For Haitians in the US, the pride and joy of the World Cup comes with fear

New York — Fifty-two years separated Haiti’s last two World Cup goals from the two scored against Morocco on Wednesday. For 52-year-old Murielle Lodvil, the wait spanned her entire lifetime.
She was one of the many watching from the pockets of New York’s Little Haiti, where bars and restaurants fell quiet as fans watched the match unfold on screens before it burst into further chaos: an equaliser, a goal and then another equaliser in the frantic first half.
Haiti went into the last group match with Morocco with elimination already sealed, after losing to both Scotland and Brazil in Group C. Haiti would concede twice more, but the result did little to diminish the occasion for Murielle.
As a birthday gift to herself, she bought tickets for her and 41-year-old sister, Barbara Albert, to watch Haiti face Brazil last week.
“That is why Haiti participating on this world stage was so special to me,” she said. “Every moment of this experience counts, ending with two goals, even with the outcome.”
Ms Albert said the experience at the Brazil match underscored the pride many supporters felt simply seeing Haiti return to the World Cup stage.
“The representation was really good. We’re proud of our Haitian community. We really showed up for them,” she said.
The sense of pride was also visible at the UBS Arena in Elmont, New York last Wednesday. The state is home to the country’s second-largest Haitian community, home to about 113,000 Haitian residents, according to the US Census Bureau in 2024.
Last week, an hour before Haiti faced Brazil, the Haitian flags were already gone. The Brazil flags, handed out alongside them at the door, remained half-stacked on distribution tables.
Thousands in wigs, Haitian jerseys and flags draped over their shoulders had filled the nearly sold-out, 19,000 seat stadium, with a handful in Brazilian yellow and green. Amid the sea of red and blue was Maude Schwartz, who waved a Haitian flag as she danced into the arena alongside her family, pumping her hands up in the air.
The 58-year-old Pilates studio owner, who moved to the US from Haiti in 1990 on a student visa, had come seeking a taste of the World Cup atmosphere. While her twin sons were at the match, she was satisfied with a $10 ticket to the watch party.
“Oh my goodness, my entire family is here,” she said, gesturing at the crowd around her.
But not everyone that wanted to be here could make it. “I have a niece who has repeatedly been denied a visa to come to the United States,” she said.
Her experience reflects broader constraints facing Haitian supporters. A travel ban imposed by the Trump administration, which began last year and was expanded in January, kept some supporters like Maude’s niece from attending.
Even players were affected. The defensive midfielder Woodensky Pierre, who lives in Haiti, was unable to travel to the United States to join the national team until 10 days before Haiti’s opening match against Scotland on June 13th.
“This is a world event and people should not be denied entry to this country,” said 55 year old Jean-Marc, a former player in the Long Island Football League dressed in a Haitian jersey and a wig dyed in the national colours. Born in the US to Haitian parents, he spent part of his childhood in Haiti before returning in 1986, following the fall of the Duvalier regime many called a dictatorship.
Watching Haiti compete in the country he has lived in for decades, he called it a “momentous event for all Haitians”.
Back in Flatbush, the Brooklyn neighbourhood that many call Little Haiti, Nadege Fleurimond has thrown open the doors of her Haitian-Caribbean restaurant, BunNan, for every Haiti match, offering those priced out of the stadium, a way in.
She came to the United States from Haiti as a seven-year-old and has watched immigration uncertainty touch nearly every Haitian family she knows. Watching Haiti’s World Cup run in the country where she built her life carried its own weight.
“I am Haitian, and I am also American,” she said. “The United States gave me opportunities, education and the ability to build businesses and create jobs. Haiti gave me my roots, my values, my resilience and my culture,” she added.
“It’s a reminder that immigrants don’t have to choose one identity over the other,” she added.
For Fleurimond, who grew up hearing more stories about what Haiti couldn’t do than what it could, the team’s appearance alone in the World Cup was enough.
“It was proof that we belong in rooms and on stages people often count us out of,” she said.
Read the full story at Al Jazeera ↗ · Al Jazeera ↗
Haiti returned to the World Cup after 52 years absent. During their group stage campaign in 2024, they lost to Scotland and Brazil but scored twice against Morocco in their final match. Haitian-Americans, concentrated in areas like New York's Little Haiti and Brooklyn's Flatbush, gathered at venues and watch parties to follow their national team. Some purchased tickets to attend matches in person; others watched at community restaurants and bars. The travel restrictions on Haitian nationals, expanded in January 2024, prevented certain supporters and at least one national team player from entering the United States to participate. For attendees interviewed, the opportunity to see Haiti compete on an international stage carried meaning beyond the match results—representing visibility and belonging for a diaspora community navigating immigration policy and questions of identity in the United States.
Read the full story at Al Jazeera ↗ · Al Jazeera ↗
New York — Fifty-two years separated Haiti’s last two World Cup goals from the two scored against Morocco on Wednesday. For 52-year-old Murielle Lodvil, the wait spanned her entire lifetime.
She was one of the many watching from the pockets of New York’s Little Haiti, where bars and restaurants fell quiet as fans watched the match unfold on screens before it burst into further chaos: an equaliser, a goal and then another equaliser in the frantic first half.
Haiti went into the last group match with Morocco with elimination already sealed, after losing to both Scotland and Brazil in Group C. Haiti would concede twice more, but the result did little to diminish the occasion for Murielle.
As a birthday gift to herself, she bought tickets for her and 41-year-old sister, Barbara Albert, to watch Haiti face Brazil last week.
“That is why Haiti participating on this world stage was so special to me,” she said. “Every moment of this experience counts, ending with two goals, even with the outcome.”
Ms Albert said the experience at the Brazil match underscored the pride many supporters felt simply seeing Haiti return to the World Cup stage.
“The representation was really good. We’re proud of our Haitian community. We really showed up for them,” she said.
The sense of pride was also visible at the UBS Arena in Elmont, New York last Wednesday. The state is home to the country’s second-largest Haitian community, home to about 113,000 Haitian residents, according to the US Census Bureau in 2024.
Last week, an hour before Haiti faced Brazil, the Haitian flags were already gone. The Brazil flags, handed out alongside them at the door, remained half-stacked on distribution tables.
Thousands in wigs, Haitian jerseys and flags draped over their shoulders had filled the nearly sold-out, 19,000 seat stadium, with a handful in Brazilian yellow and green. Amid the sea of red and blue was Maude Schwartz, who waved a Haitian flag as she danced into the arena alongside her family, pumping her hands up in the air.
The 58-year-old Pilates studio owner, who moved to the US from Haiti in 1990 on a student visa, had come seeking a taste of the World Cup atmosphere. While her twin sons were at the match, she was satisfied with a $10 ticket to the watch party.
“Oh my goodness, my entire family is here,” she said, gesturing at the crowd around her.
But not everyone that wanted to be here could make it. “I have a niece who has repeatedly been denied a visa to come to the United States,” she said.
Her experience reflects broader constraints facing Haitian supporters. A travel ban imposed by the Trump administration, which began last year and was expanded in January, kept some supporters like Maude’s niece from attending.
Even players were affected. The defensive midfielder Woodensky Pierre, who lives in Haiti, was unable to travel to the United States to join the national team until 10 days before Haiti’s opening match against Scotland on June 13th.
“This is a world event and people should not be denied entry to this country,” said 55 year old Jean-Marc, a former player in the Long Island Football League dressed in a Haitian jersey and a wig dyed in the national colours. Born in the US to Haitian parents, he spent part of his childhood in Haiti before returning in 1986, following the fall of the Duvalier regime many called a dictatorship.
Watching Haiti compete in the country he has lived in for decades, he called it a “momentous event for all Haitians”.
Back in Flatbush, the Brooklyn neighbourhood that many call Little Haiti, Nadege Fleurimond has thrown open the doors of her Haitian-Caribbean restaurant, BunNan, for every Haiti match, offering those priced out of the stadium, a way in.
She came to the United States from Haiti as a seven-year-old and has watched immigration uncertainty touch nearly every Haitian family she knows. Watching Haiti’s World Cup run in the country where she built her life carried its own weight.
“I am Haitian, and I am also American,” she said. “The United States gave me opportunities, education and the ability to build businesses and create jobs. Haiti gave me my roots, my values, my resilience and my culture,” she added.
“It’s a reminder that immigrants don’t have to choose one identity over the other,” she added.
For Fleurimond, who grew up hearing more stories about what Haiti couldn’t do than what it could, the team’s appearance alone in the World Cup was enough.
“It was proof that we belong in rooms and on stages people often count us out of,” she said.
Read the full story at Al Jazeera ↗ · Al Jazeera ↗
Haiti competed in the World Cup for the first time in 52 years Haiti lost to Scotland and Brazil in Group C and was eliminated before their final match Haiti scored two goals against Morocco A travel ban on Haitian nationals was imposed by the Trump administration last year and expanded in January Defensive midfielder Woodensky Pierre, a Haiti player, was unable to travel to the US until 10 days before Haiti's opening match New York is home to approximately 113,000 Haitian residents according to the 2024 US Census Bureau Haitian-American attendees expressed pride in Haiti's participation on the World Cup stage The World Cup appearance represented proof that Haitians 'belong in rooms and on stages people often count us out of' For Haitian-American immigrants, the team's appearance carried symbolic weight regarding identity and representation
Read the full story at Al Jazeera ↗ · Al Jazeera ↗
- Haiti competed in the World Cup for the first time in 52 years, scoring two goals against Morocco in their final group match
- Haitian-Americans in New York gathered to watch matches, expressing pride in their country's participation despite early elimination
- Some Haitian supporters, including players, were unable to attend due to a US travel ban on Haitian nationals that began under the Trump administration
- The World Cup appearance carried symbolic weight for Haitian-Americans navigating questions of identity and representation