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bajan_prideA few weeks ago we listened to veteran journalist David Ellis expressing exasperation on air about all the race talk around in Barbados. His position as we understand it – educated Barbadians need to conceptualize positions which would move the country forward. We believe if Ellis were to think a little on that utterance he would realise it was an  asinine statement. Bear in mind the issue of race is being discussed in many countries around the globe including the great USA which is described as representing the melting pot of people from all backgrounds. He should also bear in mind the greatest Roman philosophers who we quote freely today were always prepared to enter the public squares to discuss the issues, good and bad with the people. The debate facilitated cross fertilization, more importantly the approach allowed the PEOPLE to vent and for the learned to respond. Hopefully both sides were the richer for the exchanges. It is a model which BU is committed to following for as long as we exist.

For any people including Barbadians to understand who they are and what they want to become, an understanding of their past lives must feature prominently. Decisions in the present cannot be divorce from experiences of the past. The psyche of the Barbadian has been influenced over time based on ALL of our history. Sadly our past is tarred by the experience of slavery and the colonial governance system which enforced it.  Today when we survey our system of government, church and other institutions and symbols which support civil society, the vestiges of our colonial relationship remain visible to all who want to see. For us to move forward as a people we have to discuss and debate how institutions which were active in our pre-emancipation period must be reconfigured to ensure a  Renaissance which the late Right Excellent Errol Barrow would have envisaged for our small but proud nation when he uttered that Barbados would be friends of all and satellites of none. Sad to say Barbados has progressed admirably if we use economic measures but boy have we neglected the social structures which are the intangibles of equal importance.

To understand the Barbadian and the negative reaction we have had to the large influx of Indo-Guyanese, we have to revert to history.

The Apprenticeship System which was implemented after August 1, 1834, the abolition of slavery makes for interesting reading. Although the slave was announced free they had to serve in an apprenticeship period for six years which was as harsh as that suffered in the pre-abolition period. The dehumanization of the Black slave which led to the conditioning of his psyche; the slaves obviously resisted the idea of working on the plantations during the apprenticeship period. The British rulers quickly realised that sustaining the plantocracy of the time was under threat and a solution had to be found.

1838 signalled the legal end to slavery and the plantocracy turned to Indian labour to keep the plantation production going. Here is where we find the history get interesting. Bear in mind Barbados is the only island in the English speaking Caribbean which did not change hands, it is significant if we are to properly assess the psyche of the dominant host population in Barbados today.

The indentures Indian labourers were brought in to the Caribbean as competition for the Black ex-slaves. Ex-slaves were paid less than the indentured labourers. Of course trade unionism in Barbados only received birth in the 40s. BU believes given the small land size of Barbados most of the Indo-immigrant labour was attracted to Guyana and Trinidad enticed by higher wages and assistance by giving land to accommodate the indentured families. After all those countries had the land space! It explains why Trinidad and Guyana attracted nearly all of the East Indian labour.

Over 150 years later Barbadians can see that the plural make-up of Trinidad and Guyana is in name only. We admit our races work together but do we mix socially? We believe part of the reason why Blacks, Indians, Chinese et al resist full integration and fiercely protect customs has to do with our reluctance to delve and embrace our history. We believe our people can become edified by the process of discovery and benefit from the ensuing self-confidence to proudly preach our history. The result should nurture self-belief and release on the world the positive energy of our Black race. Every where there is a multi-ethnic society e.g. Trinidad, Guyana, Fiji the India populations have expanded in numbers and achieve a dominance of culture and political achievement at the retreat of the Black population.

Is this what we want for Barbados?


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74 responses to “Who Or What Am I?”


  1. I see ART the chameleon is over on the other blog looking for sympathy,i noticed that he never replied to my blog that stated how my great grandfather was killed,well Art if you are feeling so bad about this you can call David Ellis i am sure that he will have that soft shoulder for you to lean on he the real house N,these bajans who have had the privilege of going to good schools because of the sweat of our grand parents can now talk a lot ignorant talk .Mr Ellis there is still a lot of black bajans who would like to clime the ladder to where you is at


  2. @Bad Man Saying Nuttin

    You are spot on. However lets not be complacent. Self-improvement should always be the order of the day.


  3. Oh please Carson Cadogan. why don’t you give them the news form Trinidad and Tobago? They might find it more interesting, but you just single out Guyana…The Lombard and Broad Street thing in Chalrestown was a rtukus a man had with some people. I don’t even know why SN reported that, a little street rukus. OK a little water gets into GUYOIL tanks, but so you recall that water was found in jet fuel that National Oil and Gas of T&T supplied to Caribbean Airlines grounding the entire system OK, last week in T&T criminial shot dead as he walked with police to court house in Rio Claro, Guyanese man shot dead as he walked on street in Beetham Gardens, gangs killing people day and night in John John, 12 high powered rifles stolen from a depot in POS by man dressed as T&T policeman, Chinese with dengue found on Upper Frederick Street, Chinese protesting at the Music Hall for better working conditions, girl snached off the road in St. James later found murdered, girl murdered and dumped under an apartment building in Lavantille, and I can on and on and you just choose to single out beautiful Guyana. 1/2 million Guyanese live in America and they don’t do any crimes, but I know you don’t like Guyanese so you are quick to just accuse and throw them in jail.


  4. You know that ‘Hopi’ likes to blame everything including homosexuality on the Europeans, well CNN has a snippet on a centuries old practice in Afghanistan.

    Kabul, Afghanistan (CNN) — A young boy dressed in women’s clothing, his face caked in make-up, dances the night away for a crowd of men.

    The bells on his feet chime away, mimicking the entertainment and sexual appeal of female dancers. But there is no mistaking his pubescent body and face as he concentrates, focusing on every step in order to please his master and his master’s guests.

    This all played out in a video that CNN obtained from a person involved in the parties.

    The boy is but one youth among many throughout the country forced into an age-old underground tradition known as “bacha bazi,” or “boy play,” in which young boys are taken from their families, made to dance and used as sex slaves by powerful men. The number of boys involved is unknown — the practice has been going on for centuries, in a country where such practices are overshadowed by conflict and war.

    “It’s pretty much unappreciated by [the] society, unaccepted and illegal,” said Mohammad Musa Mahmodi of the Afghan Independent Human Rights Commission, one of the few organizations in the country working to end “bacha bazi.”

    Islamic scholars have denounced “bacha bazi” as immoral but the practice continues in Afghanistan, where the government is in the throes of an increasingly bloody battle with insurgent Taliban militants and is also working to recover from decades of conflict.

    The abuse stays on the backburner of issues in Afghanistan. People are aware of it, but they don’t really talk about it. Almost everyone in the country is coping with some level of injustice, and they are just trying to survive.

    It is widely known among the population that, most of the time it is commanders, high-ranking officials and their friends who partake in the abuse of the boys.

    “It continues because of the culture of impunity and lack of legal provision against this practice,” Mahmodi explained.

    Farhad,19, and Jamel, 20, are two grown dancers who were forced into “bacha bazi” about five years ago.

    Farhad was 13 when his older neighbor tricked him into coming to his home. He was made to watch a sex tape and then raped. After the brutal assault, he was taken to another location where he was locked up and used as a sex slave for five months.

    “I got used to him,” Farhad said, trying to explain why he stayed with his neighbor after the traumatizing experience.

    “He would sometimes take me to parties, and sometimes other places. I was with him all the time,” he said.

    In Afghan society the victims of rape and assault — both male and female — are often persecuted and punished rather than the perpetrator. The shame forces boys like Farhad to continue in leading such lifestyles, even when they have the chance to break away.

    Jamel, Farhad’s friend and dance partner, is now married but he was the “bacha bereesh” — or “boy without a beard” — of a powerful warlord who has since left the country. He said the only reason he continues to dance is to provide for his younger brothers and sisters.

    “I make them study, dress them, feed them. Any money I make I spend on my family. I don’t want them to be like this, be like me,” he said, brushing his shoulder length hair away from his eyes, framing his thin oval face.

    Farhad and Jamel say their families know what is going on now but are powerless to stop it — in fact they need the money and income they make.

    Both Jamel and Farhad look and act more like women than men, a trait that can be deadly in Afghanistan’s male-dominated society. Even the police can’t be counted on for protection.

    Farhad said that he was taken from a party by four police officers one night and almost gang raped at the station Before their commander walked in and stopped the assault. But then, “He said if I wanted to be set free I should give him my money and my mobile,” Farhad said. “I had no real choice, so I gave him my money and mobile.”

    The boys said they are continuously threatened, beaten and raped by men who attend the parties they dance at; parties fueled by alcohol and drugs.

    “The nights we go out, we are scared,” said, Jamel, who is the more talkative of the pair and the one who more resembles a woman. “We always think about how we will be able to get out without someone attacking us.”

    Despite the dangers, they continue to dance, making $30 for the night — a night that usually ends in assault — because they say it is the only thing they know and their only way to make money. There are no opportunities in Afghanistan for people like them.

    And once branded as men who danced as women, there is no turning back.

    “We are not happy with this line of work,” Jamel said. “We say that it would be better if God could just kill us rather than living like this.”


  5. Negroman ‘Black Barbadians Buy Black & forget the rest’

    Nothing wrong with promoting buying bajan, retaining money here.

    But the only thing that we now produce locally is some ground provisions, meat and foul, fish and rum.

    Forget who rest and interact with no one else? Think we can live on that alone?

    Clothes? Shoes? Electricity, fuel? Other nutrients?

    Jackass!


  6. @Gordon………..What CNN needs to do is an expose’ of ALL child prostitution that goes on in Amerikkka. Get deep down into the abduction and mind control of ‘young’ children many from Haiti, many from the US, for the purpose of sexploitation and muling. Now that would be fair won’t it?

    The day is coming very soon when Bajans will ONLY have their locally grown produce to rely on and I’m looking forward to the day when they can do without shoes, clothes and electricity and fuel. [the SUN provides ALL the fuel we need]. Maybe, that will be the time when they stop chasing after whitey’s illusions and allow their spiritual side to be developed.


  7. Gordon they have been many entrepreneurs who have TRIED to make a start.

    They have suffered sweated and still have not achieved! What is wrong with supporting your own for a change??????

    I have many friends who have different small businesses and I always support them!!!!

    Our problem is that we continue to allow persons to dictate what we should and should not buy ……. and all you hear is “Well we can’t eat the money!!!!!


  8. @Gordon

    I don’t think you thought through what you wrote. You just wanted to call somebody a jackass?

    But then who is the real jackass?

  9. Carson C. Cadogan Avatar
    Carson C. Cadogan

    TODAY’S NEWS IN GUYANA

    Retired Region Three official stabbed to death

    Brazilian man found gagged, dead in Robb St home

    GGMC Manager says surprised Guyanan fingered in’blood diamonds’ report.

    Boy, six, critical after struck by car

    Teen shot in chest, woman in thigh

    Barbados drugs in lumber trial…Somwattie Persaud diagnosed as having ‘adjustment disorder’

    Coastguards held at Parika with fuel, cash and GPS (yesterday its was “Army captain, Cpl., private nabbed with high-powered weapons”

    Relative claims police shot Maloney after he refused to pick up joint

    Region Eight grassroots women working to stamp out domestic violence

    Stabroek news

    Just another day in beautiful Guyana. I wonder if Norman Faria wants you to know about these things.
    Can someone tell me if some of these Carbbean policemen who will be joining the Royal Barbados Police force will be coming from Guyana?


  10. @Gordon

    You really have no idea, how many American men have been and are still going to Thailand to abuse small boys. There was a time when it was prevalent in the Phillippines as well. There was an exposed on TV some years back where French and American men were interviewed in Haiti, doing the same time. They had their faces blurred for the cameras. The sad thing is that some of these men were married with sons, but wanted to convince the narrator, that having sex with these foreign children is not the same as someone having sex with their own children.


  11. Could someone please tell me why Guyana is so rifed with violence? I have just been reading some Guyanese papers – my heart goes out to these unfortunate people.

    It’s time that Guyanese expats return to Guyana and rebuild it before the Chinese move in. I wish them all the best.


  12. What police the great Ferndell talking but! He better know we get rid of Owen and Mia we could get rid of David and he! I finding these politicians to be a lying bunch of people! I gine with NM I not voting for none of these fu###$$$ politicians!


  13. Carson
    Guyana is not the only place in the world with crime, it is a very nice country and it very large,let me give you and X-Man an idea of how large it is in the essequibo river there is an island the size of Barbados,when one is standing on the river bank on one side you cant see the bank on the other side,as usual the criminals are in the minority and they take advantage majority,Guyana poverty goes back to when Burnam wanted to turn Guyana into a communist state just look at Jamaica under Manley in the seventies and today Jamaica also has a problem with crime in these two countries criminals have places to hide especially in Guyana case,Carson, let me tell you this there is a large number of black people in Guyana who suffered as we did during slavery their are our brothers and sisters there is also a large number of mix indo-afro people. There is every race of people in that country we cant hate them for what there are or who there are the colonist thought them to be superior when looking at Africans as it thought us to think that we are inferior,what we have to do now is to teach those people that we are equal as other race,and as i have stated we cant allow other cultures to set up there norms in Barbados,i have a number of friends who are Guyanese and their grand parents are bajans,i think that a lot of bajans went to Guyana in the 1920/30

  14. Carson C. Cadogan Avatar
    Carson C. Cadogan

    Michael

    I don’t share your awe about Guyana. Guyana is a very dangerous place and I am trying to prevent Guyanese from coming here to Barbados and making good use of their criminal skills. People will travel with what they know best and for Guyanese it is crime. I am making my people aware of that.

    You can love Guyana all you want just do not expect me to follow suit. I don’t buy for two seconds all of this rubbish about Bajans went to Guyana.

    If Guyana is so big and nice why won’t Guyanese stay and develope it, that woud make more sense to me instead of flooding other countries such as Barbados.


  15. ok Carson i see i cant sell it to you and i would not want to sell it to you ,but is in not the job of the immigration service to weed out the criminals at the point of entry,what you are saying is all Guyanese are criminals there are no good ones among them.Tell me some thing all those bajans that go to ST Vincent and get involved in the marijuana planting and drug trade should Vincentians see them as our cultural ambassadors and therefore ban all bajans from coming to ST Vincent

  16. Carson C. Cadogan Avatar
    Carson C. Cadogan

    MICHAEL

    Obviously you have not been around for very long. Otherwise you would know that the actions of a few can make bad for the many. Sometimes Peter pays for Paul.

    Have you ever heard of Margarita Island. It is just off the coast of Venzuela. It was a favourite spot for Barbadians not too long ago. Barbadians don’t go there anymore. A few Barbadians went there and made a fool of themselves. If you think that Barbados is water scarse, then you haven’t heard of Margarita Island. Some Bajans went there and wasted water no end, they behaved badly, they insulted the people, they stole stuff from stores and so on. The people reached a stage where they said that enough was enough and told Bajans not to come back. Not all Bajans behaved badly but all sufferd the same fate.

    Peter paid for Paul. Often times you have to do that.

  17. mash up & buy back Avatar
    mash up & buy back

    Michael

    I hope you heard the latest news.

    A Mr Kemraj a guyanese national working as a construction worker in the whim st peter killed his next door neighbour a bajan national 45 years old.

    Her bones were discovered this week.

    Now why would we in barbados continue to encourage these people here into this island.


  18. @MUBB

    I have been wondering about some of these heinous crimes; beatings, murders and burning up people and I would say that they are totally out of Barbadian character. We are not so cruel at all. Never have been. Even our worst crimes were never so sordid.


  19. carson what you say is true i have no answer to that,mash up buy back ,yes this is bad,look i know of time when my father had to go to the UK in order to feed the family what would would i say to a guyanese in the same situation ?

  20. Carson C. Cadogan Avatar
    Carson C. Cadogan

    MICHAEL

    My father used to go to America to cut canes. He went there for a stipulated period of time and when that time was up, he returned home to Barbados. There was no Honorary council, such as Norman Faria, beating up on the American Gov’t to allow the cane cutters to stay as long as they wished. You did your time, got paid and returned home.

  21. mash up & buy back Avatar
    mash up & buy back

    Rok

    All over Barbados people were talking about these crimes that guyanese were committing so this murder by that indian guyanese man does not surprise me.

    These murders like that at palmers Plantation where that indian guyanese man stab up and then burn the man 16 year old daughter,these increase in robberies we are seeing,the breaking-in and entering where a number of guyanese – indo guyanese again were arrested for these crimes.

    I hope bajans watching how hell bent these people are to perpetuate their criminal ways here in Barbados even when this country is giving them a chance to survive.

    No matter how much you help these people ,and even though they smile in your face,deep inside they resent and envy the progress the black barbadians have made and when among their own,or even in the presence of bajans they speak out their hatred of bajans.

    Yet they don’t intend to go back to guyana.

    I often wonder why if they hate bajans so much,they are not going instead to Trinidad where a lot of their indian clans people are.

    They should feel real comfortable among them.

  22. mash up & buy back Avatar
    mash up & buy back

    If you were doubting yourself that guyanese roxanne gibbs has taken a definite policy of hiding the nationality of the guyanese who are commitiing crimes here in barbados,well just take a look at today’s nation newspaper.

    CBC news,VOB news all told us yesterday evening that a guyanese national a mr khemraj was arrested for the murder of a bajan woman.

    Now compare that to the Nation newspaper which told us that a man was arrested.

    Remember about 2 months ago when 3 indo guyanese chicken farm workers stole thousand of chicken from the chicken farm which employed them, the Nation and even VOB at that time hid the nationalities of these criminals and would only say that 3 men were arrested and one confessed guilt.

    This is a very dangerous trend to slant the news and present it a way that hides pertinent information from the barbadian public.

    Shouldn’t we be speaking out about that or all we are going to do is speak about Barbados as it was in the past?

    We looking back while rome burning.


  23. Interesting to hear news on the blogs leaking into the mainstream media. Inspector Wayne Norville of RSPCA fame will be interviewed on a VOB program Sunday 9.30AM when he will explain of cult practices by certain groups in Barbados engaging in sacrificing animals to appease their gods. The BU family has warned about this shyte taking root in Barbados but who is listening. Barbadians continue to be the door mats of the region.


  24. David
    I do not know if you consider the picture of the torture Guyanese boy with his scarred genital area highlighted in yesterday’s edition of the Kaieteur Newspaper of Guyana to be news worthy.I am wondering if a copy of that photograph cannot be shown on this blog to highlight the cruelty of the Guyanese society.

    That picture is so graphic,that it is unbelievable the persons who are responsible for the upkeep of law & orders in a country could resort to that kind of torture so as to get a confession.

    I hope our attorney general Freundel Stuart is not looking to countries like Guyana to recruit policemen for our police force.I hope not.

    David,I think it would be useful if that photograph is published because it reinforces the arguments that many bloggers make on the human right abuses that are taking place in the failed state of Guyana.

    It is no wonder that Guyanese would prefer to subject themselves to harsh treatment in foreign countries including Barbados and would resort to all type of schemes & tactics to remain in those foreign countries,than to return home to Guyana and be subjected to kind of treatment that unfortunate little boy endured.

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