1 00:00:08,463 --> 00:00:12,013 When historians talk about the atrocities of the 20th century, 2 00:00:12,013 --> 00:00:17,503 we often think of those that took place during and between the two World Wars. 3 00:00:17,503 --> 00:00:20,543 Along with the Armenian genocide in modern-day Turkey, 4 00:00:20,543 --> 00:00:22,653 the Rape of Nanking in China, 5 00:00:22,653 --> 00:00:24,753 and Kristallnacht in Germany, 6 00:00:24,753 --> 00:00:27,522 another horrific ethnic cleansing campaign 7 00:00:27,522 --> 00:00:32,765 occurred on an island between the Atlantic Ocean and Caribbean Sea. 8 00:00:32,765 --> 00:00:35,754 The roots of this conflict go back to 1492, 9 00:00:35,754 --> 00:00:39,432 when Christopher Columbus stumbled onto the Caribbean island 10 00:00:39,432 --> 00:00:46,043 that would come to be named Hispaniola, launching a wave of European colonization. 11 00:00:46,043 --> 00:00:50,665 The island’s Taíno natives were decimated by violence and disease 12 00:00:50,665 --> 00:00:54,543 and the Europeans imported large numbers of enslaved Africans 13 00:00:54,543 --> 00:00:58,043 to toil in profitable sugar plantations. 14 00:00:58,043 --> 00:01:01,335 By 1777, the island had become divided 15 00:01:01,335 --> 00:01:05,986 between a French-controlled West and a Spanish-controlled East. 16 00:01:05,986 --> 00:01:11,395 A mass slave revolt won Haiti its independence from France in 1804 17 00:01:11,395 --> 00:01:14,325 and it became the world’s first black republic. 18 00:01:14,325 --> 00:01:16,515 But the new nation paid dearly, 19 00:01:16,515 --> 00:01:21,626 shut out of the world economy and saddled with debt by its former masters. 20 00:01:21,626 --> 00:01:24,965 Meanwhile, the Dominican Republic would declare independence 21 00:01:24,965 --> 00:01:28,756 by first overthrowing Haitian rule of eastern Hispaniola 22 00:01:28,756 --> 00:01:32,116 and later Spanish and American colonialism. 23 00:01:32,116 --> 00:01:36,186 Despite the long and collaborative history shared by these two countries, 24 00:01:36,186 --> 00:01:39,977 many Dominican elites saw Haiti as a racial threat 25 00:01:39,977 --> 00:01:46,148 that imperiled political and commercial relations with white western nations. 26 00:01:46,148 --> 00:01:48,001 In the years following World War I, 27 00:01:48,001 --> 00:01:51,357 the United States occupied both parts of the island. 28 00:01:51,357 --> 00:01:54,832 It did so to secure its power in the Western hemisphere 29 00:01:54,832 --> 00:01:59,308 by destroying local opposition and installing US-friendly governments. 30 00:01:59,308 --> 00:02:02,860 The brutal and racist nature of the US occupation, 31 00:02:02,860 --> 00:02:06,208 particularly along the remote Dominican-Haitian border, 32 00:02:06,208 --> 00:02:10,872 laid the foundation for bigger atrocities after its withdrawal. 33 00:02:10,872 --> 00:02:15,007 In 1930, liberal Dominican president Horacio Vásquez 34 00:02:15,007 --> 00:02:19,279 was overthrown by the chief of his army, Rafael Trujillo. 35 00:02:19,279 --> 00:02:22,009 Despite being a quarter Haitian himself, 36 00:02:22,009 --> 00:02:25,991 Trujillo saw the presence of a bicultural Haitian and Dominican borderland 37 00:02:25,991 --> 00:02:28,019 as both a threat to his power 38 00:02:28,019 --> 00:02:32,159 and an escape route for political revolutionaries. 39 00:02:32,159 --> 00:02:35,739 In a chilling speech on October 2, 1937, 40 00:02:35,739 --> 00:02:39,389 he left no doubt about his intentions for the region. 41 00:02:39,389 --> 00:02:43,493 Claiming to be protecting Dominican farmers from theft and incursion, 42 00:02:43,493 --> 00:02:48,119 Trujillo announced the killing of 300 Haitians along the border 43 00:02:48,119 --> 00:02:53,179 and promised that this so-called "remedy" would continue. 44 00:02:53,179 --> 00:02:55,879 Over the next few weeks, the Dominican military, 45 00:02:55,879 --> 00:02:57,949 acting on Trujillo’s orders, 46 00:02:57,949 --> 00:03:01,540 murdered thousands of Haitian men and women, 47 00:03:01,540 --> 00:03:04,400 and even their Dominican-born children. 48 00:03:04,400 --> 00:03:07,270 The military targeted black Haitians, 49 00:03:07,270 --> 00:03:11,470 even though many Dominicans themselves were also dark-skinned. 50 00:03:11,470 --> 00:03:14,170 Some accounts say that to distinguish the residents 51 00:03:14,170 --> 00:03:16,161 of one country from the other, 52 00:03:16,161 --> 00:03:21,341 the killers forced their victims to say the Spanish word for parsley. 53 00:03:21,341 --> 00:03:25,470 Dominicans pronounce it perejil, with a trilled Spanish "r." 54 00:03:25,470 --> 00:03:30,732 The primary Haitian language, however, is Kreyol, which doesn’t use a trilled r. 55 00:03:30,732 --> 00:03:33,349 So if people struggled to say perejil, 56 00:03:33,349 --> 00:03:37,481 they were judged to be Haitian and immediately killed. 57 00:03:37,481 --> 00:03:40,620 Yet recent scholarship suggests that tests like this 58 00:03:40,620 --> 00:03:44,422 weren’t the sole factor used to determine who would be murdered, 59 00:03:44,422 --> 00:03:48,431 especially because many of the border residents were bilingual. 60 00:03:48,431 --> 00:03:52,051 The Dominican government censored any news of the massacre, 61 00:03:52,051 --> 00:03:54,242 while bodies were thrown in ravines, 62 00:03:54,242 --> 00:03:55,523 dumped in rivers, 63 00:03:55,523 --> 00:03:58,302 or burned to dispose of the evidence. 64 00:03:58,302 --> 00:04:02,233 This is why no one knows exactly how many people were murdered, 65 00:04:02,233 --> 00:04:07,548 though contemporary estimates range from about 4,000 to 15,000. 66 00:04:07,548 --> 00:04:11,341 Yet the extent of the carnage was clear to many observers. 67 00:04:11,341 --> 00:04:14,933 As the US Ambassador to the Dominican Republic at the time noted, 68 00:04:14,933 --> 00:04:19,114 “The entire northwest of the frontier on the Dajabón side 69 00:04:19,114 --> 00:04:22,144 is absolutely devoid of Haitians. 70 00:04:22,144 --> 00:04:28,454 Those not slain either fled across the frontier or are still hiding in the bush.” 71 00:04:28,454 --> 00:04:30,833 The government tried to disclaim responsibility 72 00:04:30,833 --> 00:04:33,884 and blame the killings on vigilante civilians, 73 00:04:33,884 --> 00:04:37,040 but Trujillo was condemned internationally. 74 00:04:37,040 --> 00:04:38,884 Eventually, the Dominican government 75 00:04:38,884 --> 00:04:44,514 was forced to pay only $525,000 in reparations to Haiti, 76 00:04:44,514 --> 00:04:46,364 but due to corrupt bureaucracy, 77 00:04:46,364 --> 00:04:51,167 barely any of these funds reached survivors or their families. 78 00:04:51,167 --> 00:04:53,884 Neither Trujillo nor anyone in his government 79 00:04:53,884 --> 00:04:58,114 was ever punished for this crime against humanity. 80 00:04:58,114 --> 00:05:01,115 The legacy of the massacre remains a source of tension 81 00:05:01,115 --> 00:05:02,764 between the two countries. 82 00:05:02,764 --> 00:05:07,464 Activists on both sides of the border have tried to heal the wounds of the past. 83 00:05:07,464 --> 00:05:10,303 But the Dominican state has done little, if anything, 84 00:05:10,303 --> 00:05:14,015 to officially commemorate the massacre or its victims. 85 00:05:14,015 --> 00:05:18,906 Meanwhile, the memory of the Haitian massacre remains a chilling reminder 86 00:05:18,906 --> 00:05:22,166 of how power-hungry leaders can manipulate people 87 00:05:22,166 --> 00:05:24,727 into turning against their lifelong neighbors.