' + activeFrame.title + '
');
$(".fotorama-caption").addClass("add_caption");
$(".fotorama-caption").removeClass("remove_caption");
} else {
// alert("hide div");
$(".fotorama-caption").addClass("remove_caption");
$(".fotorama-caption").removeClass("add_caption");
}
})
.fotorama();
Haiti Cherie: In contrast
PAUL GOLDING
Shading tree, Creole maiden for company. A gentle breeze, a warm caress if you please. Work, laughter, and play; yes, we'll always be this way, Haiti Cherie, now I've returned to your soil so dear. —
Haiti Cherie, by Jamaican Harry Belafonte
Haiti Cherie — a beautiful and melodic song vocalised by Harry Belafonte — provides an ominous contrast to what is currently happening in that country. On Wednesday morning I woke and checked my breaking news stream and it was frightening: “Jovenel Moïse, president of Haiti, was killed in an attack on his private residence on the outskirts of the capital, Port-au-Prince.”