THE AGRONOMIST
reviewed
by
Cynthia Fuchs
Cynthia
Fuchs
is Associate Professor of English, African American Studies, Film
& Media Studies, and Cultural Studies at George Mason University.
She is also the film-tv-dvd editor for the weekly cultural studies
magazine, PopMatters.
She edited Spike Lee: Interviews, (University of Mississippi
Press 2002). Her review of Bowling
for Columbine was published in Arts &
Opinion, Vol 1, No 1, 2002.
* * * * * * * * * * *
"They
try everything," says Jean Léopold Dominique in The
Agronomist. "They" would be the enemies of free
speech who repeatedly endeavored to shut down his popular radio
station, Radio Haiti Inter. Trained as an agronomist, he took
to fighting state oppression when faced by its incessant realities,
an oppression that was, of course, shaped in large part by the
United States, beginning with its military occupation (1913-1934).
The two
nations' interconnected histories continue with François
"Papa Doc" Duvalier's election as president in 1957,
supported by the Haitian military and the U.S. government and
his establishment of the brutal paramilitary group, the Tontons
Macoutes, through what Dominique calls the "Haitian spring,"
under Jimmy Carter's human rights policies (during this time,
Dominique notes, he and his wife, Michèle Montas, were
able to get their radio station back on the air). This brief season
of hope ended abruptly, however, when policies advanced by Ronald
Reagan (whom Dominique calls the "cowboy") enabled Baby
Doc Duvalier's rise to power ("Papa" died in 1971),
and forced Dominique's exile to NYC. In 1986, when the U.S. helped
Baby Doc to escape, Dominique and Montas returned and were able
to briefly reopen the radio station. Their return in 1986 brought
some 60,000 supporters to the Port-au-Prince Airport, joyous and
energized by what seemed their bright prospect.
Dominique
and Montas supported Aristide's election in 1990, as well as that
of his successor, René Préval, in 1995. (During
this time, Dominique and Montas left and came back, again.) But
neither president fulfilled promises of freedom and fairness for
the impoverished population of Haiti, and the radio activists
were increasingly disillusioned by what they saw. Their tireless
work toward social justice and fair distribution of wealth for
the "peasants" they championed earned them many enemies,
most in the government they so overtly criticized. On 3rd of April
2000, the then 69-year-old Dominique was assassinated outside
his beloved radio station. (His murder remains unsolved.)
Demme's
documentary spends less energy lamenting or even raging than it
does extolling the vitality and resilience of its subject. The
Agronomist's title refers not only to Dominique's personal
past, but also to the hopes he had for his people's future, as
well as his specialization in economics concerning the distribution
and management of land. The Haitian struggle is, at various levels,
about property -- organic production generated by farmland as
well as citizens' self-possession and right to air ideas, to broadcast
by radio and disseminate information.
The film
consists of archival footage alongside interviews with Dominique's
daughter (who, like her mother, has continued her father's work),
as well as with Dominique and Montas, conducted during their New
York exile in the early 1990s. With such imagery, and some brief
recapping of history, Demme locates an incredible story that more
or less tells itself (helped along in no small way by Wyclef Jean's
intelligent score). Charismatic and enthusiastic, Dominique's
face is as expressive as any animated character's. Demme worked
on the film for some 15 years, and until this year's eruption
of violence (and Aristide's own abrupt exile), was unable to find
a distributor. Now, unfortunately, its focus on the costs of oppression
in Haiti and U.S. involvement looks entirely immediate and painfully
relevant.
It's
easy to understand Demme's fascination with and dedication to
Dominique: he's a brilliant storyteller and relentless optimist,
his hands moving as if independent of his body as he speaks. Careful
subtitles and arty editing (a kind of scratching effect, repetition
to underline particular points) don't detract from the sheer vigor
of the man. No matter the abuses Dominique witnesses or endures,
he persists in his struggle for freedom, offering inspiration
for those who might feel overwhelmed by circumstances less dire
than his own. A film lover, he began his career in media as a
programmer for a local theater, forming a deep affection for Alain
Resnais' Night and Fog, which revealed to him the persuasive
and poetic powers of movies. His participation with this project,
whose end he never saw, is plainly a function of faith, that art
can move us to want to make a difference.
As Carmen
Gentile reports recently in her article, On the Ground in
Haiti, Haiti remains the hemisphere's poorest nation, multiply
burdened by unforgiven debt as well as increasing inability even
to structure or even imagine another, more hopeful future. How
sad Dominique would be to see what has happened in the four years
since his murder. And yet, how fiercely and relentlessly he would
continue to fight for that hope. Indeed, how fierce and beautiful
he remains in this film, a call for resistance against injustices
both general and devastatingly specific.