Bryant Freeman
Bryant Freeman was a retired emeritus University of Kansas professor. He was primarily known for being the founder and director of the University of Kansas Institute of Haitian Studies, one of the few such institutes in a major university in the United States. Freeman received his Ph.D. in French from Yale University, specializing in the work of Jean Racine.
He had also been an instructor for the United Nations Observers in Haiti, an advisor for U.S. and U.N. Peace-Keeping Forces in Haiti, receiving the protocol rank of Major General.
His awards include:
- Lifetime Achievement Award for Service to the Haitian People
- U.S. Department of Justice Commissioner's Special Service Award
- Kansas Humanities Council Award, Kansas French Educator of the Year
- Woodrow Wilson Fellow, Phi Beta Kappa
- Yale University Fellow, Fulbright Scholar
Among the classes he taught until his retirement in 2006 were French, Haitian Creole and Haitian history.
Dr. Freeman's books, including his Haitian-English Dictionary, are available from the . Many of his books are also available for free on the .
Bryant C. Freeman died February 3, 2024 at age 92.