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(CARICOM Secretariat, Turkeyen, Greater
Georgetown, Guyana) On Sunday, March 25, 2007 at
exactly 12:00 noon, Eastern Caribbean Time, the
Caribbean Community will pause for at least one
minute of silence in honour of those who died in
the Middle Passage and in resistance to slavery,
as the Community marks the beginning of the
200th Anniversary year of the Abolition of the
Transatlantic Slave Trade.
Coordinated by the CARICOM Secretariat, the
synchronised minute of silence triggers a series
of activities planned by several Member States,
as well as the CARICOM Caucus of Permanent
Representatives at the United Nations
Headquarters, to observe this historic event.
The observance is in keeping with the
decision of the 18th Inter-Sessional Meeting of
the CARICOM Conference of Heads of Government,
held in St. Vincent and the Grenadines on 12-14
February 2007, “to commemorate the event with
year-long national and regional activities.”
Under the theme, CARICOM Reflects, the
CARICOM Secretariat has collaborated with the
Government of Guyana in organising a brief
ceremony at the steps of the Parliament
Building, to mark the day. During this ceremony,
a statement from the Chairman of CARICOM, Dr the
Hon. Ralph Gonsalves will be broadcast and
remarks made by the Secretary General of the
CARICOM Secretariat HE Dr Edwin Carrington and
the President of Guyana, H.E. Bharrat Jagdeo. The
programme will be interspersed with artistic and
cultural expressions leading up to the minute of
silence at noon.
The Secretariat continues its line up of
activities with a Special Lecture on Tuesday,
March 27, 2007 at 2:00pm in the major conference
room of the Secretariat Headquarters. The
Lecture will be presented by distinguished
Surinamese writer Cynthia McCleod on the topic:
The Role and Position of Women in the Caribbean
during Slavery. Cynthia McLeod has written
several compelling historical novels and has
invested 13 years of historical research in
writing the novel, The Free Negress Elisabeth –
Prisoner of Color.
Antigua and Barbuda commenced its programme
of activities in February with a newspaper
supplement in the Daily Observer, a media launch
and the opening of a museum exhibition titled
“Breaking the Silence.” The programme continues
with a series of public lectures, panel
discussion, an ecumenical church service as well
as a rally at Betty’s Hope Estate on Sunday,
where they will be observing a minute of
silence.
Similarly, Jamaica launched its celebration
in January with a grand rally in the capital’s
Emancipation Park, organized for Haiti’s
Ancestors Day, in recognition of the struggle of
Haiti’s role in the struggle against the slave
trade and to honour Jamaica’s national heroes
who continued the struggle after the slave
trade. Its slate of activities also includes,
public lectures, logo competition and symbolic
funeral rites for the slaves who died at sea.
Meanwhile, St Vincent and the Grenadines’
schedule of activities includes a series of nine
public lectures on various related topics;
several History, Civics and Social Studies
workshops for both teachers and students and a
national concert on Sunday, following the
observance of the minute of silence.
St Kitts / Nevis and Trinidad and Tobago will
hold national church services on Sunday;
Montserrat holds a Panel Discussion on Sunday
afternoon; Dominica has organized a ceremony at
the historic site, the Barracoon at 6:30 on
Sunday and Guyana has planned a cultural evening
at the Cultural Centre on Monday, March 26.
In addition to a two hour programme leading
to the minute of silence on Sunday, The CARICOM
Caucus of Permanent Representatives at the
United Nations Headquarters in collaboration
with the Department of Public Information at the
United Nations has mounted in the visitors’
lobby, an exhibition titled “Lest We Forget –
The Triumph over Slavery,” and will host on
March 26 a special Commemorative Session of the
General Assembly at which the immediate past
Chairman of CARICOM, Hon Denzil Douglas will
deliver a statement on behalf of CARICOM. This
will be followed by a panel discussion on the
theme, “Slavery, Our Common Heritage,” in the
afternoon with the participation of several
academics from the Caribbean, Africa, Europe and
the United States.
Other activities, including a
cultural extravaganza to showcase the music of
the African Diaspora, are also planned for the
ensuing months.
Other Member States are expected to unfold
their plans to mark the event, during the course
of the week 19 – 24 March, 2007.
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