The Creole Pig was a landrace of pig indigenous to Haiti.
Creole pigs were well adapted to local conditions, such as available feed and conditions needed for their management as livestock, and were popular with the Haitian peasant farmers until an extermination campaign in the 1980s. They served as a type of savings account for the Haitian peasant: sold or slaughtered to pay for marriages, medical emergencies, schooling, seeds for crops, or Voodoo ceremonies. The dark black pigs are known for their boisterous nature and have been incorporated into elements of Vodou folklore and the oral history of the Haitian revolution.
In the late 1970s, an outbreak of African swine fever hit the neighbouring Dominican Republic and spread to Haiti. Officials feared it would spread to the United States, where it could devastate the pork industry. The United States Agency for International Development, USAID, and the Haitian government led a campaign, known by the French acronym PEPPADEP, to exterminate Haiti’s pigs. Farmers who were compensated received pigs imported from the United States that were far more vulnerable to Haiti’s environment and expensive to keep. In the year following the slaughter, levels of enrollment in schools were dramatically lower throughout Haiti’s countryside.
In the Haitian peasant community, the government’s eradication and repopulation program was highly criticized. The peasants protested that they were not fairly compensated for their pigs and that the breed of pigs imported from the United States to replace the hardy Creole pigs was unsuitable for the Haitian environment and economy.
In recent years, Haitian and French agronomists have bred a new variety of pig similar to Haiti’s Creole pig. An effort to repopulate Haiti with these pigs is underway.
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