Haiti is an island of Hispaniola. Columbus discovered Spain's colonial rule on Hispaniola Island in Haiti in the late 16th century and pioneered it. The man who lived in Hispaniola before Columbus became a slave. Later, Spanish settlers brought African slaves to the beginning of the 16th century. Eventually, Hispaniola became the territory of France. The Haitians were descendants of Africans brought by French settlers to plant sugar in the 17th century. There was a Haitian slave riot in the late 18th century.
Before Christopher Columbus discovered Ispaniola (now islands of Haiti and the Dominican Republic) there was a prosperous native American civilization known as Arano Indians. The arrival of Columbus and European colonialism brought illness, slavery, suffering and death. They soon disappeared from the island, so we needed a black slave from Africa to replace them. Haiti is thought to be a wealthy and highly profitable Western colony and today it is the poorest country in the Western Hemisphere.
Well, this story was tragic since the beginning of Haiti. An independent political analyst, GearóidÓ Colmáin, says: ... "Their second language is a lie.The lies will be exacerbated by literature, media, education, health, and in every way people can imagine, the western media will become mostly in the world by alienation I learned the process of dullening and severing in the region of I. I wrote an article about how corporate media can leave Haiti; you can read it here.
Haiti (Haitian Creole: Ayiti, French: Haïti) is a Caribbean country that occupies one third of the Caribbean island, the western part of Hispaniola. Two-thirds of the eastern part of Hispaniola is occupied by the Dominican Republic. North is the North Atlantic Ocean and the Caribbean is South. Haiti is a country full of revolutionary and exciting roads, and its future remains uncertain. Despite the difficulties of Haiti over the past several decades, Haitian's lively tourism industry has returned in the 1960s and 1980s. The resort and investment have turned this misunderstood jewelry into a Caribbean sightseeing spot again