Dédée Bazile

Marie Sainte Dédée Bazile (fl. 1806), known as Défilée and Défilée-La-Folle, is a figure of the Haitian Revolution.  She is remembered for retrieving and burying the mutilated body of Emperor Dessalines after his assassination at Pont Larnage.[1]

Life

Dédée Bazile was born near Cap Française to enslaved parents and made a living serving as a sutler to the army of Dessalines.[2] There are varying accounts of her madness but according to legend, Dédée Bazile either developed mental illness after she was raped by her master at age 18, or after some of her family members were killed in the defeat of Dessalines’s army by General Donatien Rochambeau.[3]

The Assassination of Dessalines

On October 17, 1806, Emperor Dessalines was ambushed by his former comrades Alexandre Pétion, Jean-Pierre Boyer, André Rigaud, and Bruno Blanchet. He was fatally shot north of Port-au-Prince.[4] His body was then brought into the city where it was stoned and mutilated by the crowds. 

"Pendant que de nombreux enfants, au milieu de grands cris de joie, criblaient de coups de pierre les restes infortunés de Dessalines, sur la place du Gouvernement, une vieille femme folle nommée Défilée vint à passer. Elle s'approcha de l'attroupement que formaient les enfants...On lui dit que c'était Dessalines. Ses yeux égarés devinrent calmes tout à coup; une lueur de raison brilla sur ses traits. Elle alla à la course chercher un sac, revint sur la place, y mit ses restes ensanglantés et les transporta au cimetière intérieur de la ville. [Port-au-Prince] Le général Pétion y envoya quelques militaires qui, pour une modique somme, les enterrèrent."[5]

 

Dédée Bazile, a fanatic admirer of Dessalines, gathered his remains in a sack and transported them to the Cimetière Intérieur to bury them. 

Legacy

Dédée Bazile died around 1816 and was buried in Port-au-Prince, but her grave has been lost.[6] She was survived by her several children including her son Colonel Condol Bazile, officer of the constabulary under the Haitian president Faustin Soulouque.[7] She is considered one of the four symbolic heroines of the independence of Haiti, alongside Sanité Bélair, Catherine Flon, and Cécile Fatiman.

References

  1. Braziel, Jana Evans (2005-10-05). "Re-membering Défilée: Dédée Bazile as Revolutionary Lieu de Mémoire". Small Axe. 9 (2): 57–85. doi:10.1353/smx.2005.0014. ISSN 1534-6714.
  2. Braziel, Jana Evans (2005-10-05). "Re-membering Défilée: Dédée Bazile as Revolutionary Lieu de Mémoire". Small Axe. 9 (2): 57–85. doi:10.1353/smx.2005.0014. ISSN 1534-6714.
  3. Braziel, Jana Evans (2005-10-05). "Re-membering Défilée: Dédée Bazile as Revolutionary Lieu de Mémoire". Small Axe. 9 (2): 57–85. doi:10.1353/smx.2005.0014. ISSN 1534-6714.
  4. Webmaster. "Femmes d'Haiti : Défilée, Dédée Bazile". www.haiticulture.ch. Retrieved 2016-11-21.
  5. "Mémoire de femmes". www.jasminenarcisse.com. Retrieved 2016-11-21.
  6. Braziel, Jana Evans (2005-10-05). "Re-membering Défilée: Dédée Bazile as Revolutionary Lieu de Mémoire". Small Axe. 9 (2): 57–85. doi:10.1353/smx.2005.0014. ISSN 1534-6714.
  7. "Mémoire de femmes". www.jasminenarcisse.com. Retrieved 2016-11-21.
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