Saturday, January 21, 2012

The Hunt for Mengele?s Skull

?News of the encounter spread through the city's sprawling Haitian community, from Flatbush to Laurelton to Cambria Heights to Brooklyn, as it would have in Haiti?by teledj?l, word of mouth. Constant had ventured out into the community several times since the U.S. government had set him free, but never with such audacity?selling houses to the same people he had driven into exile. When he first arrived in Queens, he seemed to emerge only periodically. He was spotted, someone said, at a disco, clad in black, dancing on the day of Baron Samedi, the voodoo lord of death who guards cemetery gates in his top hat and tails. He was seen at a butcher shop and at a Blockbuster. Haitian-community radio and local newspapers reported the sightings??Haiti's grim reaper partying in U.S.,? announced one headline?but he always managed to vanish before anyone could locate him. Finally, in 1997, the rumors led to a quiet street in Laurelton, Queens, near the heart of the Haitian community, where for years exiles had hoped to shed the weight of their history?a history of never-ending coups and countercoups?and where Constant could be seen sitting on the porch of the white-stucco house he shared with his aunt and mother. ?The whole idea of Toto Constant living free in New York, the bastion of the Haitian diaspora, is an insult to all the Haitian people,? Ricot Dupuy, the manager of Radio Soleil d'Haiti, in Flatbush, told his listeners after Constant moved in.?

Source: http://feeds.slate.com/click.phdo?i=4d386eae13a7afa29789f47f520c2b43

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