Today, President Nicolas Sarkozy arrived in Haiti. It’s
refreshing to see France step up and, at least,
make overtures
regarding the well-being of its former colony:
Some Haitians are welcoming France’s new interest in
their nation as a counterbalance to the United States, which
has sent troops there three times in the past 16 years. But
Sarkozy’s visit is also reviving bitter memories of the
crippling costs of Haiti’s 1804 independence.
The United States has too long been first to act and first
to blame in regions that were never American colonies, but
always, somehow, American obligations.
From the Balkans to Beirut, Americans have spent valuable
human and natural resources in the name of world
peace. France’s visit to Haiti is a good first step for the
former colonizer.
And although President Sarkozy’s visit to Haiti
— the first ever by a French president — spoke of the
“wounds of colonization,” it also spoke of Haitian self-reliance
and optimism.
And it spoke of French pride.
Imagine the audacité. A former
colonizer speaking Vive L’France, to a former
colony.
But that’s exactly what Mr. Sarkozy did.
Ending his remarks, Mr.
Sarkozy exclaimed, Vive la France followed by
Vive Haiti.
Although, perhaps, he regrets the wounds of
colonization, he does not apologize for or diminish the pride he
feels in being a French citizen.
And why should he? Rightly, wrongly, or indifferently,
he is the President of France.
Regardless of the international pressures to succumb to the
moral equivalence of one nation over the other, a visiting
president, should never shirk or shun from exclaiming his
nation’s exceptionalism. Mr. Sarkozy ought to utter
themes of French exceptionalism and longevity.
That is expected, n’est pas?
Would that the French can follow through on pledges to aid
in the reconstruction of their former colony. America should not
be required to go it all alone.
And like with the example of President Sarkozy in
Haiti, American exceptionalism should never be diminished or
excused by any leader on this, or especially, foreign
soil.
Not that any American president would ever do
that… I’m just sayin’.