Abstract
Big Truck That Went By: How the World Came to Save Haiti and Left Behind a Disaster. By Jonathan Katz. New York: St. Martin's Press, 2014. ISBN 9781137278975. 336 pp. $18 paperback.Review by Alyssa Goldstein SepinwallJonathan Katz's Big Truck That Went By received a great deal of attention when it appeared in 2013. Katz, the only full-time US journalist in Haiti at the time of the 2010 earthquake, had broken several important stories about Haiti. These included the first news reports to the United States that an earthquake had happened, and later identifying MINUSTAH soldiers from Nepal as the source of Haiti's deadly cholera outbreak. Big Truck That Went By won numerous prizes, and was named a top book of the year by the Christian Science Monitor, Kirkus Reviews and Amazon, com. Katz was interviewed about it on MSNBC, Al-Jazeera, and numerous public radio shows.The book's coverage begins in late 2008 with a previous disaster, the collapse of a school in Port-au-Prince. It continues through the elections of 2011, with a brief discussion of the Caracol industrial park and the dismissal of charges against Jean-Claude Duvalier in 2012. Katz explains the predominance of NGOs in Haiti, and foreign governments' preference for giving aid to these organizations rather than to the Haitian government has led to a weakened state. As Katz notes, the Haitian state is often powerless in the face of NGOs' desires: The aid groups' power to act without oversight or accountability was almost absolute. There was no way for Haitians to appeal an NGO decision, prosecute a bad soldier, or vote an unwanted USAID project out of a neighborhood (51). Katz adds that UN soldiers in Haiti are paid much more than the country's own police, and are proportionately much more powerful.In many ways, specialists in Haitian studies are not Katz's target audience. Katz's lively prose seeks to show general readers who donated to Haitian earthquake relief where your $20 went (4). He also wants to explain to readers how a massive humanitarian effort . . . could cause so much harm and heartache (4). Furthermore, he wants US consumers to understand their complicity in the forces reshaping Haiti, and that the low-wage Haitian garment industry would not exist ... if [they] were willing to pay more for their clothes (278). Katz does not presume any background knowledge among his readers; he sketches the basic contours of Haitian history, society, and culture. Another way in which the book seems aimed at a general audience is its form. book is presented not as an impersonal scholarly analysis, but as a first-person memoir, in which Katz recounts his experiences in the earthquake's wake alongside the story of his falling in love with an NYU grad student in Haiti (who later became his wife).Certainly, Katz is not the first person to analyze the failure of reconstruction in Haiti, let alone the shortcomings of NGOs and of the neoliberal economy. Numerous scholars have called attention to these issues since the earthquake (for instance Pierre Buteau, Rodney Saint-Eloi and Lyonel Trouillot, eds., Refonder Haiti? [2010]; Martin Munro, ed., Haiti Rising [2010]; Paul Farmer, Haiti after the Earthquake [2011]; Mark Schuller and Pablo Morales, eds., Tectonic Shfts [2012]; Mark Schuller, Killing with Kindness [2012]; Jean-Germain Gros, State Failure, Underdevelopment, and Foreign Intervention in Haiti [2012]; and Beverly Bell, Fault Lines [2013]).1 In addition to these works, Katz covers much of the same ground as Raoul Peck's film Assistance mortelle {Fatal Assistance), which recorded the mistakes of foreign agencies while they were being made. It is thus an overstatement to call Big Truck That Went By THE book on Haiti's devastating earthquake and its bungled reconstruction, as one blurb on the book's back cover does.And yet there are many ways in which Katz adds substantially to existing literature; in my view, several aspects of the book deserve careful reading by Haitian studies specialists. …
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