On Saturday, Haiti lost its opening match of the 2026 FIFA World Cup to Scotland. Haiti, making its first World Cup appearance since 1974, is considered a long shot to advance.
But in the 1950 World Cup, Haiti was winning without participating in the tournament. A Haitian soccer player who learned the game in his family’s Port-au-Prince backyard was the one who beat England at its own sport, wearing an American jersey.
Joseph Edouard Gaetjens scored the winning goal for the U.S., the underdog team against England’s top-ranking players. It catapulted him to hero status: A Haitian immigrant from one of the poorest former colonies delivered the upset against one of history’s most powerful colonial empires. His legend only grew after he disappeared in Haiti during François Duvalier’s dictatorship.
Now, a novel inspired by Gaetjen’s story brings it back into focus. Haitian author Dimitry Elias Léger started writing “Death of a Soccer God” after returning from Brazil, the host of the 2014 World Cup. He sees it as a stroke of fate that he finished the novel just as Haiti returned to the global stage for the first time in more than half a century.
At his Brooklyn Public Library book launch last month, Léger said Gaetjens’ story is equal parts soccer and the question many immigrants carry: how far can you go and still call yourself home.
“You don’t stop being Haitian after a certain moment,” Léger said. “Give me 10 more passports and 10 more languages. That’s still Haitian.”
A New York story
At the time Gaetjens was picked up by the U.S. national team, he was hustling in Harlem: washing dishes at a restaurant while taking accounting classes at Columbia University. His family wasn’t happy about his choice to play professionally. They had a different plan in mind, one built around his studies and nothing to do with long hours on a field.
Gaetjens already had soccer in his veins. He had played in a professional league in Haiti starting at age 14 and had won championships before moving to New York in 1947. He was considered a great striker with an unusual ability to turn even the smallest opportunity into a goal, according to Professor Frantz-Antoine Leconte, a member of the Executive Committee of the CUNY Haitian Studies Institute at Brooklyn College and a former player for Violette Athletic Club in Port-au-Prince. Among many Haitians who followed the sport, he said, Gaetjens was considered a “genius.”
Fame couldn’t save him
Despite washing dishes for work, Gaetjens was not poor by any account. He came from a once-wealthy German-Haitian dynasty. While the family’s business empire dwindled during World War I and the U.S. occupation of Haiti, it was still part of the Haitian elite.
But fame and social status could not protect him from politics. Leconte described 1963 and 1964 as the dictatorship’s darkest years, when criticizing the government could prove deadly. He recalled friends whose parents left home one morning and never returned.
Though Gaetjens was not politically active, his family had ties to one of Duvalier’s rivals. They were also of mixed African and European ancestry, which was “a problem” under Duvalier’s politics, Leconte said. They belonged to a “mulatto” class, he said, that had long held outsized influence in a majority Black Haitian society. Duvalier built part of his political movement around challenging that elite.
Gaetjens is believed to have been taken to the notorious Fort Dimanche prison, where Leconte said prisoners were forced to dig their own graves. Unlike other family members, he did not flee the country. Leconte believes Gaetjens underestimated the danger.
“That was the fatal mistake,” Leconte said.
But Léger said the pull toward your homeland is hard to escape, even though returning cost Gaetjens his life. He hoped readers would see a fuller picture of Haiti beyond headlines about violence and instability.
“People think we just live in Haiti and we just walk around freaking out because we’re poor,” he said. “No. We get married, we fall in love, we bury people when they die and we celebrate and we celebrate and we celebrate.”
Part of what drew Léger to the story was the contrast of Gaetjens’ fame and vulnerability. “People have a sense that celebrities are immortal,” Léger said. “They’re not.” As he imagined Gaetjens confronting death, Léger found himself thinking more about family, jazz and soccer than his trophies or fame.
“When the end is in the air,” he said, people “think about the things they loved.”
Carrying Haiti abroad
Les Grenadiers played every World Cup qualifier outside their country, staging their “home” matches in Curaçao roughly 500 miles away. Back home, armed gangs control much of Port-au-Prince, and Haiti’s national stadium is unusable. They qualified anyway.
Growing up, Léger heard stories about Haiti’s lone World Cup goal in 1974 nearly every day. That goal came from Emmanuel Sanon, who scored against Italy and ended goalkeeper Dino Zoff’s long scoreless streak in international play.
For many Haitians, the moment became part of the country’s collective identity – and Gaetjens’ moment holds a similar place. For Leconte, remembering his story is about more than sports history.
“Gaetjens is not just a player,” Leconte said. “All Haitians should really feel great that they had one of their citizens who has done so much for the United States of America, and for the world.”
