Phillip Thomas Tucker, Ph.D., has presented the first biography about
the life of a remarkable Haitian woman who became a revolutionary martyr
during the Haitian War for Independence, Sanité Bélair. She sacrificed
her life for the twin goals of destroying slavery and creating the first
free black republic in world history. As a seasoned lieutenant and
diehard freedom fighter of the revolutionary army, young Sanité was
executed by a French firing squad in early October 1802. But, most
importantly, Sanité's heroic legacy and memory lived on in the hearts
and minds of the Haitian people, helping to inspire the resistance
effort to succeed in the end. A bold woman of courage, faith, and
character, Sanité Bélair became not only a revolutionary heroine, but
also an inspirational founding mother of the Republic of Haiti.