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Louis Telcy, Divinity School student
The Definition of Democracy
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| photo:Jon Gardiner |
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At the age of fifteen, in an act of enterprising
civic engagement, Louis Telcy founded the Association des Jeunes
Progressistes (the Association of Progressive Youth) in his hometown
of Cayes, Haiti. The AJP's primary function was to provide the
sanitation services that the government didn't.
"Cayes was very poor," says Telcy, now a fourth-year
student in the Divinity School. "The government neglected
us. So we worked to keep the streets clean." Soon after its
creation, though, the AJP turned political. When a Catholic priest
named Jean-Bertrand Aristide began campaigning for president in
1990, the progressive youths lent him their support, tacking up
posters around town and encouraging people to vote.
Aristide won by a landslide, becoming the first democratically
elected president of Haiti. But the victory was short-lived. Months
later, the Haitian army staged a coup d'etat, overthrowing the
president and terrorizing his many supporters. "It was a violent
time for Haiti," says Telcy. "Hundreds of people died.
But the evildoers were still claiming that there was democracy
in Haiti."
One day in 1994, Raoul Cedras, the army general who ruled Haiti
after the coup, gave a speech in which he asserted that he had
returned democracy to the country. "This caused my heart to
tremble," says Telcy. "I could not remain silent any
longer." Through a contact he had at the radio station in
Cayes, Telcy broadcast a rebuttal. He asked his listeners to think
about the word "democracy" and what it truly means. "I
said, 'Democracy is a form of government in which everyone has
the right to speak out. If we do not know what the word means,
then we should not use it.'"
Days later, Telcy received a call from a friend in the military,
who told him that police were coming to arrest him. Telcy hung
up the phone and started walking. "I didn't know where. I
was just going." After three days, he could go no further.
He went to sleep under some banana trees.
When Telcy woke up, a man was standing over him. "It was the
owner of the property. He had a big knife. He asked me what I was
doing there, and
I told him about my problem. So he contacted my parents, and they
brought me some food."
Concerned for his safety, Telcy's parents called the headmaster
of his school, who had a contact in the U.S. Embassy. "And
right away, an agent came to get me," Telcy recalls. "They
granted me political asylum and, two weeks later, I was in the
U.S.A. This is how I survived."
Once in the U.S., though, he faced a new struggle. He couldn't
speak English, and he didn't have a high-school diploma. "But," he
says, "God had a plan for me, I knew."
Telcy took classes at a nearby high school to get his diploma.
He worked the nightshift as a dishwasher at a Chili's. And, eventually,
with the help of a United Methodist pastor in the area, he got
into Warner Southern College, where he studied for the ministry
and ran cross-country. "God was calling me to be a preacher," he
says. "But I wanted to go to seminary first. When I found
out about Duke, I decided, okay, I will apply there, and I will
get in."
"People ask me if I will run for president [of Haiti] one
day," Telcy says. "I just want to save democracy there.
A good leader doesn't say, 'I am going to run for president.' A
good leader finds a way to help people. The people decide if he
should be president."
--Patrick Adams
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