Haiti’s World Cup return and the promise of a global nation

Haiti’s World Cup return and the promise of a global nation

Overview:

In this opinion column, Haitian Times founder Garry Pierre-Pierre draws parallels between Haiti’s historic qualification for the 1974 FIFA World Cup and its return to the 2026 FIFA World Cup. He explores how Haiti’s migration story evolved into a global community whose wealth of diasporic talent is poised to partner with those back home to transform Haiti.

INDIANAPOLIS & JERSEY CITY — In 1974, Haiti arrived at the World Cup carrying the dreams of a nation. In 2026, it returns, in the biggest FIFA World Cup yet, carrying the dreams of a nation — and its diaspora.

The two journeys are inseparable.

When Haiti qualified for its first World Cup in West Germany, most Haitians experienced the moment from homes, bars and neighborhood gathering places in Port-au-Prince and the provinces. Today, millions will watch from New York and Miami, Montreal and Paris, Santiago and Springfield with unparalleled fervor. The team that once represented a small Caribbean nation now represents something larger: a people scattered across continents yet bound by language, memory, culture and pride.

I learned that lesson in a crowded living room in 1974.

I was a mere wisp of a teenager then, squeezed among family and friends in Bel Air, then a middle-class seaside suburb of Haiti’s capital, as we watched Haiti face mighty Italy. The Duvalier dictatorship hung over the country like a permanent storm cloud. Fear was woven into daily life. Opportunity was scarce. But for 90 minutes, the clouds parted.

Then, Emmanuel Sanon scored. 

For one suspended second, the dictatorship’s grip cracked. Joy rushed through the opening. Our house erupted. The street answered. Across Haiti, thousands of living rooms became miniature stadiums.

We knew we were witnessing history. Sanon’s goal ended Italy’s remarkable streak of not conceding a goal after losing to Brazil in the 1970 World Cup. More importantly, it announced that Haiti belonged on football’s grandest stage. What none of us could have imagined was that Haiti’s football story would soon become intertwined with another story: the story of migration.

  • Poland’s Jerzy Gorgon, left, robs Haiti’s Emmanual Sanon of the ball, while Poland’s Eladyslaw Zmuda looks on, during the World Cup Finals match, in Munich, West Germany, June 19, 1974. Poland defeated Haiti by seven goals to nil. (AP Photo/Staff)
  • Italy’s Fabio Capello, No 8 on ground, has the ball taken from him by Haiti’s Ernst Jean-Joseph, No 12 on ground, during the Football World Cup match between Italy and Haiti in Munich on June 15, 1974. Watching the action are Haiti’s Wilner Nazaire, No 14 and Arsene Auguste, No 3. Italy defeated Haiti 3-1. (AP Photo)
  • Haiti’s Emanuel Sanon, left, turns in celebration after scoring a goal for his team during the Football World Cup match between Italy and Haiti in Munich on June 15, 1974. Italy defeated Haiti 3-1. (AP Photo)

Building a nation abroad

While we celebrated Sanon’s goal, another game was already underway. Quietly and steadily, Haiti was exporting its people. The diaspora that would eventually circle the globe was beginning to take shape, like a river leaving its source and branching into countless streams.

Political instability, economic hardship, and the search for opportunity carried Haitians to New York and Miami, Montreal and Paris, Boston and Santiago, and dozens of cities in between. They built businesses and organizations. They raised families. They created community organizations. They preserved traditions. And they sent money home.

Over time, the diaspora became one of Haiti’s greatest assets.

  • Haitian flag displayed during an event. Haitian Times file photo.
  • Inductees to the 1804 List of Haitian -American ChangeMakers in the United States (2015)
  • Junior Bernadin, Ron Clark Academy dean of students, IT director and house system expert, received the Presidential Award for Excellence in STEM. (Photo courtesy of Ron Clark Academy)
  • Claudine Gay inaugurated as Harvard’s 30th president Sept. 29. Photo courtesy of Harvard Crimson.
  • Oklahoma City Thunder guards Luguentz Dort, left, and Shai Gilgeous-Alexander react during a celebration of the Thunder’s NBA basketball championship Tuesday, June 24, 2025, in Oklahoma City. (AP Photo/Nate Billings)
  • Attendees at the 2024 West Indian American Day Carnival Parade celebrate with exuberance, waving flags and enjoying the festive atmosphere. This iconic parade highlights the cultural richness and unity of the Caribbean diaspora in New York City.
    Photo Credit: Steve Harewood for The Haitian Times
  • Street vendors near the corner of Nostrand and Newkirk avenues. Photo by Sam Bojarski
  • A woman and child enter Els Beauty Salon in Miami’s Little Haiti neighborhood, Friday, June 6, 2025. (AP Photo/Rebecca Blackwell)

Every year, billions of dollars flow back to Haiti through remittances. Those dollars put food on tables, pay school tuition, cover rent, and help families weather crisis after crisis. For decades, the diaspora has served and remains Haiti’s unofficial social safety net.

But survival and development are not the same thing. If Haiti is to rebuild, the relationship between the homeland and its diaspora must evolve. The diaspora cannot remain merely an ATM for relatives and friends. It must become a strategic partner in Haiti’s future.

Distance does not diminish belonging

That requires something Haiti has often lacked: structure. Not another fundraising drive. Not another emergency appeal. Structure, like in football.

Institutions that can channel diaspora capital into investment. Networks that can connect expertise to opportunity. Systems that transform generosity into lasting economic growth. Sending money home helps families survive. Investing helps communities thrive. One pays this month’s bills. The other builds next generation wealth.

The Haitian diaspora includes entrepreneurs, physicians, engineers, educators, lawyers, journalists, financiers, and technology leaders. It possesses expertise and resources that many countries would envy. Yet too often those assets remain fragmented, disconnected, and underutilized.

  • Stevenson Savart, the flag bearer of Haiti, takes part in the athletes parade during the Olympic opening ceremony at the 2026 Winter Olympics, in Predazzo, Italy, Friday, Feb. 6, 2026. (AP Photo/Matthias Schrader)
  • Haitians in Montreal, Canada
  • Melchie Dumornay pictured during a friendly game versus Canada at Saputo Stadium in Montréal, Canada on June 3. Photo via Haitian Football Federation (FHF)
  • Kitana St. Cyr at the Open de France Féminin in Sept. 2025. Photo by Eva Jakovle.
  • A man waits in the doorway of a Church Avenue money transfer store, often used to send money to Haiti, on May 7. Photo by Sam Bojarski
  • A man wears American and Haitian flags in his hat, as members of South Florida’s Haitian-American community listen to speakers during a rally to condemn hate speech and misinformation about Haitian immigrants, Sunday, Sept. 22, 2024, in North Miami, Fla. (AP Photo/Rebecca Blackwell)
  • Duckens Nazon smiles as he greets attendees during “A Night for Haiti” at the Museum of Contemporary African Diasporan Arts  April 13, 2026. Supporters gathered to celebrate the Haitian national team forward ahead of the FIFA World Cup. Photo by Fredner Cayemitte / The Haitian Times
  • A view of the parade going down Nostrand Ave in Brooklyn for the celebration of Haitian Flag Day on May 10 in Brooklyn. Photo courtesy Life of Hope

What’s next: Imagination and organization 

Imagine diaspora investment funds supporting local entrepreneurs. Imagine professional associations mentoring young leaders in Haiti. Imagine chambers of commerce, universities, civic organizations and investors working from a common playbook.

The diaspora is no longer simply a community abroad. It is a global network. And networks become transformative when they are organized around a shared purpose. That is one reason Haiti’s return to the World Cup feels so meaningful.

This team is the living map of the Haitian diaspora. Its roster traces migration routes more accurately than any atlas. Players developed in France, Canada, the United States, Switzerland and elsewhere have chosen to wear Haiti’s colors. They are the children and grandchildren of migration. They embody a simple but powerful truth: distance does not diminish belonging.

Their stories mirror our own. Many grew up navigating multiple cultures, multiple languages, and multiple identities. Yet when the national anthem plays, they stand beneath a single flag. In that sense, this team offers a lesson that extends far beyond sports.

It demonstrates what becomes possible when talent scattered across the world rallies around a common mission. The same principle applies to Haiti itself.

For years, conversations about Haiti have been dominated by crises. Political crisis. Economic crisis. Security crisis. Humanitarian crisis. Those challenges are real. But nations are not rebuilt by crisis management alone. They are rebuilt by vision. They are rebuilt by institutions. They are rebuilt by people who believe tomorrow can be different from today.

The diaspora has an indispensable role in that work, not as spectators watching from afar, but as stakeholders helping shape the future. In many ways, Haiti’s World Cup team offers a glimpse of what that future could look like. Talent spread across countries and continents. A shared identity. A common purpose. A belief that together they can accomplish something larger than any individual could achieve alone.

The possibility that a group of people scattered across the world can still move in the same direction.

And the possibility that the next great Haitian victory will not be measured only on a soccer field, but in the businesses we build, the institutions we strengthen, the opportunities we create and the future we choose to shape together.

That would be a victory worthy of celebration long after the final whistle.

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