Respuesta :
Answer:
In this letter, leader of the Haitian Revolution, Toussaint L'Ouverture warns the Directory (the executive committee which ran the French government between the Reign of Terror and Napoleon Bonaparte’s coup in 1799) against any attempt to re-impose slavery in St. Domingue.------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------The attempts on… liberty which the colonists propose are all the more to be feared because it is with the veil of patriotism that they cover their detestable plans. We know that they seek to impose some of them [on the French government] by illusory [deceptive] promises, in order to see renewed in this colony its former scenes of horror…My attachment to France, my knowledge of the blacks, make it my duty not to leave you unaware or ignorant either of the crimes which [anti-Revolutionary White colonists] meditate or the oath that [formerly enslaved Africans] renew, to bury ourselves under the ruins of a country revived by liberty rather than suffer the return of slavery.
Explanation:
Answer:
It would be impossible to re-enslave Haitians since they understand the value of freedom.
Explanation: