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Out To Defend Ourselves
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27 June 2023

— El Jones, author of Abolitionist Intimacies and Live from the Afrikan Resistance!
“An essential contribution to contemporary histories of policing the racialization of crime, providing critical perspectives on the historical emergence of street gangs. Out to Defend Ourselves describes the lives of those who experienced the confluence of anti-Black state and popular violence, and the carceral response to a moral panic around crime. The book provides a compelling firsthand account of the development of Montreal’s first Haitian street gang, which emerged as Black community self-defence against rampant white violence and acute economic disenfranchisement, while shedding light on the ways the police contributed to the violence they purported to combat. In a moment where political leaders continue to work in direct opposition to the widely supported call to #DefundThePolice, this text is crucial reading.”
— Robyn Maynard, author, Policing Black Lives: State Violence in Canada from Slavery to the Present
“Maxime Aurélien and Ted Rutland, in Out to Defend Ourselves: A History of Montreal’s First Haitian Street Gang, do an amazing deconstruction of the racist police and mass media construction of Haitian and Black ‘gangs.’ In this grounded oral historical investigation based on Aurélien’s and other members of les Bélangers experiences, they show how ‘gang’ formation did not have to do with instigating violence and crime but instead with resisting racist violence against Haitians in Montreal and seizing space for Haitian ‘male’ youth. This is a powerful book that will be useful for all those resisting anti-Black racism and the police, including their racist ‘anti-gang’ policing. As the authors note, while this book is about the historical past it is very much for our historical present.”
— Gary Kinsman, co-author of The Canadian War on Queers: National Security as Sexual Regulation
“In this ground-breaking collaboration, the authors have produced a book that offers a new way of seeing the history of Montreal in the 1970s and 1980s, one that takes the reader into a world far removed from the city’s sites of wealth and prestige. A must read!”
— Sean Mills, professor and Canada Research Chair in Canadian and Transnational History, University of Toronto
“Aurélien and Rutland detail the formation of the first Haitian street gang in Montr.al not as some inherently violent and predatory force — the white supremacist, police-state, and mainstream narrative — but as a defensive response by young, working-class Haitian diaspora to racist violence at the hands of white society and the police. An important book to question preconceived notions of street gang formation.”
— Asaf Rashid, author, Solidarity Behind Bars
“An excellent case study in how racialized moral panics fuel police power and abuse. A compelling analysis of how white Montrealers translated the Haitian community and Black empowerment into a threat during the 20th century. The rich narrative reveals how local media and public police worked in concert to constrain and contain young Black people, limiting their life chances and criminalizing those who resisted, while legitimizing vigilante white violence against young Haitians. The work is a lovely example of oral history blended with social science analysis, recounting an awful chapter of Montreal’s and Canada’s history of anti-Black racism.”
— Kevin Walby, co-author of Police Funding, Dark Money, and the Greedy Institution
Maxime Aurélien (Author)
Maxime Aurélien is the former leader of les Bélangers, Montreal’s first Haitian street gang. He is the owner of Cash Comptent, a pawn shop and barbership in Montreal’s east end.
Ted Rutland (Author)
Ted Rutland is a professor at Concordia University. His research and activism focuses on the racial politics of urban planning and policing in Canadian cities. He is the author of Displacing Blackness: Planning, Power, and Race in Twentieth-Century Halifax.
Chapter 1: Introduction:
Chapter 2: Landscapes of Community, Racism and Violence :
Chapter 3: The Bélanger Boys:
Chapter 4: Out to Defend Ourselves :
Chapter 5: Paying the Rent :
Chapter 6: New Gangs and a Moral Panic :
Chapter 7: The Death of les Bélangers :
Chapter 8: What Is a Gang? :