Press release 72/2007
(26 March 2007)In the occasion of the 200th
Anniversary of the Abolition of the
Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade, I bring you the
following brief message from the Caribbean
Community to the world:
The fact that the commemoration of this
occasion echoes across so many cities, states,
island nations and continents is testimony to
the pervasive and persistent influence of that
most insidious period in human history. The
theme of this commemorative event organised by
the Government of Guyana, to mark the
Bicentenary of the Abolition of the
Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade – The Middle
Passage to Nationhood - is most apt but
there is an awful lot of water – rough waters in
between.
Words can never adequately describe human
slavery as a concept, or the slave trade as a
practice. The Trans-Atlantic slave trade in
Africans – let us call it what it was - with its
repulsive and inhuman character, was a human
atrocity of global proportion organised to
satisfy an economic need (mainly of European
Society). In that process, it relegated human
beings to property – chattel. It justified
widespread, systemic and prolonged African
enslavement, for profit, through an ideology of
racism, resulting in virtual genocide.
The 200th Anniversary of the Abolition of the
Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade is therefore a
historical milestone which presents us all with
an opportunity for reflection, for teaching; for
healing, and for building a better world.
CARICOM’s theme for the observance of this
Bicentenary - CARICOM Reflects…..Never
Forget - should probably be enlarged to
also add - … And Never Again in the history of
mankind! Let us therefore use this opportunity
to recall the facts of this protracted period of
enslavement and oppression for the information
of the younger generation; for those who may
have forgotten; and for those from whom perhaps
it was hidden. Among these facts are:
• Some four centuries of this nefarious
trade mainly by various European powers,
beginning in the late 1400s;
• Warfare, abductions, and over 25
million Africans forcibly removed from the
continent;
• One-third perishing in the arduous
journey in the Middle Passage from Africa to
the Americas which came to be synonymous
with death, depravity, degradation and
dehumanisation;
• Holding cells, Coffles and chains;
• Stripping of language and culture,
religion and identity.
Without doubt this period of slavery
profoundly altered the course of human history
through the transformation of the economic,
social, racial and cultural landscape. No corner
of the globe was left untouched. Indeed much of
the early industrial capacity of large parts of
Europe, for example, owes its origins to this
system.
Four centuries later, we the offspring, the
descendants of those who survived the Middle
Passage, are here, reflecting together as free
peoples. Along with others brought to these
lands, we continue to emancipate ourselves from
the mental shackles imposed over those centuries
which spawned a resilience and creativity
enabling the creation of a new civilisation -
a Caribbean Civilisation of which we are justly
proud.
We must as a Community, in the building of
that Civilisation resolve to stand firm against
any form of human slavery – be it human
trafficking, especially of women and children;
drug trafficking; child labour; and other such
nefarious activities and violations of human
rights.
It was because of these convictions; and in
memory of those who died in the Middle Passage,
in resistance and revolt; and those who
experienced a lifetime of slavery, that
yesterday, at 12:00 noon on 25 March, the
Caribbean Community was united in a synchronised
minute of silence that announced to the world
that we shall and must never forget!
The late great Bob Marley, Caribbean cultural
icon and prolific songwriter, speaks profoundly
to us today in his composition “War” from the
album “Exodus,” - named Album of the Twentieth
Century by Time Magazine in 1998.
In it he brings into sharp focus the issues
that are at stake:
• historical truth;
• acceptance of individual and collective
responsibility; atonement;
• apology; and
• a moral obligation to provide
effective remedies to those against whom
these crimes were perpetuated.
Marley rightly cautions:
That until that day
The dream of lasting peace, world
citizenship,
The rule of international morality
Will remain but a fleeting illusion to be
pursued,
But never attained.
There is therefore a mandate for the
international community to act. The United
Nations last November started the process at the
61st session of the General Assembly. It is for
us as a Caribbean civilisation to remember that
“none but ourselves can free our minds”.
The process already begun, must now be
strengthened. We shall never, must never, and
can never afford to forget!
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