| (CARICOM Secretariat, Turkeyen,
Greater Georgetown, Guyana) Chairman of the
Caribbean Community (CARICOM) and Prime Minister of
St Vincent and the Grenadines, Dr the Hon Ralph
Gonsalves has called upon the Community to use the
occasion of the Bicentenary of the Abolition of the
Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade as an opportunity to
teach the younger generation of the region, the
history, the lessons and the effects of slavery and
to ensure that this tragedy “is never again
experienced in old or new forms.”
Dr Gonsalves’ statement was read by CARICOM
Secretariat’s Assistant Secretary General, Human and
Social Development, Dr Edward Greene at a brief yet
solemn ceremony in Guyana, on Sunday, March 25, 2007
to mark the beginning of the 200th Anniversary year
of the Abolition of the Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade.
The CARICOM Chairman stated that while the
observance should be used as an opportunity for
healing, it should be noted that healing could only
come if all the parties involved were willing to
remember and acknowledge their respective roles and
collective responsibility “for the betrayal, for the
atrocities and for the suffering that resulted from
African genocide and enslavement.”
He noted that by far, the most crippling effect
of slavery and the slave trade has been the ideology
and the legacy of racism, legitimized then by the
Code Noir in the French colonies; and which he
stated, is still perpetuated in new and insidious
forms in our contemporary world, and charged the
Community to “never forget.”
However the Chairman pointed to the fact that
despite the atrocities, the Caribbean Community also
had much to celebrate as a great Caribbean
Civilisation that has triumphed over great
adversity.
“We celebrate our cultural diversity and the
melting pot of races, cultures and peoples who have
demonstrated to a divided, globalised world that we
can live in peace and harmony. Out of the crucible
of our painful past, we have created a neo-people, a
model community, and a spiritual and cultural
renaissance,” the Chairman concluded.
Chaired by President of the National Emancipation
Trust, Lorri Alexander, the Ceremony which was held
in the forecourt of the historic Parliament
Buildings also saw several officials including the
Deputy Secretary General of the CARICOM Secretariat, Ambassador Lolita Applewhaite, the
Prime Minister of Guyana, the Hon Samuel Hinds and
the Mayor of Georgetown, the Honourable Hamilton
Green in attendance.
In her remarks on behalf of the Secretariat,
Ambassador Applewhaite pointed to the historic
significance of the Parliament Buildings, alluding
to it being the site of many slave hangings.
“This place bears the burden of the history of
pain and suffering of many Africans, who met an
untimely and brutal death in this very place, for
their refusal to accept the dehumanising status of
“chattel” that could be bought and sold; and for
refusing to accept the denial of their freedom and
the life-long exploitation of their labour,” the
Deputy Secretary General emphasised.
Built by the former slaves of Guyana, the
Parliament Buildings were commissioned in1832, two
years before the Proclamation of the Emancipation
Act that ended slavery in 1834. The Guyana
Parliament Buildings is also the site where the
Emancipation Proclamation was read on August 1,
1834.
Pointing to the theme CARICOM Reflects…Never
Forget, Ambassador Applewhaite, further stated that
reflecting on the past and on “the colonial policy
of divide and rule, that pitted races against each
other and isolated countries in the region, should
strengthen our resolve to rise above racial and
ethnic division in our countries, and deepen our
Caribbean integration within CARICOM and across
language groups in the Region.”
In his remarks, Prime Minister of Guyana the
Honourable, Samuel Hinds noted the progress that the
Caribbean Community had made since the abolition of
the Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade and challenged the
peoples of the Community to see themselves “as
members of one human race shouldering equitably all
the responsibilities of our race, contributing and
sharing equitably in our common produce.”
Mayor of Georgetown the Honourable Hamilton Green
in an impassioned speech recalled the story of
Guyana’s National Hero, Damon and pointed to the
significant contributions made to the development of
Guyana by the enslaved.
“Today we need to invoke the spirit of the
thousands of slaves who died… let us do so in order
to give ourselves strength,” the Mayor urged.
At noon, the Town’s clock gave the signal and one
minute of silence was observed in honour of those
who died in the Middle Passage and in resistance to
slavery. The silence then transmuted into the wail
of the congo drums and the lament of the steel pans
as the audience joined in the singing of freedom
songs, including Bob Marley’s ‘One Love,’ and
‘Redemption Song,’ led by Guyana’s songbird Delma
Lynch, thus bringing to a rousing finish, the voices
of history makers in marking yet another historic
event.
Contact:
piu@caricom.org
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