Oswald durand œuvre

Oswald Durand

Atik sa a se yon ebòch.

ou kapab pataje konesans ou pandan w ap amelyore l (Kijan ?).

Charles Alexis Oswald Durand[1], rele Oswald Durand, ki fèt 17 septanm1840 nan Kap Ayisyen epi ki mouri 22 avril1906 nan Pòtoprens (Ayiti), se yon ekriven ayisyen.

Biyografi

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Li te fèt 17 septanm1840 nan Okap.

Li te pitit pitit gason du bawon de Vastey, rele Pompée Valentin Vastey. Manman li te Aricie de Vastey ak papa li te Louis Dolcé Durand. Tranblemanntè a sou 18 me 1842 te fè li yon òfelen manman ak papa. Li soti vivan avèk sè li Juliette ak te leve pa grann manman li yo. Li grandi nan Wanament. Oswald Durand ekri premye powèm li, lè li gen sèz (16) ane. Li se pwofesè pita direktè nan lise.

Li marye an 1863 avèk Virginie Sampeur, yon pwofesè popilè ak fanm powèt.[2] Yo divòse iut (8) an pita, li pral remarye yon mwa pita avèk Rose Thérèse Lescot. Li se wo fonksyonè (sekretè nan Konsèy la nan Minis an 1868, delege eli an 1885), re-eli jiska sis (6) fwa, nan lane 1888, prezidan chanm lan, jounalis (li te fonde


Oswald Davidson Durant was born in 1895 in a community called Paxville just outside of Sumter, South Carolina. The son of a farmer and postmaster who had likely been born into slavery, Oswald attended Morris College in Sumter. He was working as a waiter at a hotel called The Oakes north of Pittsburgh in June 1917 when he completed this draft card.

Oswald was drafted to serve in the First World War and assigned to the 371st Infantry in the still segregated U.S. Army. The 371st had white officers and African American draftees, the majority of whom were from South Carolina.

By the time they sailed for Europe in April 1918, Oswald had been promoted to the rank of sergeant. Sergeant Durant and nearly 3,000 other members of the 371st were brigaded under the French and were issued French rations and equipment, including the distinctive French combat helmet, which would become their symbolic shoulder patch.


During their service with the French 157th Division, these brave African American draftees earned the respect of the French military, as well as many white U.S. officers. The r

Oswald Durand

Haitian poet and politician (1840–1906)

Oswald Durand (September 17, 1840 – April 22, 1906) was a Haitian poet and politician, said to be "to Haiti what Shakespeare is to England, and Dante to Italy."[1] He was also a Haitian writer and poet of French and Creole expression, considered as the national poet of Haiti. Besides he was also judged as a Romantic poet and the most prolific one in the nineteen centuries. These 20th-century successors such as René Depestre, and Jacques Roumain congratulated Oswald Durand for his authentic expressions and honored him as a forerunner of Haitian indigenism.[2] He was born in the northern part of Haiti, in the city of Saint-Louis du Nord. In 1842, both his parents died in the earthquake that devastated the city of Cape Haitian. Oswald Durand, and his sister, were welcomed by their maternal grandmother who raised them. He spent most of his childhood outside the city where he was born. Because of political instabilities in Haiti, he was forced to leave school and to educate himsel

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