Supporting an amusement park for children in Haiti

Dear friends,

The Centre Haïtien de Recherche et d’Actions pour le développement (ChrAD) is a Haitian nonprofit organization dedicated the promotion of research and local community development, run by the historian Jean Fritzner Etienne, one of Haiti’s leading scholars of the colonial and revolutionary periods and an authority on the Catholic Church in Saint-Domingue/Haiti. CHrAD is raising money to support the building of an amusement park for children in Gressier (located south of the capital of Port-au-Prince) who have been traumatized by gang warfare in the Haitian capital and the permanent political unrest in the country. The initial fundraising campaign is being hosted by the Global Giving Accelerator. If the campaign can raise $5,000 by June 26, 11:59pm, it will receive a permanent place on the Global Giving website which will greatly facilitate the project’s long-term fundraising prospects. Please consider giving in any amount you can to support this worthy cause: the link to make a donation is here.

With thanks for your consideration,

Malick Ghachem

MIT Community Vigil on racial justice

My thoughts on racial justice and the state of our country, delivered as part of an MIT Community Vigil on June 2, 2021, can be found at 40:41 of the webcast, and also here in text form. If you have come this far, please also hear the other voices who spoke up at this event: in order, Rafael Reif, Danielle Geathers, Madeleine Sutherland, DiOnetta Jones Crayton, John Dozier, Corban Swain, Malick Ghachem, Sandy Alexandre, Ramona Allen, Chevy Cleaves, AudreyRose Wooden, Kelvin Green, Kendyll Hicks, Aiyah Josiah-Faeduwor, Jaleesa Trapp, and Heather Konar. Thank you to Kaijeh Johnson and Erica James for their questions and comments.

Pan-Mass Challenge

Dear friends,

I will be logging some 190 miles from Sturbridge to Provincetown on my bike August 3-4, 2019 to raise money for the Dana Farber Cancer Institute as part of the 2019 Pan-Mass Challenge.  Last year I rode in memory of my friend Lara Moore, a friend from graduate school who passed away from cancer in 2003.  This year I am riding to celebrate two wonderful friends who have had a big impact on me.  The first is Lisa Diller, a pediatric oncology specialist at the Dana Farber Cancer Institute with whom I shared my fellowship year at the Radcliffe Institute this past year. She does incredibly difficult work that few people I know (least of all myself) could bear even to contemplate let alone actually do.  The second friend I honor is Andrew Wheeler, a person of great strength and character who was struck by cancer last year but has recovered successfully and is now back in full force on the squash and tennis court, where we met some time ago.  I ride to celebrate his recovery.

Please support my ride in honor of these two great individuals.  My PMC fundraising page is here where you can find some more information about Lisa and Andrew:

http://profile.pmc.org/MG0388

100% of funds donated go to support the costs of research and treatment at the Dana-Farber Institute. (If your employer has a matching program, please remind them of your contribution!) Thank you most kindly for your consideration and know that there is a special place in my heart for small amounts.

Best wishes,

Malick Ghachem

Fredrik Thomasson events on Haiti/Sweden/Colonial Archives Feb. 4 and 8, 2019 at Harvard/Radcliffe

Please join us for a lecture by Radcliffe Visiting Scholar Fredrik Thomasson entitled Sweden and Haiti, 1791-1825. Register here to attend.

Sweden and Haiti 1791–1825
Monday, February 4 | 4 PM
Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, Harvard University
Knafel Center, Room 104, 10 Garden Street, Cambridge MA

Haitian historiography is evolving rapidly and the recent focus on the revolution has expanded to cover the first decades of the independent nation/s. New research has refuted the notion of Haitian post-independence isolation.

Uppsala University historian Fredrik Thomasson contextualizes these perspectives in a discussion of Swedish-Haitian relations from the beginning of the rebellions in the early 1790s to the Swedish recognition of Haiti in 1825. Thomasson will compare the reporting in Sweden to that in the Swedish Caribbean colony Saint Barthélemy where the Revolution was seen in a very different light.

The Swedish case is an interesting testimony both to the extent that the revolution was world news and how newly independent Haiti interacted with surrounding colonies, as well as with a distant Scandinavian nation.

Lite refreshments will be served. Register at http://bit.ly/FThomasson to attend.


Fredrik Thomasson

The Colonial Archive and Swedish Saint Barthélemy 1785–1878

Friday, February 8, 2019

12:00 – 1:15 PM

Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, Harvard University
Byerly Hall (10 Garden Street, Cambridge)

http://bit.ly/Thomasson_Lunch

Fredrik Thomasson, Department of History, Uppsala University

When Sweden sold the Caribbean island Saint Barthélemy to France in 1878, all governmental archives were left on the island. This collection is now held in the French colonial archives in Aix-en-Provence: Archives nationales d’outre-mer. Fonds Suédois de Saint Barthélemy (FSB) – with documents in mainly Swedish, French and English. It covers the entire Swedish period 1785–1878 and is by far the richest source on Swedish Caribbean colonialism.

The archive, c. 300.000 pages, is several times bigger than the material on the Caribbean possession in archives in Sweden but has, with very few exceptions, never been used by Swedish historians.

This presentation discusses the digitization project of the FSB and gives an account for the archive’s exceptional history.

Negotiations with institutional stakeholders and contact with a larger public confirms that this project is very much part of contemporary history and memory debates. Why was the archive never used, and why was there so little interest from Swedish archival institutions to make it accessible?  Other issues to be discussed are the effects of digitization on colonial history, and to what extent access to this archive can change perceptions on Swedish Caribbean colonial history.

Interested in attending? Register as soon as possible at the bit.ly link above.

Seats for our lunches tend to fill quickly, so do register early. We will let you know if you receive a seat.

Africa in Global History: A Colloquium on the Work of Joseph C. Miller

Looking forward to participating in this upcoming (Oct. 26) Harvard colloquium on the work of the great Africanist Joseph Miller of UVA, spearheaded by my wonderful new MIT colleague Kenda Mutongi.  You can find the final program at this link and also just below:

final miller program

Race in Boston (and Newton)

Two real-world anecdotes from my life today:

1. I am playing tennis at the local clay courts with a friend, whose family comes from subcontinent.  Four Caucasian males on the court next to us are finishing a doubles match.  One of said males, with whom I had been chatting earlier (but whom I had met only that morning), tells me as he is preparing to leave the court that “at least you guys don’t need sunscreen.”

2. About an hour later, I am driving my son and one of his friends home from another friend’s birthday.  I strike up a conversation with my son and his friend about — what else? — the Fortnite craze taking over our nation (see, e.g., this apologia).  I ask my son’s friend what his favorite skin is.  (In Fortnite, a “skin” is a costume or outfit that you can buy to dress up your combatant in the game.)  Answer: “white.”  (I did a quick check to confirm that in fact Fornite does not actually market “white” skins per se — which one could be excused for thinking might actually be a possibility in this day and age.)

Some context: I live in Newton, which is an overwhelmingly white, generally prosperous town.  If you haven’t had a chance yet to read the superb Boston Globe series “Boston. Racism. Image. Reality,” by the Globe‘s legendary Spotlight team, do yourself a favor and read it.  As journalism goes I thought it was among the most probing series of articles I have read on this topic, and for Boston area residents it is an eye opener.  For example, the story by Andrew Ryan on the Seaport district really shows persuasively how the combination of real estate developers intent on creating an “upscale” neighborhood, a tendency to revert to a handful of big players in the construction industry instead of reaching out to minority-led firms, and a city government unable to exert any real influence over the development process despite massive public investment in the district has created possibly the least diverse neighborhood in greater Boston  And the series reveals any number of other disturbing, even shocking factoids, e.g.: the median net worth for whites in the metropolitan Boston area is nearly $250,000, but a mere $8 for African-Americans.  (I too had to read that one twice to make sure I read it correctly.)  For those of us in the higher education business, the article on the relatively small enrollment of African-American students at Boston area colleges is particularly disturbing.  Some of the demographic and economic figures highlighted in the series have not changed greatly since the Globe did an earlier, similar investigation into race and racism in Boston in 1983.

So the entire series, as well as the 1983 reports (not easily tracked down, alas) are worth a close look.  I used it this semester in a course I teach on “Race, Crime, and Citizenship in American Law” and I will almost certainly do so again.  Back in March, I had the chance to sit down with two of the journalists who worked on the series (Ryan and Adrian Walker) along with their editor Patricia Wen, in the form of a panel conversation at the annual meeting of the Kendall Square Association (whose new president, C.A. Webb, is fabulous and has a real commitment to this issue).  One of the attendees made the point that Andrew Ryan’s story about the Seaport district could also have been written about Kendall Square.  The KSA has organized a series of small group followup dialogues among its members to continue the March 29 discussion.

The Spotlight series made me feel quite differently about what it means to live in the Boston area.  I still love this city, but I understand better now why so many people continue to find it difficult to call Boston home.