his life.
Dana's deep Haitian roots are part of the country's long Jewish history.
Back in 1492, Luis de Torres, Christopher Columbus's interpreter, was the first known Jew to step foot on what is now Haiti. Brazilian immigrants of Jewish ancestry settled there in the 17th century, though many perished in the slave revolts at the turn of the 19th century that ultimately established Haiti's independence from France.
Then came a small wave of Jewish immigration to Haiti from Lebanon, Syria and Egypt - the influx that brought Dana's grandparents - during the late-19th and early-20th centuries. Many of these Middle Eastern Jewish immigrants made a living importing and selling textiles, and they sent their children to the local Catholic schools.
The island's Jews were joined during the 1930s by about 100 European Jews who came to Haiti fleeing the Nazis. The Haitian Jewish community peaked mid-century at about 300 members, many of whom left for larger, more established Jewish communities in the United States, Argentina and Panama.
Archaeologists have also found evidence of a Crypto-Jewish, or Marrano, community that once existed in the western Haitian city of J'amie.
During the 1940s and 1950s, Jews who grew up in and around Port-au-Prince remember how the community would import matzah for Passover and would gather together, 50 to 60 people strong, for High Holy Day services.
"Services were held in one of the largest homes; men sat in the front and women sat in the back," said Vivianne Esses, 76, who lived with her family in P'tionville until she was 13, before moving to Bogota, Colombia, and, later, to Brooklyn, N.Y.
In J'mie, where Marie Mizrahi grew up in the 1940s and 1950s, hers was one of only a couple of Jewish families in town. Although she and her family weren't particularly observant, they managed to observe Jewish traditions. ?We ate chicken and beef, but never shrimp or pork," she said. "I have five brothers, and they were all circumcised."
Both Esses and Mizrahi fondly recalled the sweetness of Haiti?s mangos, the fruit that remains one of the country's main exports.
Today, Haiti - a country of 9 million people, where the dominant religions are Catholicism and Vodou - has an estimated 25 Jews. Most of them live in Petionville, a relatively affluent enclave situated in the hills above Port-au-Prince. Some of the country's Jews are among the wealthiest residents of the island nation, where about 80% of people live in poverty.
Haiti has no rabbi and no synagogue. Dana can't remember the last time local Jews were able to gather a minyan. There is a Torah, which is kept in the home of Dana?s cousin Gilbert Bigio, the Haitian business magnate with interests in the steel, telecommunications, banking, petroleum, and food sectors.
One of Haiti's wealthiest citizens and the de facto leader of the island's Jewish community, Bigio owns the land on which Israel recently set up its military field hospital, according to Amos Radian, Israel's Dominican Republic-based ambassador to the nations of the eastern Caribbean.
Radian said he arrived in Haiti about 16 hours after the earthquake and, after meeting with Haitian President Renval, began to look for Gilbert Bigio's son Reuven Bigio. Gilbert Bigio, who is Israel's honorary consul in Haiti, was in Florida at the time of the earthquake. The ambassador had received word that the Bigio family had survived the earthquake. But because nearly all forms of electronic communication were down, it took more than a day to locate him.
Radian, speaking with the Forward from the IDF field hospital, said that the Bigio family has been ?the key for our success? in opening the hospital just hours after the Israeli army team's January 15 arrival.Haiti and Israel maintain full diplomatic relations. Radian said that, during the 1960s and 1970s, Israel's international development organization, Mashav, was active in creating "special farms" in Haiti, and teaching locals about sustainable agricultural practices, such as the use of drip irrigation and greenhouses.
Kenneth Ades, 41, a Jew who resided in Haiti as a child, said his father, a writer and real estate investor who lived in P'tionville until his death in 2005, had his own plan for improving Haiti's agriculture, legal system and general infrastructure.
"He was very, very patriotic about Haiti," said Ades, who lives in New York. "He had a blueprint to bring Haiti back; he said it was going to cost $6 billion."
That was before the earthquake.
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Apparently you do not know how to interprete what you are reading! The 25 jews in Haiti are all well and helping their fellow country men, not themselves! Yhe Lebanese community, mostly christian, in Haiti is much larger and also prosperous. Any help sent from lebanon?
HAITI. Imad frm Leb. You don't get people more stupid than the one from above !
This proves that the planet itself is an anti Semitic bastard.
Although the devestation in Haiti is to cry for, this article brought a smile on my face, here you have a man on an island, far away from Israel and Europe, he is Jewish and a business man !! It is in our blood I suppose, no matter where you live, which skin colour you have, the business is in our system.
So, now Imad, where was the Hezbollah Field Hospital.? Have a nice day.
only to assist Haiti Jews ... what real jews
Maybe this is a sign that they need to return? HaShem is calling his children..
"Some of the country's Jews are among the wealthiest residents of the island nation" With 25 Jews in total, isn't this a fact that could be nailed down a little bit better? What is going on, there is one family of like 5 people who isn't wealthy, or what? I'd expect them all to be grouped in the same class level, supporting each other and helping each other.
give the king thy judgments o lord and thy righteousness unto the king's son he shall judge thy people with righteousness and thy poor with judgment the mountains shall bring shalom to the people and the little hills by righteousness he shall judge the poor of the people he shall save the children of the needy and shall break in pieces the oppressor they shall fear thee as long as the sun and the moon endure throughout all generations for the lord shall save zion and will build the cities of judah that they may dwell there and have it in possession the seed also of his servants shall inherit it and they that love his name shall dwell therein oh that the salvation of israel were come out of zion! when the lord bringeth back the captivity of his people jacob shall rejoice and israel shall be glad out of zion the perfection of beauty the lord hath shined our lord shall come and shall not keep silence a fire shall devour before him and it shall be very tempestuous round about him,tehilim
but thou o lord shall endure for ever and thy remebrance unto all generations thou shalt arise and have mercy upon zion for the time to favour her yea the set time is come for thy servants take pleasure in her stones and favour the dust thereof so the heathen shall fear the name of the lord and all the kings of the earth thy glory when the lord shall build up zion he shall appear in his glory tehilim
I was glad when they said unto me let us go into the house of the lord our feet shall stand within thy gates o JESUSALEN JESUSALEN is builded as a city that is compact together whither the tribes go up the tribes of the lord unto the testimony of isreal to give thanks unto the name of the lord for there are set thrones of judgments the thrones of the house of david pray for the shalom of JESUSALEN they shall prosper that love thee shalom be within thy walls and prosperity within thy palaces for my brethen and companions sakes I will now say shalom be within thee because of the house of the lord our lord I will seek thy good o praise the lord all ye nations praise him all ye people for his merciful kindness is great toward us and the truth of the lord endureth for ever praise ye the lord set thou a wicked man over him and let satan stand at his right hand when he shall be judge let him be condemned and let his prayer become sin