Michele bennett duvalier death in paradise
Michèle Bennett
Former First Lady of Haiti
This article is about the former First Lady of Haiti. For the Australian film producer, see Michele Bennett (film producer).
Michèle Bennett | |
---|---|
In role 27 May – 7 February | |
President | Jean-Claude Duvalier |
Preceded by | Simone Duvalier |
Succeeded by | Gabrielle Namphy |
Born | () 15 January (age74) Port‑au‑Prince, Haiti |
Spouses | Alix Pasquet Jr. Jean‑Claude Duvalier (m.; div.) |
Children | 4 |
Michèle Bennett (born 15 January )[1] is the former First Lady of Haiti and the ex‑wife of former President of Haiti, Jean‑Claude Duvalier.[2] They fled to France together when he resigned in ;[3] they divorced in [4]
Early life
Michèle Bennett was born in Port‑au‑Prince, Haiti,[5] in , the daughter of Aurore(néeLigondé) and ErnestBennett, a Haitian businessman and descendant of King Henry I of Haiti.[5] Her father owned more than 50, acres (20,ha) of land, growing mostly coffee, and employing 1, estate workers in addition to more in his business.[6] Her uncle was Haiti's Roman Catholic Archbishop Monsignor D.
Antoni.[7] At 15, Bennett moved to New York, where she was educated at St. Mary's School in Peekskill. She went on to work as a secretary at a slipper company in New York City's Garment District.[6] In , she married Alix Pasquet, Jr., the son of Captain Alix Pasquet, a well known mulatto officer and Tuskegee Airman who in led a coup attempt against François Duvalier.
By Pasquet she had two children, Alix III and Sacha.[8] After her divorce from Pasquet, she had a career in public relations for Habitation LeClerc, an upscale hotel in Port‑au‑Prince.[9]
Marriage
Although Bennett met Jean‑Claude Duvalier in high school, the pair did not become romantically engaged until ten years later.
She was firstly married to Alix Pasquet Jr. in then divorced in [10] In , Bennett married President Duvalier. Their wedding, Haiti's social event of the decade, cost an unprecedented US$2million and was falsely reported to be received enthusiastically by the majority of Haitians.[10] Michèle Duvalier at first endeared herself to the population by distributing clothes and food to the needy as well as opening several medical clinics and schools for the poor.[2] In the six weeks following the wedding, Michèle and Jean‑Claude toured Haiti, turning up unannounced at meetings, marketplaces, and other gathering places, which garnered "approving glances and words most everywhere".[6][10] On a visit to Haiti, MotherTeresa remarked that she had "never seen the poor people being so familiar with their head of state as they were with [Michèle]".[11] With Jean‑Claude, Michèle had her third and fourth children: Nicolas and Anya.[12]
The marriage represented a symbolic alliance with the mulatto elite, the families Jean‑Claude's father had opposed.[6][13] This resulted in her husband's mother, Simone Duvalier, who opposed the match, being sidelined politically, which in turn created new factional alliances within the ruling group since the Duvalierist Old Guard opined that the new First Lady's power appeared to exceed her husband's.
While Jean‑Claude often dozed through Cabinet meetings, his wife, frustrated at his political ineptitude, reprimanded ministers herself.[14]
First lady
Accusations of or associations with corruption plagued the Duvalier–Bennett marriage. Michèle's father, Ernest Bennett, took advantage of his presidential connection to extend interests into his businesses, from his BMW dealership, to his coffee and cocoa export concerns, to AirHaiti, in whose planes Bennett was rumored to be transporting drugs.[8][15] In , Frantz Bennett, Michèle's brother, was arrested in Puerto Rico for drug trafficking, and began a three‑year jail term.[8]
Michèle Duvalier's family amassed wealth during the later part of Jean‑Claude's dictatorship.
By the end of his fifteen‑year rule, Duvalier and his wife had become notorious for their corruption.[8] The National Palace became the scene of opulent costume parties, where the young President once appeared dressed as a Turkishsultan to dole out ten‑thousand‑dollar jewels as door prizes.[8]
While on a visit to Haiti in , Pope John Paul II declared that "things must change in Haiti", and he called on "all those who have power, riches and culture so that they can understand the serious and urgent responsibility to help their brothers and sisters".[16] Popular uprising against the regime began soon after that.
Duvalier responded with a 10%reduction in staple food prices, the closing of independent radio stations, a cabinet reshuffle, and a crackdown by police and army units, but these moves failed to dampen the momentum of the popular uprising. Jean‑Claude's wife and advisers urged him to put down the rebellion in order to remain in office.
In response to widening opposition to 28 years of Duvalier rule, on 7 February , the Duvaliers fled the rioting country in an American plane accompanied by 19 other people.[3][17]
Exile
The governments of Greece, Spain, Switzerland, Gabon and Morocco all refused the Duvalier family's requests for asylum.
France agreed to give the Duvaliers temporary entry but also denied them asylum.[18] Soon after their arrival in France, their home was raided as part of an investigation into pillaging Haiti's treasury. Bennett was found trying to flush documentation down a toilet. Her papers documented recent spending including US$, for Givenchy clothing, US$, for Boucheron jewellery and US$9, for two children's horse saddles at Hermès.[19] In , a French civil court dismissed Haiti's lawsuit against the Duvaliers, which sought to have the Duvaliers held responsible to repay money to Haiti.[20]
In , Jean‑Claude Duvalier filed for divorce from Bennett in the Dominican Republic, accusing her of immoral acts.[4] Bennett, who was living with another man in Cannes at the time, contested the decision, flying to the Dominican Republic to obtain a reversal before her husband prevailed in a third court.[4] She was awarded alimony and child support.[4]
In the wake of the earthquake in Haiti, Bennett returned to Haiti with a search and rescue team to look for her brother RudyBennett in the rubble of the HôtelMontana.[21] Bennett returned to Haiti for Jean‑Claude Duvalier's funeral on 11 October She attended with her two children from their marriage, at a chapel on the grounds of the Institution Saint-Louis de Gonzague school in the Delmas district of Port‑au‑Prince.[22]
References
- ^Abbott, Elizabeth ().
"Jean‑Claude and Michèle, Honeymoon". Haiti: A Shattered Nation. Rev. and updated from Haiti: The Duvaliers and Their Legacy().
Michele bennett duvalier death in paradise pictures In , Jean? Louis de Gonzague school in the Delmas district of Port? Preceded by Simone Duvalier. Michelle Bennett, with her three sons and daughter.New York: The Overlook Press. p. ISBN. LCCN OCLC OLM.
- ^ ab"Duvalier's wife claims full partnership". Ottawa Citizen. 4 January
- ^ abCloutier, Jean‑Pierre (18 May ) [1st pub. in the HaitiTimes].
"C‑ Passenger List". The Haitian Files. Archived from the original on 22 October
- ^ abcd"Divorced for Life". The New York Times. 24 June ISSN Archived from the original on 25 May
- ^ abHall, Michael R.
(). Woronoff, Jon (ed.). Historical Dictionary of Haiti. Historical Dictionaries of the Americas. Lanham, Maryland: Scarecrow Press. pp.38– ISBN. LCCN OCLC OLM.
- ^ abcdVine, Brian (5 July ).
"In Opulent Cocoon, Haiti's First Lady Talks of Poverty". The Palm Beach Post. West Palm Beach, Florida. ISSN
[permanent dead link] - ^Reding, Andrew (). "Democracy and Human Rights in Haiti"(PDF). World Policy Reports. New York: World Policy Institute. pp.93, Archived from the original(PDF) on 22 August Retrieved 5 November
- ^ abcdeDanner, Mark (11 December ).
"Beyond the Mountains (Part III)". The New Yorker. Archived from the original on 31 December
- ^Carlson, Peter; Cornell, Barbara; Sellinger, Margie Bonnett; Sindayen, Nelly; Wilhelm, Maria (3 March ).Michele bennett duvalier death in paradise photos Photo Stories Haitian Thanksgiving. Toussaint Louverture. Thomonde, Haiti. Claude Duvalier filed for divorce from Bennett in the Dominican Republic , accusing her of immoral acts.
"Dragon Ladies Under Siege: While Their Countries Suffer From Poverty Imelda Marcos and Michèle Duvalier Live In Luxury". People. Vol.25, no.9. ISSN Archived from the original on 22 June
- ^ abcGoodsell, James Nelson (15 July ).Death in paradise episodes Mary's School in Peekskill. Claude Duvalier. Traditions, habits and the way we were or grew are alive in this site. Laurent Lamothe.
"Haitians wonder which advisers will have Duvalier's ear". The Christian Science Monitor. Boston. ISSN Archived from the original on 28 September
- ^Aikman, David ().
Death in paradise season 14: Many innocent people suffered due to her irresponsibility and inability to effectively rule a nation. Michelle Bennett, with her three sons and daughter. Retrieved 5 November Marriage [ edit ].
"Mother Teresa: Compassion". Great Souls: Six who Changed the Century. Lanham, Maryland: Lexington Books. p. ISBN. LCCN OCLC OLM.
- ^Stumbo, Bella (17 December ). "Powerful, Chic First Lady Generous to Poor, Herself: Haiti's 'BabyDoc' Governs in Isolation". Los Angeles Times.
ISSN Archived from the original on 11 June
- ^"'First Lady of Haiti': BabyDoc's Bride Wins Power". Observer–Reporter. Washington, Pennsylvania. Associated Press.
- Item 3 of 5
- Latest news & top stories about Michele Bennett Duvalier
- Michèle Bennett - Wikipedia
- Beyond the Mountains (Part III) – Mark Danner
16 April
- ^Moody, John; Brelis, Dean; Diederich, Bernard (10 February ). "Haiti Bad Times for BabyDoc: As violent protests grow, a besieged dictator imposes martial law". Time. Vol., no.6. ISSNX. Archived from the original on 30 March
- ^Treaster, Joseph B.
(14 June ). "U.S. Officials Link Duvalier Father‑in‑Law to Cocaine Trade". The New York Times. ISSN Archived from the original on 28 July
- ^"'Things in Haiti must change,' pope tells Duvalier". The Spokesman–Review. Spokane, Washington. Associated Press. 10 March p. ISSN
- ^Wolff, Christine (12 June ).Michele bennett duvalier death in paradise Many innocent people suffered due to her irresponsibility and inability to effectively rule a nation. Born in , Michele Bennett was the daughter of a Haitian businessman who owned 50, acres of land, where he mostly grew coffee. OCLC Michele's marriage with Jean-Claude Duvalier was one of the celebrated and highly coveted events of the decade back then.
"BabyDoc to Walters: 'Did best I could'". The Miami News. p.4A.
[permanent dead link] - ^Moody, John; Brelis, Dean; Diederich, Bernard (17 February ). "Haiti End of the Duvalier Era". Time. Vol., no.7. ISSNX. Archived from the original on 23 May
- ^Valbrun, Marjorie (16 April ).
"A‑hed: Exile in France Takes Toll On Ex‑Tyrant 'BabyDoc'". The Wall Street Journal. New York. ISSN Archived from the original on 10 September
- ^Randal, Jonathan C. (24 June ). "Haiti Loses Lawsuit Against Duvalier". The Washington Post. ISSN Archived from the original on 30 January
- ^Sontag, Deborah; Lacey, Marc (14 February ).
"Haiti Emerges From Its Shock, and Tears Roll". The New York Times. p.A1. ISSN Retrieved 20 January
- ^Sanon, Evens (11 October ). "Hundreds in Haiti attend funeral for former dictator 'BabyDoc' Duvalier". Toronto Star. Associated Press. ISSN Archived from the original on 30 September