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Submitted  by Dr. E. Anthony Hurley

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Batts Rock has been, for more than half a century, one of my favorite spaces in Barbados, that means on earth. It was there I had one of my most treasured experiences of childhood terror, when my schoolmates (we were all less than nine years old) suggested I climb up on one of the large boulders in front of the caves that were a feature of the beach in those days. They roared with laughter at my shocked surprise when a wave entered the cave, apparently underground, and washed me off my rocky perch, tearing my swim trunks and bruising my legs as I was knocked into the surf. It was there as a teenager we hung out in the bar built under and around the bearded fig tree that used to dominate the beach.

Over the years, as I lived abroad, I made it a feature of my frequent trips back to the motherland to visit this spot which held so many pleasant memories. On my visits for the last twenty years or so (I usually come at least two to four times a year), my practice has been to walk from Batts Rock to the old Paradise, my favorite (please excuse any American English spellings which my computer insists on using) swimming location.

In the last few months, therefore, I witnessed with increasing shock the renovation (and racialization) of the bar facilities (in front of the lifeguard station) which had been non-operational for many years. I grew concerned when I saw the installation on the beach front under the trees of concrete stands for umbrellas, the laying down of a straw carpet along the path where I previously walked, the setting up of standing light fixtures, and the positioning of tables and chairs.

The way in which the remodeling of this new bar has treated the beach space has conjured in my mind notions of recolonization. This renovation process has provoked in me the question: What’s going on at Batt’s Rock? Beach space that I thought was public has clearly been appropriated by the owners of this new operation. Even the public bathroom facilities, where for decades I’ve left my car keys in the care of the attendants, have been appropriated and colonized, bore a sign for a short while saying “La Cabane,” thereby signaling the ownership of the formerly public (Barbadian) rest rooms.

Colonization, I have been taught, in most cases involves the appropriation of space, of land. Barbados is in this respect a signal example of successful British colonization. The Barbadian land space was forcibly occupied, appropriated, by the British in the 17th century. The British, like other European colonizers of that era, made what was to prove an historical misjudgment by importing masses of Africans as chattel to further the economic objectives of their colonial enterprise. The lack of foresight of these colonizers and their inability to exercise permanent control of the majority populations they enslaved and colonized led to the reduction and destruction of the British and European empires internationally and eventually even to the relative independence of “Little England.”

Octave Mannoni (1899-1989), the French ethnologist, philosopher, and psychiatrist/psychoanalyst, taught in Martinique in the 1920s and in Madagascar in the 1930s. This experience gave him insights into relationships of dependency between colonizers and colonized people, and formed the basis of his 1950 text, Psychology of Colonization. In this text, as part of the understandable necessity to justify France’s brutal colonial practices and the responses of the colonized populations which he had witnessed in Martinique and Madagascar, Mannoni claimed that colonized people suffered from a dependency complex and in fact were unconsciously waiting and wanted and needed to be colonized. According to Mannoni, colonized people suffered from an inferiority complex that existed before they were actually colonized, that colonial racism was different from other kinds of racism, and that France was the least racist country in the world.

Mannoni’s theories of the dependency complex of colonized people were effectively challenged and refuted by two the Caribbean’s intellectuals, Aimé Césaire and Frantz Fanon, both Martinique-born. Cesaire’s Discourse on Colonialism exposed the limitations and fundamental hypocrisy of Mannoni’s assertions, in trying to excuse and justify the violent actions of colonizers, and emphasized that colonial racism was no different from any other kind of racism, while Fanon, himself a distinguished psychiatrist, more respectfully alluded to socioeconomic factors that inevitably contribute to psychological reactions and psychoses. My own explorations of colonial history and psychology also led me to the firm conclusion that Mannoni’s pronouncements were typical of the European need to justify colonial practices that were clearly crimes against humanity.

How therefore do I explain what is happening at Batts Rock? The owners of La Cabane, while clearly appropriating public space, cannot do so without the knowledge, acceptance, approval, or complicity of our national leaders or those in charge of protecting our national cultural heritage. Barbados is, after all, an independent nation. As the politically-conscious and socially-engaged musician, singer, and cultural ambassador Gabby (Dr. Anthony Carter) has had to remind us, our beaches belong to us. They are public. Barbados is a small country, with limited land space. Who gives permission for this tenuous land space to be occupied, to be appropriated, to be recolonized? Were we subconsciously wanting this? Are we suffering from Mannoni’s


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137 responses to “Batts Rock and Recolonization”


  1. Colonization, I have been taught, in most cases involves the appropriation of space, of land. Barbados is in this respect a signal example of successful British colonization. The Barbadian land space was forcibly occupied, appropriated, by the British in the 17th century.

    +++++++++++++++++++++++++

    I think the author should have just stuck to issue and left out theorizing on colonization.

    Who exactly are or were the colonized people referred to in the piece?


  2. @Submitted by Dr. E. Anthony Hurley “Who gives permission for this tenuous land space to be occupied, to be appropriated, to be recolonized? Were we subconsciously wanting this? Are we suffering from Mannoni’s…”

    I don’t like Batts’s Rock myself, but I thank Anthony Hurley for bringing this to our attention. I would bet anything that the La Cabane people have not received permission from anybody. And NO. We do not consciously nor subconsciously want to be recolonised. Mannoni was an old racist, and we do not accept his theory that any people wish to be terrorised, brutalised, mistreated and stolen from. We do not accept that at all. We remember very well that the last time around colonisation did not work for us.


  3. Since Gabby led that motley crew along the beach at the Crane we have heard of a householder erecting a fence on the beach behind his home and now this, I suspect there are other instances which have not been brought to the public’s attention.

    It is slow and insidious, we are like the proverbial frog in the pot with the water slowly coming to a boil soon the only beach we will be able to call our own will be the one at North Point which no one wants.


  4. @ Sargeant,

    I am blessed to have spent the first 20 years of my life in Barbados when de beach did really belong to we.

  5. pieceuhderockyeahright Avatar
    pieceuhderockyeahright

    @ Dr Anthony Hurley

    A refreshing piece with a much removed perspective on this issue.

    You should note with some interest that the very first comment that seeks to give and affront to your article comes from none other than John the Quaker else called “He who wants the good ole massa slave lynching days back in Barbados ”

    And, as you are pointing out, it will not be much longer before our 95% population of negroes will be in visible shackles again!

    Those of the mind never left.


  6. Let’s hear from PLT, the beach is mine he say. Where is his gang, cometh and take beach from ?


  7. @Wily, PLT is full of it – ie himself.


  8. “Who gives permission for this tenuous land space to be occupied, to be appropriated, to be recolonized?”

    … That would be the lowlife, bribetaking black government ministers in the last administration who have no self respect. ., they allow the halfassed minority racists on the island to terrorize the majority population…as long as they get their bribe money..it is ok eith them..

    .both negro governments have indulged these crimes against the population for 52 years..

  9. William Skinner Avatar

    @ WARU
    “ both negro governments have indulged these crimes against the population for 52 years”

    As a youngster, I vividly recall a dog that used to chase people off what was then called the Aquatic jetty at what has been called In recent times the Pebbles beach. I speak under correction but I think that some old timers, referred to it as Gravesend beach. It was where the hot water pot was located before it was at Brandons.
    I observed that this dog never chased a white person off that jetty. I drew this to the attention of my friends and others and we realized that we were not imagining things. Years later and up to this present time; when I tell people this, they usually believe I am kidding.
    I thank Dr. Hurley for sharing this informative article with us. I hope we hear from the powers that be on this.
    WARU, you have brilliantly nailed it with your comment above.


  10. No not mannoni;s ….nosey parker’s….some person trying to eek out a few bucks in a rotten economy, I bet the bastard even picks up the garbage around the place how dare he. WS the movie was called white dog.


  11. Yes William..it was called Gravesend.

    We know what caused these decades of segregation and apartheid practices against the black population .. though most people, particularly the victims to these abhorrent repulsive forms of blatant human rights abuses against themselves would not want to voice the reality….nor acknowledge its existence.

    But that will be exposed completely to the world going forward…both the lowlife criminal minority bajan and foreign whites who use these crimes as weapons to steal from the people…and the disgusting black ministers and lawyers who think it is STILL ok to allow apartheid and racism to be practiced against their own people as long as it fills their own pockets with money through bribery and corruption…all their names will be trotted out for the world to know the type of evil wild animals they are…just as they deserve.

    They have no clue what is coming at them like an out of control freight train…it is that time…when we are done, the right people in the right places will be fully appraised of these nasty human rights violations…committed by both demonic out of control, self serving negro governments and the no class minorities infesting the island.

    All of them seem to have forgotten that the very Constitution was drafted AND ratified in UK….not Barbados.


  12. “I observed that this dog never chased a white person off that jetty. I drew this to the attention of my friends and others and we realized that we were not imagining things. Years later and up to this present time; when I tell people this, they usually believe I am kidding.”

    Mr Skinner

    Your above comment has some truth in it……… however, there could be a valid explanation for the dog’s behaviour. Allow me to give you an example.

    I used to work at a hotel and when I went for lunch or dinner, I observed the cats that frequented the eating area, comfortably and fearlessly mingled amongst and rubbed themselves against the feet of the white guests, who would in turn pet and feed them bits of food. I was amused at the thought these animals were “colour prejudiced.”

    But I soon realized what was responsible for their behaviour. While the white guests “accommodated” these animals, the black employees used various methods, such as throwing objects, water or kicking at them, in an attempt to chase them from the dining area. Hence, they would run away anytime they saw a black person.

    We all know that animals would respond accordingly to how they are treated. Herein lies the problem.

    Animals respond to “external stimuli” (i.e. sources of danger) through learnt, inherited or instinctive behaviours, which may have been developed as a result of changes in experience, from parents or response to feeling threatened.

    As Sir Fuzzy would “say”……..”just my take”

  13. peterlawrencethompson Avatar
    peterlawrencethompson

    Haven’t been to Batts Rock recently. I will go and take a look.

  14. peterlawrencethompson Avatar
    peterlawrencethompson

    @John
    Why do you pretend to be so stupid… you know perfectly well who the colonized people are.


  15. @Artax
    Indeed you are right.
    Someone should have fed that dog.


  16. When we first heard Aretha Franklin many years ago
    we heard her singing this song
    I have heard of a land where we shall never grow old


  17. peterlawrencethompson
    October 28, 2018 7:26 AM

    @John
    Why do you pretend to be so stupid… you know perfectly well who the colonized people are.

    ++++++++++++++++++++++

    You mean the Amerindians?


  18. … when you get to Batt’s Rock Beach, tell me how many Amerindians you see!!


  19. Time to create a “pressure group ” and name it BEACHES FOR BAJANS.


  20. There are not many American Indians left to be seen in Texas either…..
    We know of the genocide John.

  21. millertheanunnaki Avatar
    millertheanunnaki

    @ John October 28, 2018 7:49 AM
    “… when you get to Batt’s Rock Beach, tell me how many Amerindians you see!!”
    +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    The name “Barbados” (with or without the ‘e’) is not an “English” word.
    Do you see any Portuguese around other than in the Jewish cemetery?

    But we must remember we are dealing with a Johnny who has postulated on many occasions how wonderful and beneficial chattel slavery for West African males since it rescued their testicles and their race from the butchery of the Muslims traders.

    Yes, indeed John, as you so convincing argued only recently: “Slavery worked” and worked well it did.
    So the countering question to you, Sir Johnny the quaking hypocrite, is: why do you argue ad nauseam that your people the Quakers were in the vanguard for its abolition and it was this Christian-minded group who singlehandedly and with all beneficence in the sight of your white god put an end to that dreaded act against that blackened swath of humanity?

    Why get rid of something that works perfectly well unless you want to replace it with a more modern model called free-market capitalism?

    Where have all those godly Quakers gone? Have they gone to graveyards for fossils just like the Bajan Amerindians and enslaved Africans?

    “The graveyards are full of people the world could not do without.” ~ E. G. Hubbard


  22. @Artax October 28, 2018 7:16 AM “Dogs and cats should not be encouraged to frequent public food service areas. And in fact in most countries, including majority white countries they are forbidden, except if it is a service animal such as a guide dog. The black patrons were therefore right to chase the animals away. The white patrons were wrong to encourage the animals. That said in the bad old colonial days I went to a school with a white English headmistress, in those days the headmistress’ house was in the school yard. We the students were amazed to find that at lunch time she fed the cat off her own eating dishes. One does not have to pretend that an animal human in order to be kind to the animal. I have had a cat since 2004. She never eats off my dishes, and she is healthy and presumably happy. Spay or neuter the animal, provide food and fresh water everyday. Deworm the animal as recommended by a professional. Provide shelter and a companion of its own kind and the animal is good. If a dog walk the dog daily.

    This business that one has to treat an animal as a person, even while treating REAL REAL human beings shabbily is nonsense, and I simply call it out for what it is.

    No Artax. You are very likely making an excuse for bad behaviour. The dog had very likely been trained by racist white people to harass and attack black people. And in any event the dog ought to have been on a leash while in a public pace. All dogs should be leashed while in public.

    We must cease making excuses for bad behaviour.

    When we excuse bad behaviour, invaribly we get more of the same.


  23. @TheOGazerts October 28, 2018 7:29 AM “Someone should have fed that dog.”

    Feeding a pet is always the RESPONSIBILITY of the owner. It is NOT the responsibility of passers-by.

    Why we so like to fill up our heads with damned foolishness?


  24. John (Jack) is an automated bot that is programmed to always get the last word in with a stupid point

    国际健身气功联合会


  25. @Simple Simon
    You missed my point completely.


  26. Hants
    October 28, 2018 8:03 AM

    Time to create a “pressure group ” and name it BEACHES FOR BAJANS.

    ++++++++++++++++

    One problem Hants, … not many Bajans go to beaches!!

    The sewage ending up in the sea around Batt’s Rock is a deterrent for many, myself included!!


  27. We need the government to speak out. No Barbadian government has spoken out about public access to the beaches, and sought to enforce the law (is there a law?) over the last 50 years. That is where the pressure should be applied. We also have to put pressure on Town and Country planning (the prime minister’s responsibility) and the police to enforce the law.
    I have said before I suspect that secret agreements are made with foreign investors which are not put in writing for fear of the back lash. It is all to do with foreign reserves. Prostitution is prostitution, whether it is on Bush Hill or for foreign reserves.
    Barbados is a failed state.

  28. millertheanunnaki Avatar
    millertheanunnaki

    @ Simple Simon October 28, 2018 9:47 AM

    “Spay or neuter the animal ………..”
    +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    Why?
    Why do you want to play “god”? Don’t you think the “animal” has the same right like ‘humans’ to perpetuate it genes?

    How about doing the same thing to those “humans” you consider to be genetically sub-standard, mentally or physically “handicapped” and those deemed as social misfits like dangerous criminals with the hallmark of recidivism?


  29. WARU
    October 28, 2018 5:06 AM

    “Who gives permission for this tenuous land space to be occupied, to be appropriated, to be recolonized?”
    … That would be the lowlife, bribetaking black government ministers in the last administration who have no self respect. ., they allow the halfassed minority racists on the island to terrorize the majority population…as long as they get their bribe money..it is ok eith them..
    .both negro governments have indulged these crimes against the population for 52 years..
    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    Is it black people who are behind the recolonization of Batt’s Rock?


  30. Where have all those godly Quakers gone?
    +++++++++++++++++++++++++

    Did you know Batt’s Rock is named after an old Quaker family with the surname Batt?

    Rock is all about the Christian faith of the Batt family.

    So, even today we have before us the example of the Christian faith right before our very eyes!!

    … just that we are blind and can’t see the obvious.

    The Quakers and their faith is there for all to see.

    It hasn’t gone anywhere!!

    When PLT goes to Batt’s Rock looking for Amerindians, he too will be able to see what is before all of us, if he really looks!!


  31. Can we revert to the thesis of the submission?


  32. Simple Simon

    Your October 27, 2018 9:47 AM contribution “harrowed me with fear and wonder,” but much more wonder than fear.

    It’s either you delight in being PROVOCATIVE………..

    ………….. you don’t THOROUGHLY read and UNDERSTAND contributions BEFORE attempting to respond………

    …………. or you deliberately “over think” simple situations to impress upon others that you have some special knowledge.

    You have introduced irrelevant information, thereby “transforming” a simple example and taking it to an extreme that makes the original intent unrecognisable.

    Could you please explain to me the relevance of your headmistress feeding the “cat off her own eating dishes;” you owning a cat since 2004; providing food and fresh water every day; spraying or neutering, deworming the animal or walking a dog daily and “this business that one has to treat an animal as a person” …………

    ……………have with a SIMPLE example of how animals RESPOND to “external stimuli?”

    Could you please indicate to me where in my contribution I used any word or phrase that directly or indirectly suggests or implied I’m “very likely making an excuse for bad behaviour?”

    And where in the said contribution I made references to “black patrons” and “white patrons?”


  33. A few years ago, the NCC “rehabilitated” Batts Rock Bay beach area, including improving vehicular and pedestrian access to the beach, building a play park for children and “installing” chairs and benches. But at that time the La Cabane was not yet located on the beach.

    I don’t know if it’s case where the author has associated the “redevelopment” of the area with the restaurant, or since the restaurant has been there, there were further developments of the area.

  34. pieceuhderockyeahright Avatar
    pieceuhderockyeahright

    Would the author be so kind to provide a picture of the area in question?

    @John

    That is not a bad repartee John since, you are seeking to suggest that none of us , including, we the 95% black bajans, cannot lay claim to being the “original peoples”, therefore colonization, or recolonization, technically cannot be relied on AS such would only apply TO THE ORIGINAL INHABITANTS – Amerindians

    You seek rather cleverly to suggest that the article ONLY DEALS WITH THE BLACK SLAVE inhabitant that was ripped from his original home and others of the original settlers.

    Not a bad counter John.

    The construct of the article relies heavily on that word, does it not? but, in fact, we are a transplanted people who are in a majority.

    Indeed a nuance of some magnitude if we had allowed ourselves to be tricked by your sleuth.

    But de ole man would ask you to consider the verb at today.

    As it relates to beach access, the author has moved from (a) the time line of the original settlers, vis a vis original inhabitants, to today, a time where citizens, the majority of whom are black, demand access to specific spaces.

    I must admit that, being already in that mind space of “that beach belongs to we”, the verb recolonized has only one meaning, which is that the forceable retaking of what is a bajan asset, by outsiders, or a minority of a particular colour

    @ William

    Before the spring garden expansion, we used to walk down a track with a graveyard to the left and the limestone wall of mount gay rum to our right to get ti Brandon’s beach.

    I remember that this wooded place on the left was a graveyard called gravesend too, but that was years ago and de ole man well.. I just old. I think there was one out by Sugar Sugar on Bay Street too.

  35. pieceuhderockyeahright Avatar
    pieceuhderockyeahright

    @ the Honourable Blogmaster your assistance please with an item for a few bloggers thank you

  36. Talking Loud Saying Nothing Avatar
    Talking Loud Saying Nothing

    If the the owners of La Cabane have appropriated what you claim is public space, then may I suggest that you and some the majority population remove and destroy the offending obstacles. Writing fine articles will not change anything. Action speaks louder than words. The landscaping from the images looks pretty ad-hoc to me and tasteless; lacking in aesthetics. Certainly unworthy of a high quality Caribbean resort.

    If you were to go to Speightstown you would see a number of similar beach front bars, restaurants, cafes that have recently appeared. They appear to be encroaching on public space.

    The beach should always remain free of obstacles.

    We are witnessing in Barbados an upsurge of unregulated developments from all and sundry which gives the impression that the law makers are turning a blind eye.


  37. We need the money. What’s left of the West, South and soon to be East coasts will have to go.


  38. “I remember that this wooded place on the left was a graveyard called gravesend too, but that was years ago and de ole man well.. I just old. I think there was one out by Sugar Sugar on Bay Street too.”

    That is also true…there was supposed to be an original Amerindian burial ground on that Brandon site…the reason it was called Gravesend..

    John is being an ass…when African slaves were transported to the Caribbean and across the earth they were being COLONIZED in the ways of the british, just like Africa…there is nothing brilliant about what John said, he is being contrary like a 5 year old.

    Were they to attempt the same demonic practices and customs against the people, it would be a recolonization.


  39. John..I have not been to Batt’s Rock in years…what I can tell you, if it’s segregation being practiced to prevent black people from accessing any area of Batt’s Rock…it is not black people doing it, the black government does not give permission to blacks to practice racism and segregation but they give that evil permission to whites and everyone else…in exchange for a bribe…….

    ..neither are black people so inclined to practice racism at that level…they do not carry that evil demonic spirit of trying to shut others out, particularly the natives, from what is rightfully theirs..


  40. I think out by the hot pot/Hilton was called Gravesend, also because of the cemetery, a military one that sits right at the end behind the Hilton…that cemetery has been there forever.


  41. @Talking Loud,

    Bajans are cowards. They should go and confront these people, but they won’t they are scared. They believe that the owners would shoot them – or the police/defence force.

  42. Talking Loud Saying Nothing Avatar
    Talking Loud Saying Nothing

    @ Hal,

    Your use of the word “cowards” is a tad harsh; however I will repeat that these well meaning articles are meaningless unless they are backed up by force on the ground. What will it take for Barbados majority population to understand that it was their ancestors who built the island through blood, sweat and tears.

    I have said it a thousand times before on BU that Barbados African diaspora should concentrate on building a fortress on their island home. Emigration will suit and benefit 20% of the population whilst the remaining 85% will fall victim to exploitation.


  43. But TLSN
    We are men of words and not of action.


  44. Artax
    October 28, 2018 11:29 AM

    A few years ago, the NCC “rehabilitated” Batts Rock Bay beach area, including improving vehicular and pedestrian access to the beach, building a play park for children and “installing” chairs and benches. But at that time the La Cabane was not yet located on the beach.
    I don’t know if it’s case where the author has associated the “redevelopment” of the area with the restaurant, or since the restaurant has been there, there were further developments of the area.

    +++++++++++++++++++++++++

    People do not know the facts yet hold forth as though they were experts!!

    Barclays Park was a gift to the GOB and people’s of Barbados.

    I don’t know if the concession in the building works or not, as I haven’t been down there for ages.

    I remember there were major renovations.

    I have had a meal there a while ago and it never dawned on me to ask if the concessionaire was white or black!!.

    Suppose the concession were given to the best tenderer and the tendered turned out to be white.

    Suppose the same situation pertains at Batt’s Rock!!

    The problem with this blog is that it is dealing with two issues and neither of them has a factual basis!!

    Recolonization and the concepts presented are about as baseless as can be!!

    The author needs to get his facts straight on what is actually going on.

    Forget the recolonization aspect … it only provided me with some mirth which I have enjoyed this blessed Sunday!!

    Deal with what is on the ground.


  45. SS

    The dog had very likely been trained by racist white people to harass and attack black people. And in any event the dog ought to have been on a leash while in a public pace. All dogs should be leashed while in public.

    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    It doesn’t get more stupid than this!!

    The only case I have heard of where dogs attacked and killed a black person in public was in Mount Friendship … and those dogs were owned by … another black person!!


  46. WS

    I observed that this dog never chased a white person off that jetty. I drew this to the attention of my friends and others and we realized that we were not imagining things. Years later and up to this present time; when I tell people this, they usually believe I am kidding.

    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    What next, the dogs in Barbados are racist!!


  47. That’s why I put up the Dog Whisperer intervention with Patti LaBelle.

    I was waiting at the Land Registry one day and this was on TV.

    Everybody was watching it in silence and all of a sudden, a sage “black” Bajan opined, “a dog will bite a black person”!!

    I nearly fell of my chair and had to restrain myself.

    I remember being bitten once by a dog, when I was a little boy … I was terrified of the dog as the adults had spoken about how sharp it was.

    Well, I got bit!!

    Since then, I can’t remember another occasion.

    I get on well with most dogs …. people too … although some folks swear I am making fun of them!!

    I am a good judge of a dog’s character ….. same thing with people!!


  48. I would make one generalization regarding dogs, black people and white people.

    I have seen plenty “black” people pelt rocks at dogs.

    I cannot remember seeing any “white” people doing the same.


  49. John

    How many white people have been associated with in Barbados?

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