@batfam_nights: I know I normally recommend fics on here but I drew this earlier and wanted to share! #birdflash #dc #nightwing #batfam #fyp

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Monday 29 September 2025 19:26:17 GMT
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In 1990, Jean-Bertrand Aristide rose from priest to president, winning Haiti’s first democratic election with massive support from the people. Crowds filled the streets, demanding change after decades of dictatorship. But the old guard of the Duvalier regime wasn’t ready to give up power. Haiti’s 1987 constitution barred them from politics for 10 years, yet figures like Roger Lafontant, a Duvalier loyalist, tried to force their way back. In January 1991, Lafontant launched a coup d’état. The people of Haiti refused. Mass protests shut it down, and Lafontant was arrested. Aristide remained in power—for the moment—proving that the Duvalierists could not simply walk back into office against the will of the people. #Haiti #Aristide #Duvalier #CoupDetat #HaitianHistory  An 1990, Jean-Bertrand Aristide soti nan prèt pou l vin prezidan, li ranpòte premye eleksyon demokratik Ayiti a ak gwo sipò pèp la. Lari yo te plen foul moun k ap mande chanjman apre plizyè dizèn lane diktati. Men ansyen moun ki te nan rejim Duvalier yo pa t vle lage pouvwa a. Konstitisyon 1987 la te entèdi yo patisipe nan politik pandan 10 lane, men figi tankou Roger Lafontant, yon fidèl Duvalieris, te eseye pran pouvwa ankò. An janvye 1991, Lafontant lanse yon koudeta. Pèp Ayisyen an pa t dakò. Yo te desann nan lari an mas pou kraze mouvman an, epi Lafontant te arete. Aristide te rete prezidan—pou kounye a—sa te montre Duvalieris yo pa t ka retounen nan pouvwa kont volonte pèp la. Sources: Alex Dupuy, Haiti in the New World Order: The Limits of the Democratic Revolution (1997). Robert Fatton Jr., Haiti’s Predatory Republic (2002). U.S. Library of Congress, Country Studies – Haiti, Aristide’s Presidency.
In 1990, Jean-Bertrand Aristide rose from priest to president, winning Haiti’s first democratic election with massive support from the people. Crowds filled the streets, demanding change after decades of dictatorship. But the old guard of the Duvalier regime wasn’t ready to give up power. Haiti’s 1987 constitution barred them from politics for 10 years, yet figures like Roger Lafontant, a Duvalier loyalist, tried to force their way back. In January 1991, Lafontant launched a coup d’état. The people of Haiti refused. Mass protests shut it down, and Lafontant was arrested. Aristide remained in power—for the moment—proving that the Duvalierists could not simply walk back into office against the will of the people. #Haiti #Aristide #Duvalier #CoupDetat #HaitianHistory An 1990, Jean-Bertrand Aristide soti nan prèt pou l vin prezidan, li ranpòte premye eleksyon demokratik Ayiti a ak gwo sipò pèp la. Lari yo te plen foul moun k ap mande chanjman apre plizyè dizèn lane diktati. Men ansyen moun ki te nan rejim Duvalier yo pa t vle lage pouvwa a. Konstitisyon 1987 la te entèdi yo patisipe nan politik pandan 10 lane, men figi tankou Roger Lafontant, yon fidèl Duvalieris, te eseye pran pouvwa ankò. An janvye 1991, Lafontant lanse yon koudeta. Pèp Ayisyen an pa t dakò. Yo te desann nan lari an mas pou kraze mouvman an, epi Lafontant te arete. Aristide te rete prezidan—pou kounye a—sa te montre Duvalieris yo pa t ka retounen nan pouvwa kont volonte pèp la. Sources: Alex Dupuy, Haiti in the New World Order: The Limits of the Democratic Revolution (1997). Robert Fatton Jr., Haiti’s Predatory Republic (2002). U.S. Library of Congress, Country Studies – Haiti, Aristide’s Presidency.

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