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K1314 • 2025

Memorializing Governor Kathy Hochul to proclaim May 2026 as Haitian Heritage Month in the State of New York

Memorializing Governor Kathy Hochul to proclaim May 2026 as Haitian Heritage Month in the State of New York

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Sponsor
Rodneyse Bichotte Hermelyn
Last action
2026-05-11
Official status
Adopted
Effective date
Not listed

Plain English Breakdown

Using official source text because the generated explanation was unavailable or could not be confirmed against the official bill text.

Memorializing Governor Kathy Hochul to proclaim May 2026 as Haitian Heritage Month in the State of New York

Memorializing Governor Kathy Hochul to proclaim May 2026 as Haitian Heritage Month in the State of New York

What This Bill Does

  • Memorializing Governor Kathy Hochul to proclaim May 2026 as Haitian Heritage Month in the State of New York

Limits and Unknowns

  • This entry is temporarily using official source text because the generated explanation could not be confirmed against the official bill text during the last sync.

Bill History

  1. 2026-05-11 Assembly

    ADOPTED

  2. 2026-05-08 Assembly

    REFERRED TO CALENDAR

Official Summary Text

Memorializing Governor Kathy Hochul to proclaim May 2026 as Haitian Heritage Month in the State of New York

Current Bill Text

Read the full stored bill text
Assembly Resolution No. 1314

BY: M. of A. Rules (Bichotte Hermelyn)

        MEMORIALIZING  Governor  Kathy  Hochul to proclaim
        May 2026, as Haitian Heritage Month in the State  of
        New York

  WHEREAS,  Haitian  Heritage  Month,  recognized  globally during the
month of May, celebrates the rich  culture  of  Haiti  and  its  people,
including  their history, language, distinctive art, delicious foods and
cuisines; and

  WHEREAS, The  purpose  of  the  month  is  to  raise  awareness  and
Understanding   about   Haitian  culture,  history  and  traditions;  by
educating the historical contributions Haitian people have made  to  the
United States and to the world; and celebrate these Haitian achievements
across the globe; and

  WHEREAS,  Haiti's history is of vital significance and pride for its
people and has crucial global importance, representing a new concept  of
human  rights,  universal  citizenship,  and participation in government
through the Haitian Revolution (1791-1804); and

  WHEREAS, The Haitian Revolution is one the  largest  and  the  first
successful slave rebellions in the Western Hemisphere; starting with the
founding  act  of  the  Revolution by Dutty Boukman, a slave transferred
from British colonial Jamaica to French colonial Saint Domingue,  was  a
Houngan,  or  Vodou  priest,  who led the ceremony of Bois Caiman on the
night of August 14, 1791; and

  WHEREAS, In 1793, Toussaint L'Ouverture, former slave of the  French
colony  and  born  with  the  name  Francois  Dominique Toussaint, was a
Haitian General who led to the  success  of  enslaved  Africans  gaining
autonomy in Saint-Domingue, now known as Haiti; and

  WHEREAS,  Jean  Jacques  Dessalines,  a  former slave, lead a mighty
group of Haitians, Africans and Blacks during the Haitian Revolution  as
the  General,  who emerged after Toussaint L'Overture was captured, that
defeated Napoleon Bonaparte and the French colonists at  the  Battle  of
Vertieres  at  the  end  of  1803 to become the first Black ruler of the
first independent Black republic in the world; and

  WHEREAS,  Henry  Christophe  became  Toussaint  Louverture's   Chief
Lieutenant  fighting  the  French,  British, and the Spaniards and later
became President of Haiti in 1806 where he introduced a monetary system,
declared Catholicism the state religion,  and  established  schools  and
hospitals including a basic school of medicine; and

  WHEREAS,  The  Haitian  flag was designed by Jean Jacques Dessalines
and was adopted on May 18, 1803, at the Congress of Arcahaie, which  was
held to establish the united command of the revolutionary army under the
supreme authority of Jean-Jacques Dessalines; and

  WHEREAS, Haitian Heritage Month is an expansion of Haitian Flag Day,
a national Haitian Holiday celebrated annually on May 18th, serving as a

major  patriotic  celebration  in  Haiti  and  the Diaspora to encourage
patriotism; and

  WHEREAS,  Haitian  Flag Day is a reminder of the struggle to freedom
and the Haitian Flag symbolizes the unity that borne the Haitian  nation
through   the   alliance   of   the  Blacks  and  mulattoes  during  the
Revolutionary war; and

  WHEREAS, The independence of Haiti echoes the  importance  of  women
and   women   of   color   in   building  independent  nations,  through
revolutionaries like Marie-Jeanne Lamartiniere, who fought as a  soldier
in  the  Indigenous  army,  and  Catherine Flon who, like Betsy Ross, is
credited with crafting the independent Black Republic of Haiti  Flag  in
1803, and who also served as a nurse; and

  WHEREAS,  Haitian  culinary  dishes,  such  as  Soup  Joumou, a soup
Haitian slaves were forbidden from eating as it was "reserved for  their
white  masters,"  have become symbols for Haitian freedom; and Haiti has
vast variety of unique local food now enjoyed throughout the world, such
as griot (fried pork), diri djon djon (black rice), plantains,  grenadia
juice and rhum; and

  WHEREAS,  Haitians  continue to produce the largest number of health
care workers (nurses, and doctors) and engineers in the Black  diaspora;
and

  WHEREAS,  Haitian  history  has  indelibly shaped the United States,
including the 800 men of color from Saint-Domingue (present-day  Haiti),
who  fought  along  the  with  the  Continental Army during the American
Revolution at the Battle of Savannah, Georgia in 1779 to  fight  against
the  British,  and enslaved Pierre Toussaint, who accompanied his master
to New York in 1787 and became a major  philanthropist  who  contributed
money to the erection of the Saint Patrick's Cathedral; and

  WHEREAS,  Haitian  born,  Jean  Baptiste  Point du Sable traveled to
North America in the early 1770s and was instrumental in  the  Pontiac's
Rebellion  by  negotiating  and  preserving  peace  among several Native
American tribes and later  became  the  first  settler  and  Founder  of
Chicago in the 1780s; and

  WHEREAS,  Haiti's  victory over France helped ensure the survival of
the United States, who got an enormous bargain on the  purchase  of  the
Louisiana  Purchase  after French leaders were spooked by the revolution
in Haiti; and

  WHEREAS, Haitian American immigrants have come to the United  States
bringing  their  own  influences and cultural traditions to a variety of
spheres including the arts, business, sports,  literature,  science  and
law,  with  notable figures including: Jean-Michael Basquiat, one of the
defining   artists   of   the   20th   century;   Jackson   Georges,   a
Haitian-American painter who worked with wood, marble, metal and leather
to create works featured at the World Trade Art Gallery, United Nations,
and  Mehu  Gallery;  Jean-Claude Brizard, a Haitian-American teacher and
superintendent who served as the chief executive officer of the  Chicago
Public  Schools  from  2011-2012;  Dean  P.  Baquet,  a Haitian American
journalist who has served as the executive editor of The New York  Times
since  2014;  Nicole  Baron  Rosefort, who served as a New York City and
State public education leader; Jacques Jiha, who was Commissioner of the

New York City  Department  of  Finance,  and  who  currently  serves  as
director  of  the New York City Mayor's Office of Management and Budget;
and Karine Jean-Pierre, who serves as the Assistant to the President and
White House Press Secretary; and

  WHEREAS,  The New York State Assembly houses the largest Legislative
Haitian Caucus in the country, with four members; New York City has  one
of  the largest numbers of Haitian elected officials in city council and
the judiciary in the nation; and the National Haitian  American  Elected
Officials  Network  (NHAEON)  has the largest network of Haitian elected
officials in the United States; and

  WHEREAS, Haitian Creole is one of the top 10 languages spoken in New
York City, and  in  2018,  the  'Little  Haiti  Brooklyn'  cultural  and
business  district  was  established to preserve, harness, showcase, and
celebrate the commercial and socio-cultural institutions in the Flatbush
section of Brooklyn with the largest concentration  of  stakeholders  of
Haitian ancestry; and

  WHEREAS,  In 2021, the Metropolitan Transportation Authority renamed
the  Newkirk  Avenue  subway  station  in  Flatbush   to   the   Newkirk
Avenue-Little  Haiti  station to honor the neighborhood's unique Haitian
roots; the Haitian population continues to grow across the  state  which
started  in  Harlem,  to Brooklyn, and with the highest concentration of
Haitians in Queens,  Long  Island,  Rockland  County,  Poughkeepsie  and
Buffalo; and

  WHEREAS,  For  decades,  Haiti  has  faced  significant  challenges,
including natural disasters that have devastated the land and  disrupted
the  lives  of  millions,  however, the Haitian people have demonstrated
resilience throughout history; now, therefore, be it

  RESOLVED, That this Legislative Body pause in its  deliberations  to
memorialize  Governor  Kathy  Hochul  to  proclaim  May 2026, as Haitian
Heritage Month in the State of New York; and be it further

  RESOLVED, That copies of this  Resolution,  suitably  engrossed,  be
transmitted  to The Honorable Kathy Hochul, Governor of the State of New
York; and Haitian organizations across the State.