#haitian-heritage-month

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fromTravel + Leisure
18 hours ago

These Are the 10 Best Attractions in the Caribbean-and No. 1 Is Not a Beach or National Park

Hunte's Garden, with more than 90 percent excellent reviews and year-round accessibility, was the clear winner. A world-renowned botanical garden located in the central hills of St. Joseph, Hunte's Garden consistently ranks as the top thing to do in the country.
Travel
fromenglish.elpais.com
2 weeks ago

The week in which Puerto Rico celebrates its Afro-descendant heritage

The Bandera Cimarrona, a flag conceived at the first edition of the International Summit of Afro-descendants in Puerto Rico in 2022, stands as a symbol of the resistance, the pursuit of freedom, and the strength of Afro-descendants on the island and throughout the Americas.
Social justice
Brooklyn
fromBrooklyn, NY Patch
2 weeks ago

Haitian American PR Executive Leads Workshops And Forums To Empower Tenants In Brooklyn

Marie Theodore appointed Housing and Block Associations Committee Chair, focusing on tenant education and housing advocacy in NYC.
#guadeloupe
fromTravel + Leisure
1 week ago
Travel

I've Traveled to 20+ Caribbean Islands-and This Butterfly-shaped Archipelago Is Often Overlooked by American Tourists

Guadeloupe offers rich Creole culture, outdoor adventures, and unique cuisine, making it a must-visit destination in the French Caribbean.
fromFrenchly
1 month ago
Travel

Guadeloupe: A French Island in the Caribbean - Frenchly

Guadeloupe combines French governance and Caribbean culture, offering tropical beaches, rainforests, Creole music, and European infrastructure.
Travel
fromTravel + Leisure
1 week ago

I've Traveled to 20+ Caribbean Islands-and This Butterfly-shaped Archipelago Is Often Overlooked by American Tourists

Guadeloupe offers rich Creole culture, outdoor adventures, and unique cuisine, making it a must-visit destination in the French Caribbean.
fromFrenchly
2 weeks ago

La Francophonie: How Louisiana Keeps the French Language Alive - Frenchly

The territory was named La Louisiane in 1682 by French explorer René-Robert Cavelier de La Salle, in honor of King Louis XIV, who claimed for France the vast Mississippi River basin. When French settlers later founded New Orleans in 1718, the region quickly became a center of French culture in North America.
History
World news
fromThe Nation
3 weeks ago

Haiti Doesn't Need War. It Needs Peace.

Haitian police and international forces launched a major offensive against armed groups in Port-au-Prince, killing civilians alongside gang members, while displaced residents faced barriers to relocation due to neighborhood stigma.
fromwww.theguardian.com
3 weeks ago

France returns sacred talking drum looted from Cote d'Ivoire over 100 years ago

After a long stay away from this land, it is returning to its own people and it is an honour for us and a relief to welcome it. This is the missing piece of the puzzle that is returning today. Receiving this sacred instrument is a relief, but it is also another form of connection with our ancestors who were very close to this instrument.
France politics
US news
fromwww.npr.org
3 weeks ago

A record number of political parties register for Haiti's first election in a decade

Haiti registered a record 280 political parties for its first general election in a decade, with new parties hopeful to address gang violence and corruption despite security challenges threatening the electoral process.
Paris food
fromFrenchly
3 weeks ago

10 Cities Outside France Where You Can Practice Your French - Frenchly

Over 320 million people speak French across five continents, with colonial history establishing French as an official language in many countries, making immersive French learning possible in diverse cities worldwide.
fromWashingtonian - The website that Washington lives by.
3 weeks ago

A Haitian Tasting Menu Restaurant Is Coming to Shaw

The most important thing for me is to highlight every part of our history, whether it's beautiful or ugly, bad or good. Haitian cuisine has developed through colonization, slavery, and centuries of poverty, and Salomon wants to acknowledge that history while telling nation's story through food.
DC food
fromwww.cbc.ca
1 month ago

Students, Black professionals celebrated in new exhibit for Black History Month | CBC News

Students across the Greater Toronto Area are recognizing inspiring Black professionals in a variety of fields in a new exhibit to mark Black History Month. The We Are Canada exhibit opened Saturday to celebrate the essays and photos taken by students showcasing leaders of the Black community in different areas of work. "We Are Canada gives students the opportunity careers, career progression and become inspired by what they see," said Angela Henry, director of communications for the Lifelong Leadership Institute. "And also gain the understanding that Black people have been involved in areas of work across many positions in Canada."
Canada news
fromThe New Yorker
1 month ago

A Childhood in Jewish New Orleans

It's a standard trope in portrayals of assimilated Jews to open with a scene built around a Christmas tree. That's how Tom Stoppard's " Leopoldstadt" and Alfred Uhry's " Last Night of Ballyhoo" begin, and also Ian Buruma's memoir about his grandparents, " Their Promised Land." The idea is, as soon as you show that, you've got the audience's full attention, especially if it's a Jewish audience, because it's so peculiar.
Books
fromFrenchly
1 month ago

10 Black Francophone Historical Figures You Didn't Learn About in School - Frenchly

History is full of Black Francophone figures who have shaped politics, culture, science, and resistance across continents. Yet too often, they remain invisible in school textbooks. These individuals challenged colonial power, redefined identity, confronted racial hierarchies, and transformed intellectual and political life in the Francophone world and beyond. From West Africa to the Caribbean, in scientific research and political activism, they forged new paths in the face of oppression and erasure, leaving legacies that continue to inspire freedom, dignity, and solidarity.
History
#temporary-protected-status
London music
fromTravel + Leisure
2 months ago

I've Been to Nearly Every Caribbean Carnival-and These Are My Favorite Celebrations

Caribbean Carnival originates in Black resistance and remains a cultural celebration of freedom, music, vibrant costumes, and diasporic connection despite commercialization.
Cooking
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 months ago

West African sunshine dishes: Toyo Odetunde's chicken yassa pot pie and stuffed plantain boats recipes

A Senegalese yassa–inspired chicken pie and Nigerian ewa riro–filled plantain boats combine West African flavours with flaky pastry and convenient tinned beans.
Design
fromwww.archdaily.com
2 months ago

Community Center in Bercy-Cavaillon Haiti / Emergent Vernacular Architecture (EVA Studio)

A community centre and APTEKKA office in southern Haiti provides the sole shared facility for Bercy-Cavaillon, enabling training, cultural events, gatherings, and rest.
Arts
fromArtnet News
1 month ago

Haiti's Hand-Painted Winter Olympics Uniforms Are a 'Story of Resistance' | Artnet News

Haiti's Olympic uniforms were hand-redesigned after the IOC banned Toussaint Louverture imagery as political, leading to a novel, hand-painted alteration preserving symbolic elements.
Food & drink
fromBon Appetit
2 months ago

Devonn Francis's Caribbean Roots Taught Him How to Curate Perfect Events

Devonn Francis uses Jamaican-American family culinary traditions to create welcoming, artful events that showcase Caribbean flavors and complement spirits like Glenlivet Jamaica Edition.
History
fromWorld History Encyclopedia
2 months ago

The Colony and the Company: Haiti after the Mississippi Bubble

France's Mississippi Bubble and company collapse reshaped Saint-Domingue, implanting enduring structures of debt, monopoly, coercion, and plantation violence before 1791.
World news
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

Haiti's Winter Olympics kit redesigned at last minute to fit IOC guidelines

Haitian designer Stella Jean repainted the 2026 Olympic ski suits to remove Toussaint Louverture imagery after the IOC said they violated guidelines.
fromHyperallergic
2 months ago

Visions of Venezuela and Cuba From Exile

Otherworldly forms greet you at the entrance to the exhibition, transporting you into a kaleidoscopic, dream-like space. A voice speaks in the background as projected images dance across the forms, animating the space. "It's been really beautiful to see her work come alive, become a landscape ... where you can traverse and kind of get lost," curator Fabiola R. Delgado says of Lisu Vega's "The Uncertain Future of Absence (El Futuro Incierto de la Ausencia)" (2025).
Arts
#mardi-gras
Travel
fromTravel + Leisure
2 months ago

Why the West African Nation of Benin Should be on Your 2026 Travel List

Benin is opening to tourism while preserving cultural heritage, highlighted by Ganvié's floating village and new hospitality investments in Cotonou.
fromwww.mercurynews.com
1 month ago

Today in History: February 7, Haiti inaugurates its first democratically elected president

Today is Saturday, Feb. 7, the 38th day of 2026. There are 327 days left in the year. Today in history: On Feb. 7, 1991, Jean-Bertrand Aristide was inaugurated as the first democratically elected president of Haiti. (He was overthrown by the military the following September.) Also on this date: In 1904, the Great Baltimore Fire began; one of the worst city fires in American history, it destroyed over 1,500 buildings in central Baltimore.
History
fromTravel + Leisure
1 month ago

This Lesser-known Caribbean Island Has Stunning Beaches, Rain Forest Hikes, and Incredible Biodiversity

Close enough to island-hop to nearby St. Lucia and Dominica but worlds away in terms of language and customs, Martinique offers a distinctive Caribbean experience. The French overseas territory is greatly influenced by its European counterpart; residents speak French, the euro is the official currency, and outdoor bistros in the capital city of Fort-de-France mimic those of Paris. Many residents speak Creole, too-a nod to the island's rich West African heritage, which is on full display during the annual Carnival season.
Travel
History
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 months ago

Sweet thing: a personal look at a photographer's Cuban slavery heritage photo essay

Reconstructing ancestry disrupted by the transatlantic slave trade uses personal and archival materials and sugar as a motif to reclaim a fragmented family history.
Travel
fromConde Nast Traveler
2 months ago

In New Orleans, the "Big Easy" Includes Accessibility Too

Historic preservation and aesthetic priorities often block wheelchair access, forcing disabled people to confront inaccessible public spaces in cities like New Orleans and London.
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