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Submitted by Heather Cole
Submitted by Heather Cole

When I was knee high I remember going to Father Knight’s shop in Maxwell to buy groceries with my cousins. It was a time when my Grandmother wrote her list with a lead pencil on a brown piece of paper and we carried our groceries in a box. I still have a memory of Father Knight looking down at me from behind the counter and I peering up at him smiling, I could see the top of the bright red scale that rested on the counter. The shop smelled like salt meat, red herring, salt fish, potatoes, cheese and fresh salt breads all rolled up in one.

He knew everyone by name. He talked a lot and asked a million questions. He was the source of information even though he did not get out much because he was literally tied to the shop.

As I grew a little older, we traded in Father Knight’s shop for Hills Supermarket in Oistins. The only thing that I liked going there for was the ice cream. There was no friendly shopkeeper who knew me by name or had a conversation with me that made me smile and gone were the familiar smells of Father Knight’s shop. The supermarket was not personalized and even back then I recognized that it came with a price.

It has taken a lifetime for me to process what happened way back then. It was never progress but we may have thought that it was because everything was now brightly packaged. I did not understand back then that that change symbolized the breaking away from the traditions of our past which we held so dear. The village shop, the prominent fixture in every village, the fabric that held the communities in Barbados together had started its demise. Today we are still reeling from the effect of what happened so long ago, when our black entrepreneurial class was significantly destroyed because Barbadians stopped patronizing them. What makes this situation even worse is that Barbadians no longer own the supermarkets that the village shops were traded in for. Besides its social ramifications, mass retailing with all of its packaging started the garbage problems that we have today.

Mrs. Burrows was the shopkeeper in Cane Vale; she must have been the first person in the village to buy a TV. It was a black and white TV and like bees attracted to honey the children would gather at her window late in the evening and watch whatever was showing on TV. I remember watching Dark Shadows and afterwards feeling scared to go home. However, it was when my uncle bought a TV that I began to notice that my life was changing. Watching TV became my past time, when my home work was finished I was glued to that box. It became an obsession. I wanted to watch all the shows. We no longer had to create our own entertainment, someone else provided it for us. That box that we welcomed with joy really changed us. We enjoyed because it was new and everyone else was doing the same thing, watching TV. It did not build creativity, all we did was sit an absorb like sponges a set of make believe that started to change to our customs, our norms , our values, the way we dressed and behaved. “Dark Shadows” truly brought a dark shadow into my life. We no longer played the childhood games like we did at night. We did not sing folk songs as much. We no longer went for walks when the moon was full and the whole world looked as though it was dressed in silver. I do not think we truly understood what we were doing. The art of good conversation that I heard as I sat and listen too was disappearing from the landscape, all the talk was about what was happening on that foreign TV. That box had begun to transform the simplicity of our lives.

So, we put away our own drums and started to dance to the beat of another drum because we thought it was progress. Progress stopped our children from playing the games I played as a child; from singing our folk songs as they gathered at night; now they have to learn them at school. I wonder how many of them know of the old Bajan proverbs, or hear stories at bedtime that were passed down from one generation to the next.

All is not lost because Lynette Eastmond is working diligently to create a film Industry in Barbados and I am hoping that her efforts will be fruitful to create in Barbados a Barbywood of the Caribbean as we have so many stories that can be put into film before they are lost to living memory.

This brings me to the standpipe, a remnant of a bygone era. I do not recall any standpipes in Cane Vale but there was one in the Crane where we washed the sand off our feet or sometimes rinsed away the salt water from our bodies after bathing in the sea at Foul Bay. Decades ago, the standpipe was a permanent fixture on the Barbadian landscape. Many Barbadians armed with buckets and skillets travelled to this source of running water. They were truly the watering holes. Women gossiped as they washed their clothes, children played and even the occasional fight broke out. The demise of the standpipe came with the advent of running water into Barbadian homes. What then seemed like a privilege then is now a basic necessity for cleanliness a well as good health and sanitation. To me this was the greatest act of progress in modern Barbados, even surpassing Independence. I believe that the demise of the standpipe impacted the congregation of people but they were far more meaningful benefits that were to be obtained from having running water in their homes.

Surely the Government of Barbados has its priorities in the wrong order. It made a choice to spend 63 Million of the tax payer’s money to build a new complex for the Barbados Water Authority and is spending another $300,000 to start off Independence celebrations when it already had information that the burst mains were affecting the water supply. To add insult to injury the Government went ahead to compulsorily acquire land to build a Waste to Energy Plant in the same area to further deplete the water supply of the people in the North. It is an embarrassment that Government values buildings and celebrations more than Barbadians having access to a water supply.

After 50 years of Independence, reverting to the use of portable standpipes rescinds any gains in the past fifty years. It seems that we are right back where we started. How can Government wish to remove the last bastion of colonialism and become a republic when it has sentenced it people to live as they did in the colonial days? I now wonder if we have lost more than we have gained, if we are using the correct measurement of progress. Have we finally lost our minds in pursuit of brand name clothes, constant fetes, carnivals on every bank-holiday, grandeur and legacies; on things that give gratification that last no longer than a snow cone, that we ignore the basic needs of man?


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101 responses to “The Price of Progress”


  1. Beautifully written…for me…we have lost over the years far more than we have gained…but then I see much through the eyes of a creative and with that comes a deep nostalgia.


  2. One of the best pieces of Barbadian journalism I have read in over 60 years.


  3. By the way, plse extend this as a long essay for the 50th anniversary, maybe even a small book. I suggest you read Tim Clarke’s essay in the independence issue of New World. It will be your gift to future generations.


  4. Required reading for the baby boomers and the young. Excellent piece. Keep up the good work and continue to expose the deficiencies of a sleeping opposition consumed with internal squabbling at the expense of representing the interests of those who elected them.


  5. First thing my dear Heather is that it is $63 million, and not $36 million. We don’t want to take away anything from what they have spent! I am now waiting to see what sweetheart deal they gave the Del Mastro cousins for building something the solar industry players here could have built, leaving some of them to close down and therefore cause unemployment to rise. What is more scary is the reputation of these two persons. One spent the night in a Canadian jail for violating election spending rules, and is out on bail and is due to appear before a Canadian court again on January 4 and 5, whereas his cousin David is due before a Canadian court in April also for violations of election spending rules. Is that not a fine pair with whom this Government should be doing business?


  6. ” What is more scary is the reputation of these two persons. One spent the night in a Canadian jail for violating election spending rules, and is out on bail and is due to appear before a Canadian court again on January 4 and 5, whereas his cousin David is due before a Canadian court in April also for violations of election spending rules. Is that not a fine pair with whom this Government should be doing business?”

    Going to court for breaking election rules is not in my estimation wrongdoing of that kind and nature that I would consider I should use to preclude me from doing business with other persons. Then if I am to follow Bro Caswell’s expose of election law breaking here then most of our laws should be deemed null and void and no one should do business with our parliamentarians since most of our parliamentarians are guilty of breaking election laws with impunity.


  7. Rosemary and Hall Thanks. The memories within the essay are actually from a manuscript that I intend to publish this year entitled “The Backdoor to the Sea.” Anthony that was an error. It should have been $63M.


  8. I made a mistake too: it should have been Austin ‘Tom’ Clarke.


  9. Some nostalgia infused with a bit of politics or is it the other way around? Take your pick. It was enlightening that the author mentioned the Knight’s village shop and then the Supermarket in Oistins, my take is why wasn’t there no continuum for those very successful shops of the 50’s 60’ era to morph into Supermarkets of their own with local ownership.

    It is really a shame when one considers that Knight also had a small shop in Welches (not sure if the area is still considered Welches or Oistins) which was an extension of his larger one on or near the site of the Southern Plaza which is now home to a Supermarket.

    How come we are unable to build on success?


  10. @Sargeant I do not think that it is the same Knight. This grocery store was in Maxwell Hill. Going West from where Maxwell Great House used to be. I believe that the building is still there.


  11. @Heather

    One and the same, the woods just east of the Maxwell shop was known as “Elgy Woods” (spelling may be off). Ask any old timer.


  12. Good news Heather, most of the above will be revisiting our lovely island soon again. We have underestimated the wisdom of this government to our own detriment. Standpipes – a gathering place when you and your neighbors could meet and discuss neighborhood happenings – they are being reintroduced by this caring government through the clever denial of running water to our homes. Moonlight walks (and daylight too) will be necessary to get to work as the public transport is being phased out through lack of an effective and efficient service. Villages shops will again become a necessity as some areas are almost inaccessible due to extended or no systamatic road repair programme.

    See what I mean? Through the vision and forethought of an enlightened government, the old tried and trusted Barbadian way of life is being reintroduced for the betterment of all. Oh yes, almost forgot all of this foolishness about university education will not be necessary in the new Barbados (new after Republic status) as a university education will be a luxury to which only the children of the new massas will be entitled (compliments of the Min. of Education and his brilliant advanced thinking). CBC has already embarked on a reeducation programmed to wean us off of watching TV – spend two hours any day watching CBC and you’ll see what I mean….and the list goes on.


  13. Be careful how one goes about knocking the stan pipe era .The stan pipe a symbol of bajanism one of the few places honesty abound making for all tyes of news politicall sicially abd economicslly serving its purpose in shaping the landscape of barbados.differing voices shared,making for open discussion.The vocal similarties which all take for granted and recited daily via social media. All in all one can attest that the stan pipe mentality still lives and thrives within social media with the same views that brings about changes to society


  14. I am trying to stay positive and ignore the nagging nayers of jealousy and meanderings with an agenda to attack and degrade barbados celebration of 50 years of
    of Independence celebration a once in a lifetime. occasion carring a historical first and which will never be repeated or duplicated in our lifetime

  15. Jeff Cumberbatch Avatar
    Jeff Cumberbatch

    I too am pleased by the nostalgia in this piece. But I do believe that the remark about Republicanism is a cheap shot. How can a matter of constitutional identity depend on whether there are standpipes or not? Of course, we all wish to have an improved standard of living, but there were standpipes around in 1966 too. Should that fact and a generally lower standard of material existence have delayed Independence then?


  16. Jeff,
    Plse explain what a constitutional republic will mean to the way Barbados is governed; also, plse explain why it has taken 50 years for governments of both parties to realise that we ought to be a republic.
    By the way, has the Ford Commission report been publicly available after all these years? When the commission came to London, I remember being asked by a well-known public servant to speak to the inquiry when it met at Lambeth town hall.
    I did, and others did, and it appears as if the report alleges that UK-based Barbadians were against being a republic. I was not at the Birmingham meeting, but this was not the sentiment of the London audience.
    What l said, and others agreed, was that if we had a ceremonial President, then it will be a governor general with another title; if it was a popularly elected President, there could be conflict between the elected government and the elected President, since the President will rightly say, when there is a difference of policy that s/he was elected by the voters.
    By the way, has the Crown (not the Queen) ever interfered with the government of Barbados at any period since the Second World War? On documents and in the courts we will have the State v John Doe, us that of any constitutional significance?
    Canada, Australia, New Zealand and most of the Commonwealth are monarchies, what constitutional change will this introduce in Barbados? Show us the evidence.
    Barrow’s first act, on becoming prime minister, was to run the colonial governor in to our very first governor general.
    Also of interest is that the General Hospital became the QEH in 1963, and the Barbados Police Force became the Royal Bawrbados Police Force.
    What about all the knights and dames we have? I can imagine some of the Sirs and Ladies crying in their rum and cokes when they lose their titles. Or will there be an automatic tyransfer?
    As to what a republic has to do with running water, it can be an indication of good governance.


  17. So, a financially unsustainable yearlong celebration for the 50th anniversary of independence, is MUCH MORE IMPORTANT than those former Beautify Barbados employees who have not received their severance payments almost two years after being retrenched; or the former NCC employees who have to await the conclusion of the ERT to receive severance payments; or Barbadians not receiving their income tax refunds and reverse tax credits due since 2011 and many businesses not receiving their VAT refunds; or the over 20,000 people the NIS admitted to not processing their sickness, maternity or unemployment benefits; or the water problems residents of St. Andrew and St. Joseph are experiencing?

    These people should be contented, forget their problems and accumulated debt to “jump and wave” tomorrow in Trafalgar Square and for the remainder of the year until November 30?

    WTF!!!


  18. @Sargeant. You are correct. It is the same. Who owned the land on which Supercenter is located?


  19. Artaxerxes,

    Let’s see who turns up. I assume it will be on CBC.


  20. @ Donna

    As the saying goes: “we too like uh fete,” so I guess all and sundry will be there to take in the free entertainment.


  21. Artaxerxes,

    I am not a “party animal” so count me out.

  22. Well Well & Consequences2 Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences2

    Balance….just look at the Del Masros as preludes to bigger crimes, who will ever arrest them in Barbados and besides most criminals, for one reason or another, are never caught, lack of evidence etc beingvthe most popular reasons, so there is no telling what level of criminality Del Mastros are capable of until some time in the future, when they see how much the bribe takers on the island will allow them to getaway with…….and they do exactly that……


  23. Some of us like to focus on what is irrelevant. Where is the transparency with this transaction?

  24. Jeff Cumberbatch Avatar
    Jeff Cumberbatch

    Hal, I am rather busy at the moment. I promise that I will deal with this issue more pointedly in my column on Sunday!


  25. @Jeff with regards to the island becoming a Republic, the price tag will be a fortune when the island can least afford it. Any shot the Republic would have to be expensive not “cheap.” Are you going to itemize the cost in your column?


  26. @ Heather,

    Wait one damn cotton-picking minute here baby, you facts are a little screwed on the BWA headquarters building at the Pine.

    You said “Surely the Government of Barbados has its priorities in the wrong order. It made a choice to spend 63 Million of the tax payer’s money to build a new complex for the Barbados Water Authority” WRONG, WRONG WRONG……..SO WHEEL AND COME AGAIN SWEET GIRL.

    Private Bajan, Guyanese and Trinidad money pay for that there building complex hear? not money from BWA, GOB or tax payers of Barbados.


  27. Willie,

    Are we to pay them back? If so the money is still spent.


  28. A well written piece Heather. Being a country buck from the land of Nowater, this is the first time that I am hearing of a Hills Supermarket in Oistin. Was it the same Lionel Hill’s?


  29. Heather

    Were not those same shop keepers controlled by the Roebuck street crowd?


  30. @Heather,
    Excellent article.
    I am from the northern part of the island but we have similar experiences.

    It appears that when it come to having a supply of water, that we have moved backward more than 50 years.

    @Jeff.
    Looking forward to that column. I hope you can touch on exactly what will change and what will remain the same in the new Republic.


  31. @ Colonel Buggy I think so. Sargeant will be more informative on that question.@ Vincent again Sargeant may be ablevto help us on this one. @ Sargeant can you provide any light on which Hill owned the Supermarket? As well as if they were controlled by the Roebuck Street Merchants.


  32. Whichever form of governance is decided Monarchial or Republican there are those among us who are not locals yet deserve to be roped into the Barbados experience. I don’t know Ian D’Souza the Trini bank manager nevertheless his sunny outlook and consistently positive remarks on Barbados suggest he is genuine. If he keeps up his refreshing optimism he deserves honorary citizenship. He loves the island and defends it more than many of the yardfowls on this blog. He is qualified to run a Patriotism 101 course. On the contrary foreigners who don’t merit the national embrace include Mwansa the climate change joker at BWA, Tony Webster a low life who writes a roll of shite in the comments section of the dailies and not to be left out the ultimate jackass of academia Tennyson Joseph. Unlike Ian D’Souza the rest are disturbed hum bugs who add zilch to the national discourse except negativity.

    It puzzles how without evidence or research you condemn a planned $50 million Aeronautical School to be based at Coverley Villages . Yet Webster and yardfowls who think like him have shamelessly attacked this major foreign investment immediately on its announcement. Its knee jerk a**holes like them who stunt the progress of the our nation state. The unwarranted criticism of enterprises bringing foreign exchange must cease. If there aren’t grounds for pouring cold water on much needed investment why open your mouths to create controversy. The uncalled for sniping frightens investors.


  33. @Togetherness January 5, 2016 at 8:58 PM #

    About to happen….will shortly take place….planned operation……Skippah,start talking when it has happenened,enuff of a lotta long talk by wunnah…..show us the proof of the pudding.


  34. It doesn’t matter what happens in terms of investment if the government is so corrupt that it sucks the life out of everything. I support neither B not D. I am fed up with both parties. Not one can tell the next one to come back. A yardfowl comes in both varieties. Is it better to be a DLP yardfowl than a BLP yardfowl?

  35. de Ingrunt Word Avatar

    @Heather, ineed well scripted nostalgia. But like Sargeant I was struck by the “Some nostalgia infused with a bit of politics or is it the other way around? ” The politics seemed so out of place…the nostalgia was more gripping.

    A brief engagement on your premiss of ‘what is progress or is it ‘what price progress’. It is interesting that a read of Black history in US gives a very similar playbook re the demise of Black entrepreneurs due to changing times. In this case I refer to the thriving Black businesses that provided goods and services to the Black community during the segregation era. As ‘progress’ was made on racial equality many of those businesses lost customers and eventually drifted to oblivion…different circumstances here but not a dissimilar context.

    And just as there is now a growing Black entrepreneurial class in US after these many years so too can it be said of Barbados. Progress to what though have we reached?

    The issue of the TV is also intriguing. Surely it caused major disruption in habits but it also provided serious new pathways of thought and ‘creativity’. That should not have been a bane for us (although many made it so) but rather a potential boom; perhaps only now being realized. How many youth of your day and mine (I also came of age when TVs were first introduced to my neigbourhood) decided that they wanted to an artist (writer, director, actor, stuntman, photographer, media personality etc) or journalist, engineer, doctor or teacher as a result of the introduction to characters on the ‘idiot box’?

    How many parents grasped the real impact of that ting and encouraged their children that they in fact could strive for what they saw those White faces doing on TV or what some of us first saw of a Sidney Poitier?

    New and different vistas were opened…did we see them or take-hold of them for what they were?

    But then again here we are now with everyone trying to be a Black diva…and living their life (reality shows) on the damn TV — a TV that would now take up likely an entire side wall of your Father Knight’s shop.

    So to your point…what price progress????

    I agree with others you should expand the first part of your piece…of the second part it’s a given there is a lot more to come from your pen!


  36. @ de Ingrunt word. I have written a book. It is yet to be published. I may have to self publish but I hope to do it soon.


  37. It is said that James A Tudor had some 100 shops spread across Barbados. Many of these shops were leased out to shopkeepers, who were obliged to restock their shops from J.A Tudor, whose goods laden trucks used to be a regular feature around the countryside. Characters like Brute Alleyne, Bull Dog and Gear Box at one time worked for James A Tudor.
    I remember when all of Tudor shops were sold by Auction, with Alleyne Arthur purchasing most.
    On the day when one of his shop in St Joseph was being auctioned, Mr Tudor sat on a stool alongsideof the road. He paid very little interest in the proceedings, preferring to sit and talk ,about life in Barbados , with the young men of the village who had gathered there. A giant of a man.


  38. @ Heather

    Excellent article.


  39. Togetherness January 5, 2016 at 8:58 PM #

    “The uncalled for sniping frightens investors.”

    I hate to hear wunnuh DLP yard-fowls talking shiite ‘bout people scaring away investors.

    Since when business men does read BU or any eddah social media as a guide to invest in a country?


  40. @Heather

    Someone once mentioned the name of the individual/family that owned the land but I just can’t remember but if memory serves they lived in the immediate area.

    I also can’t say whether the “Hill” who owned the Supermarket in Welches was Lionel C or another Hill (can’t remember the first name who also owned a Supermarket in the Baxters Road area) as I was away from the island on a continuous basis for several years.

    It was not my intention to level criticism at any one but time and distance has afforded me a unique perspective on some of the issues that plague Barbados and one of the things that I have observed is that many flourishing small businesses have never expanded or grown beyond their immediate environs, they just wither on the vine and die.


  41. @ Sargeant wrote ” many flourishing small businesses have never expanded”

    I know a few who chose to invest in land and build rental properties.


  42. Jeff,
    Looking forward to it.


  43. The portable standpipes/water tanks can be used as a communal area to bring back community life to St.Joseph.

    People in St Joseph who repeatedly vote for BLP Dale Marshall cant expect to be first beneficiaries of the DLP mains laying programme. The DLP faithful areas of St Lucy, St. Philip, St. John must be given priority.

    Whether St Joseph gets water or not they wont vote for the DLP. This is politics people. Get with it. Long live the DLP.


  44. BLP stronghold areas cannot expect to be fed the fatted calf by the DLP.


  45. This is what will send this country to the grave. Idiotic comments like those recently posted.

  46. Well Well & Consequences2 Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences2

    Having access to life saving and life giving water has and should have nothing to do with being affiliated with 2 slimy political parties….karma will right that wrong.


  47. This link ties in with the point how technology has impacted social development in Barbados. Follow the link to understand the resource used to inform government’s tax on cellphone policy.

    http://www.gsma.com/publicpolicy/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/gsmaglobaltaxreviewnovember2011.pdf

  48. Well Well & Consequences2 Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences2

    David, I swear, there is no hope for the island if mentalities have degraded to that level of retardation where access to life saving water is predicated on a human being’s association with some slimy politican, politics or not having a functioning brain with independent thought.

    When that drivel is read by people around the world and many people do read BU, what does that say for how the level of education and lack of commonsense by those commenters are preceived, particularly if it’s one of those same dumb politicians hiding and making the ridiculous comments…..it’s sickening, but in no way surprising.


  49. Yes Well Well the online presence is starting to take root especially with ND joining the fray. The BU household does not always agree with many of the updates but they show the rotten underbelly of the society.

The blogmaster invites you to join the discussion.

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