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Dona Sabine Happy, content, wealthy Wife of Don Juan, mother to his children Who loved dancing, traveling, and the benefits that being a land-owner providedWho tried to cover up that she was born Haitian, came to live in the Dominican Republic on luck, and symbolizes the difficulties of being both a Dominican and a Haitian. Wo did her best to find a personal balance between what made her a Dominican and a Haitian in a divided landWho hid with Dona Valencia in the hopes of avoiding the massacre of the Haitians in the Dominican Republic.
Who wanted nothing more than to continue living in the peace that she once knewBorn in Haiti but living the Dominican RepublicDona SabineA Reflection the Character Dona Sabine form “The Farming of Bones” Throughout the story of “Farming of Bones”, one of the themes that it dealt with was how difficult it was for the Haitians living in the Dominican Republic because of work to integrate into the social setting. It was important for the Haitians to continue to honor their traditions from home and keep in touch with each other in what became a close knit extended family circle.
These people were alone in a country that did not respect them as workers or human beings. So I can only imagine how difficult it was for Dona Sabine to be interacting with her workers, who, were Haitian just as she was by birth. Her position in society dictated that she hold herself in a certain high manner and treat her workers in a certain way. That was easy for her to do because as a dancer, she had traveled the world and was used to living the high life. However, the fact that she could mask who she truly was by birth could not erase who she truly was.
That is what I believe to be the main reason that she tried to protect the Haitians in her care as best as she could. She could never turn her back on her roots and her heritage. To not help the Haitians would have been to do exactly that. Since she only became a member of the Dominican Republic due to the land exchange between the two nations that share the same border, she became a hybrid of the two cultures. Which made her a unique person with a wider sense of understanding about what was happening around her.
It is these intricacies in her character and its development that helped me to understand that the massacre was not just about the crimes the Haitians supposedly committed upon the Dominicans. It was all about social cleansing. Which led me to understand the story even more because there is not a person alive who does not know that World War II was all about Hitler committing legalized genocide in Germany. Which is what happened in the Dominican Republic at the time that was set in the book as well.
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