Ahead of its first match in the 2026 World Cup, the Haitian national soccer team was forced to make a last-minute change. But it didn’t have anything to do with its roster or travel plans. It was the team’s jersey.

FIFA, the sport’s global governing body, said the jersey design violated its rules, which ban political slogans or imagery.

FIFA didn’t elaborate on which components of the jersey were problematic. But the issue almost certainly stemmed from the small image of a group of people holding the Haitian flag that appeared on the right hip of the jersey. After the decision was made, a spokesperson for the team confirmed that the original jersey included “an image depicting the Battle of Vertières and some independence heroes raising the Haitian flag.”

The commemoration was doubly symbolic since Haiti officially qualified for the World Cup for just the second time in the men’s tournament’s history on Nov. 18, 2025, which also marked the 222nd anniversary of the famous 1803 battle that secured Haiti’s victory over France in its war for independence.

While the spokesperson for the team described the image as including “some independence heroes,” I think it’s safe to assume that Jean-Jacques Dessalines, who led the Haitian revolutionaries during the Battle of Vertières, is the central figure of the vignette.

The subject of my 2025 book, “I Have Avenged America,” Dessalines was the man who declared Haiti’s independence from France, and he was Haiti’s first head of state.

But because of his radical and violent fight for freedom, Dessalines’ enemies often described him as ferocious and barbaric, both during his lifetime and in the centuries after his death. They sought to undermine his leadership and undermine Haiti as a country, depicting him as a figure whose sole purpose was violence for violence’s sake, rather than a revolutionary driven by any ideological or political commitments.

A successful slave revolution

In the late 17th century, France had colonized the western third of Hispaniola, the island that Haiti now shares with the Dominican Republic.

By forcing enslaved men, women and children to work on sugar and coffee plantations, the French turned the colony, which they called Saint-Domingue, into one of the wealthiest in the world.

In August 1791, enslaved men and women rose up in revolution. It was the world’s first and only successful slave revolution: Within two years, they forced the French to abolish slavery.

The Haitian Revolution – as the event is known today – became a war for independence only when the French tried to reinstitute slavery in 1802. Dessalines declared Hai­tian independence on Jan. 1, 1804, and Haiti became the first nation to permanently ban slav­ery.

The ‘silencing’ of the revolution

The effort to discredit the Hai­tian Revolution by targeting Dessalines began during the war for independence against the French. Criticism only in­tensified after the Declaration of Independence.

That year, French propagandist Louis Dubroca, a mouthpiece of the Napoleonic government, published a slant­ed, factually incorrect biogra­phy of Dessalines. Even though the book got some basic facts wrong, such as claiming that Dessalines was born in Africa, its impact has been indelible.

“Cunning and hypo­critical,” Dubroca wrote, Des­salines “is also brutal, impetu­ous, and violently excessive. He inspires a kind of terror in all around him.”

An image that accom­panied an 1806 Spanish transla­tion of the book still haunts the memory of the Haitian Revolu­tion: It depicts Dessalines hoist­ing a sword in one hand and holding the severed head of a white woman in the other

In the decades after the revolution, opponents of the young nation routinely claimed that Dessalines had massacred the entire white population on the island after declaring inde­pendence.

Yes, in the context of ongoing war with France, Des­salines executed some French citizens, including those who had participated in Napoleon Bonaparte’s bloody campaign from 1802 to 1803 to regain control over the colony and re­introduce slavery. After 1804, however, hundreds of white French people remained in Haiti and were naturalized as Haitian citizens, securing equal rights under Dessalines’ 1805 Haitian constitution.

But the facts didn’t matter. The hyperbolic narrative of unmitigated violence served to discredit and undermine the revolution’s successes.

Thomas Jefferson be­came so worried that enslaved people in the United States would be inspired by the Hai­tians that in his correspondence he frequently depicted the Hai­tian Revolution as a violent upheaval rather than a struggle for freedom. Jefferson went on to ban trade with Haiti in 1806, and the U.S. did not formally recognize Haiti’s independence until 1862.

The strategy of deny­ing Haiti’s success became so effective that the Haitian anthro­pologist Michel-Rolph Trouillot called it the “silencing” of the Haitian Revolution.

A pattern emerges

The World Cup jersey ban marks Haiti’s second sartorial controversy of 2026.

In early 2026, the In­ternational Olympic Committee required Haiti’s Winter Olym­pics team to modify its opening ceremony outfit for similar rea­sons.

The garments, de­signed by Stella Jean, a Haitian Italian fashion designer, fea­tured a painting of the Haitian revolutionary Toussaint Louver­ture, Dessalines’ fellow revolu­tionary.

Once again, the de­sign was deemed political.

Dessalines and Louverture fought togeth­er throughout the revolution, but they are often portrayed as opposites. Louverture, in this framing, is strategic, diplomat­ic, rational and reasonable. In contrast, Dessalines is typically described as violent, unthink­ing, emotional and heartless.

But there’s a note­worthy distinction between the Olympic ban and the current one imposed by FIFA. For the Olympics opening ceremony, the banned outfits depicted a single, specific person: Louver­ture. In the case of the World Cup jerseys, the mere impli­cation of Dessalines, standing alongside his fellow revolu­tionaries, was enough to elicit a backlash.

Ever since the Haitian revolutionaries first rebelled against the French in 1791, the proslavery and imperialist pow­ers of Europe and the Americas had a special interest in ensur­ing that Haiti failed.

Both then and now, targeting revolutionaries like Dessalines has supported that goal. The irony is that more people may be learning about Haiti’s revolutionary history in the process. Saeta, the company that designed the controversial jersey, has announced on Insta­gram that it will restock it. The jersey has become a fan favor­ite.

Disclosure statement

Julia Gaffield does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant af­filiations beyond their academic appointment.

Insight News started in 1974 as a color cover magazine based in and serving Minneapolis’ African American north side. It was owned by Graphic Services, Inc., a general printing and magazine publishing firm in Northeast Minneapolis. Al McFarlane, headed the Midwest Public Relations division of Graphic Services. McFarlane, a 26 year-old media enthusiast, had previously worked for the St. Paul Pioneer Press as a reporter and for General Mills in public relations. He purchased rights to Insight News in 1975 and began publishing as a community newspaper in 1976.

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