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Vincent
Ogé was a mulatto property owner on Saint Domingue (Haiti). He went to Paris to present the views of the Mulatto property owners to a meeting of white planter delegates who had also come to Paris. They were pressing for full civil and political rights. Like the white planters, they owned property and slaves, however their rights were limited. The white planters resisted an alliance, fearing any changes that might eventually affect slavery. Ogé was executed for leading a mulatto rebellion in the fall of 1790. The slaves of Saint Domingue began their own evolution in August of 1791 Some mulattos and free blacks supported the whites and others supported the slaves. Others tried to remain independent.
But Sirs, this word of Freedom that one cannot pronounce without
enthusiasm, this word that carries with it the idea of happiness,
is this not because it seems to want to make us forget the evils
that we have suffered for so many centuries? This Freedom, the greatest,
the first of goods, is it made for all men? I believe so. Should
it be given to all men? I believe so again. But how should it be
rendered? What should be the timing and the conditions? Here is
for us, Sirs, the greatest, the most important of all questions;
it interests America, Africa, France, all Europe and it is principally
this question that has determined me, Sirs, to ask you to hear me
out.
If
we do not take the most prompt and efficacious measures; if firmness,
courage, and constancy do not animate all of us; if we do not quickly
bring together all our intelligence, all our means, and all our
efforts; if we fall asleep for an instant on the edge of the abyss,
we will tremble upon awakening! We will see blood flowing, our lands
invaded, the objects of our industry ravaged, our homes burnt. We
will see our neighbors, our friends, our wives, our children with
their throats cut and their bodies mutilated; the slave will raise
the standard of revolt, and the islands [of the Caribbean] will
be but a vast and baleful conflagration; commerce will be ruined,
France will receive a mortal wound, and a multitude of honest citizens
will be impoverished and ruined; we will lose everything.
But,
Sirs, there is still time to prevent the disaster. I have perhaps
presumed too much from my feeble understanding, but I have ideas
that can be useful; if the assembly [of white planters] wishes to
admit me, if it desires it, if it wants to authorize me to draw
up and submit to it my Plan, I will do it with pleasure, even with
gratitude, and perhaps I could contribute and help ward off the
storm that rumbles over our heads.
Source: The materials listed below appeared originally in The French
Revolution and Human Rights: A Brief Documentary History, translated,
edited, and with an introduction by Lynn Hunt (Boston/New York:
Bedford/St. Martin's, 1996), 103–4.
Source: The French
Revolution and Human Rights: A Brief Documentary History, translated,
edited, and with an introduction by Lynn Hunt (Boston/New York:
Bedford/St. Martin's, 1996), 103–4.
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