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Submitted by Tee White

A new buzz phrase that seems to be in use by members of the current Barbados government is, “This is who we are” as Bajans or in the negative version, “This is not who we are”. Some version of this phrase was used 17 times in Prime Minister Mia Mottley’s address to the nation on the 54th anniversary of independence and has since been repeated by Minister of Tourism Lisa Cummins. But what are the aims behind the use of this phrase?

The first question that arises is who gave the 24 members of the current government the right to define for the nearly 300, 000 Bajans at home and the many thousands more who have made their lives elsewhere what it means to be a Bajan. Secondly, how did the government arrive at this essence of Bajan-ness? There are Bajans of all outlooks and personal views, some of which are directly contradictory. For example, there are those who cling fast to white supremacist ideas and the whole colonial inheritance from the English slavemasters, while there are others who reject this inheritance with contempt. How is it possible, in this complexity to decide that doing X is being Bajan but doing Y is not? And in any event, who gets to make that judgment?

In reality, however, the government’s new found love of defining Bajan-ness is not because they have suddenly discovered a desire to understand the cultural and psychological essence of what it is to be Bajan. Quite the contrary. The government’s intention is to use its definition as a weapon to stifle the struggle of the workers for their rights. Once the government establishes its monopoly to decide what is part of ‘who we are’ and what is not, it can easily use this power to declare anyone taking actions it disagrees with as being outside of the nation. The idea of using political and ideological differences as a means to exclude people from the nation is not a new one. One Senator Joseph McCarthy in the USA in the 1950’s drew on the work of the US legislature’s House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC) to pursue his own vendetta against those US citizens who took a stand for rights and justice because he considered them to be un-American. Towering freedom fighters like Paul Robeson and Claudia Jones were to become the target of McCarthy’s activities. Is this the direction of travel of the government of Barbados?

That the government intends to use its definition to suppress the workers’ struggles is clear from the fact that they have been targeting the fighting hotel workers with it. These workers, abandoned by their unions, faced with employers trying to cheat them out of their redundancy pay and a government that colluded with the employers by amending the Severance Payment Act, took a courageous stand to fight for their rights. The statements from the Prime Minister and from the Minister of Tourism are that the actions of the workers are not part of ‘who we are’. In other words, the workers must give up the struggle for their rights because this type of struggle is not part of being Bajan. These statements come from leaders of a political party which supported the huge protest in Bridgetown in 2017 against the tax policies of the previous DLP government. Was that protest part of ‘who we are’? And what about Nanny Grigg, Bussa and the freedom fighters of 1816 or Clement Payne and the martyrs of 1937? Were their actions part of ‘who we are’? Or are we now to understand from the government that our national heroes are not ‘who we are’?

Far from not being ‘who we are’, the actions of the fighting hotel workers are exactly who we are. From the days of slavery, those who toil in this country have had to fight for every inch of progress we have made. It’s no different today. The just demands of the laid off workers must be met and Bajans must go all out to support them in their struggle. That’s who we are.


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101 responses to “Who WE are as Bajans”


  1. @Tee White

    Is this the system not working as designed? Industrial action is always the main weapon in the toolbox of the employee. However you should factor that the hotels are effectively closed because of COVID and consideration must be given to the role of government.


  2. “Without taking the action they did, I think the workers would have been left high and dry for Christmas without their money.”

    those thieves for hoteliers wouldn’t have lost a second of sleep over employees and their children starving and dying from lack of food over xmas nor at any other time, neither would the sellout ministers…they would’ve blamed their victims for not protesting and saying something…to them it’s all about getting away with exploitation and thievry from workers…extra money in their pockets to pretend they’re superior (employers) and have pedigree(sellouts).

    it’s really up to the people to accept or reject any of this, no one else.


  3. Slogans are good for advertisements and political campaigns not so much for governing perhaps the PM (who loves slogans) means to attach this slogan to some national campaign but it is such a trite offering that anyone can use it to mean whatever they want it to mean- positive or negative.


  4. @ Tee White,

    One of the dynamic social programmes organised by the president’s grand father, one of many, was the free Queen’s Park food kitchen, when hungry and desperate people in the City (many came from outside the City) could get free food.
    Even this common act of humanity seems outside the president’s imagination. This is who we are.


  5. @ Sargeant

    What is your interpretation? Put some flesh on the bones.


  6. This is who we are.
    We got this.
    Not bout hay.
    Punching above our weight.
    World class


  7. Here is William Skinner arguing with himself again!

    Why can’t you understand that we ALL know that Barbados has its problems and we ALL know what they are?

    It is not always what you say, it is how you say it.

    But you are wrong again about my neck of the woods! We may not be as up in each other’s business as we were in my grandmother’s day but we do more than see our neighbours only when we cut the lawns and wash our cars.

    Right now I am looking at the beautiful partially enclosed club house where the fellas lime every day and the women lime and party on special days. Independence Day, Xmas Day, Old Year’s Night, New Year’s Day you can hear the music and the fun. Plenty local music played. Some cooking is even done on the spot. We still have our village shops. One old female shopkeeper recently died and my poor son does not want to hear about it. It makes him too sad. The other shopkeeper he calls “Auntie”.

    So… still chasing the beautiful butterflies in my garden. Woke up this morning to the sweet sounds of the fowl cock.

    P.S. CBC does show plenty of local content. And we do have quite a few budding writers, movie makers etc who are much appreciated. We had a soap opera and several films that I thoroughly enjoyed.

    My son was actually an extra for “Chrissie” by Marcia Weekes. It ran for weeks and weeks at cinemas.

    Ricky Redman also had a few good ones that did well at the cinema.

    Bajan content is more appreciated now than it ever was.


  8. @HA

    Do I have to? The positive speaks for itself, you have used some iteration of the negative by citing “the Bajan condition” many times on the blog, as to governance if the PM would retrace her steps the phrase “many hands make light work” would be excised from her speeches.


  9. @ Sargeant

    Unless you define what you mean, how am I to know we are singing from the same song sheet. That is part of the clarification process.
    I will give a simple example: the word cussing. What does it mean. You have never seen me use the word because it not a word I understand. I can imagine people saying if you are a Bajan you must know what cussing means. I do not.
    I talk about obscenities, swearing, cursing, can those word be interchanged with cussing? I have also asked on numerous occasions what does having the last word men.
    I go on because it is culturally important. On the 50th anniversary of independence I asked a prominent Barbadian to get ten people, including himself, to write 10000 words each on what Barbados meant to them. I am sure if they had we would have had ten different interpretations.
    That is what debate is about, not speculating about what people think. ( I can go on about the predictability of the Barbados Condition, but that will call for another discussion).
    I am sure you do not have the same impression of Barbados as myself. I do not fly the flag, and sing the National anthem and put my hand on my heart or talk nonsense about patriotism and obsess over cricket or support the Bees or the Dees – but I am a Barbadian


  10. The trouble with moving into new development areas is that the neighbours are usually all new people. It’s not like the old villages where one usually only moved in by being attached to somebody from the village.


  11. @ Hal
    I’ve never seen so many people want to prove they are more Bajan than anybody else. A bundle of pure crap.Reducing serious discussion to a lot of mundane self serving mumbo jumbo.


  12. @ William

    Have you noticed when you ask people to define what being a Barbadian means to them they play the Bajan trick and go silent? It is predictable behaviour.


  13. Barbados recorded the 38th murder for 2020 at Farm Road, St Peter, on Monday night.


  14. @ Donna,

  15. Economic Graduate Avatar
    Economic Graduate

    When will Mia stop borrowing so much money in a low productive net exporter company?

    Will Mia action eventually lead to devaluation should covid kill the tourism industry after all the careless borrowing for non productive purposes?

    We all need to be concerned as the whole country is silent.


  16. @ Economic Graduate

    One cannot criticise government economic policy on this blog, if not one is seen as anti-government. Even more, as befits BU, everyone is an expert, even if what they say does not make sense.
    How will a loan from the World Bank of US(?)$200m, thereby increasing the debt to GDP ratio, help in reducing that debt? How much additional debt has the Mottley government added to the government’s balance sheet since May 2018?
    It is not of the Barbadian character to say I do not know about this, plse explain. For example, you talk about government debt, and someone chimes in with talk about the economy. Or someone makes the mistake of thinking the stock exchange and the economy are one and the same and when corrected then goes off in a strump.


  17. @ Hal
    “ It means doing things differently, finding
    new niche markets, making new business
    connections in unfamiliar locations, tapping the DIASPORA ( my emphasis) like
    never before………………”
    Ronald Toppin, Minister of International
    Business and Industry. Barbados Today,
    12/15/2020
    Drip..drip…drip……
    Reality slowly replacing pie-in-the-sky mumbo jumbo. The Barbados economy outside of Barbados needs to be fully exploited. But……….
    Peace


  18. Barclays fined £26m for poor treatment of struggling borrowers https://t.co/YJy99om3iL— The Guardian (@guardian) December 15, 2020

    https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js


  19. @ William

    We can make suggestions, but if the political elite do not understand what is being suggested they either ignore it, or just mess it up.
    Cyprus, Greece and Israel make very good use of their Diaspora. Barbados does not because they do not know what to do. I have spoken before about the Diaspora biennial meetings organised by David Thompson, which Senator McClean turned in to a preaching meeting after his death, and which the president has now dropped, while still begging for ideas.
    @William, the biggest employer of black people in the UK are local authorities, and some of those people manage budgets bigger than the entire budget of the Barbados government. They can teach our politicians and civil servants a thing or two.
    I will give one simple example, the mess at the NIS. It does not need bits of plaster, it needs getting rid of and starting from scratch again. I have put forward one idea, others can out forward theirs.
    But this does not fit anyone’s agenda, so it is ignored, while we talk crap about severance pay, and contributions by employers, etc.
    We have to do things differently, and stop believing we are world class, a fantasy all in the head of the president.


  20. @ Hal
    “ We have to do things differently, and stop believing we are world class, a fantasy all in the head of the president.”
    (Quote)
    There are some who come here on BU with bedtime stories. The Bajan Diaspora, is a bigger economy than the local one.
    These people are not serious. Where are the representatives “ on the ground” in our overseas offices? All they do is fly about fooling people who know nothing. But I enjoy the fairy tales.
    Drip….drip…… drip…..


  21. @ William

    The other fantasy is because someone has read a book on a subject, attended a lecture and got a qualification they are experts.
    Even more before the BU court, you get all kinds of people jumping up and expressing a view, that they have Googled, saw on CNN or an idea that came to them during a dream.
    Have you noticed how the other Caribbean islands are not only competing seriously with us, but surpassing us. Have you been to St Lucia recently?
    But that is who we are. Have a nice rum and coke.


  22. The usual.


  23. Gabby – Wind Force


  24. The BPF band is really good imho. This is what I am listening to while blogging.


  25. Hants,

    World class?

    🙄


  26. 🎵It’s a beautiful day in my neighbourhood. The neighbours passed by and called me sweet names. The birds are singing, the fowl cock is crowing and my son saw a mongoose.

    🙄

    Uh-oh!

    🎶We can build a factory and make misery
    We’ll create the cure
    We made the disease🎵

    🎵Frustrated Incorporated…..

    Put me outta my misery!🎶

    😭😭

    Song by Soul Asylum

    Hants, do you know this one? THIS is what plays in my head when I blog at BU.

    https://youtu.be/GLQ2TIul8pI


  27. Politicians say the darndest things!!!

    ” “Bajans by choice tend to have the most passion, and we need a lot of passion now ”

    https://www.nationnews.com/2020/12/18/mottley-new-immigration-bill-coming/

    ” People living under the Welcome Stamp Programme were told that they are Bajans by choice, and Barbados is one of the best places to live. “


  28. Bajans would be more passionate if they made US$50,000 a year.

    At the very least pay Bajan workers their severance and raise the minimum wage to a Living wage. They would definitely
    have more passion.

    “I certify that I expect to earn an income of US$50,000.00 or more over the next 12 months and/or have the means to support myself, my spouse/partner and dependants accompanying me, during my stay in Barbados”


  29. @Hants

    Yours @9.27 am

    Just goes to show that there is more than one way to skin a cat, remember the goal of increasing the population?


  30. Why are the two women in the photo with the PM not wearing masks?


  31. @ Sargeant,

    Maybe they had a tour of Ilaro court and passion made them forget the masks.


  32. “……..and Barbados is one of the best places to live. “”

    For Which race????

    and displaced BLACK WORKERS CANT EVEN GET THEIR MONIES LEGLLY DUE TO THEM?


  33. A very strange story in today’s Nation.

    hpttps://www.nationnews.com/2020/12/18/govtp-launch-new-accounting-service/


  34. The days of having an Auditor General’s report that highlights a myriad of accounting inconsistencies and financial irregularities in Government departments, may soon be at an end.

    This is because come April 1, 2021, Government will be rolling out its accounting service, which will provide uniformity in training and protocols, said Minister in the Ministry of Finance, Ryan Straughn.

    Problem solved? De money still gone? Creative accounting?


  35. Everything being put in place before the call of an early electiion


  36. Where on earth are black or poor people or poor black people treated any differently?

    This is a global fight.


  37. Real real Bajans putting a Beach to its best use.


  38. CHRISTMAS CAME early .Bajans love nuff pork.

    https://www.nationnews.com/2020/12/21/pork-pan-parang-party/


  39. @Hants

    The blogmaster was out and about yesterday and today and everywhere Bajans COVID or not are going about the business of enjoying the season.


  40. Germany and Switzerland have banned travel from South Africa after Africa’s most industrial nation warned of the emergence of a new coronavirus variant.

    This new variant — which shares some characteristics to the new strain that has appeared in the UK but is different — has been present in about nine in 10 new recorded cases in South Africa in recent weeks.

    This “strongly suggests that the current second wave we are experiencing is being driven by this new variant,” said Zweli Mkhize, South Africa’s health minister. The German and Swiss governments barred incoming flights from South Africa from the start of Monday…..(Quote)


  41. @Hants

    Parang? The takeover of Bim by Trinidad is progressing by bits and pieces we too love to absorb others culture.


  42. That was exactly my reaction to the tartan.


  43. @Hants

    I know you love music, so start practicing on the Bagpipes and you can showcase your talent on Republic Day 2021 dressed in your kilt complete with sporran and all the ladies will ask what is he wearing under that kilt .

    I will bring the Haggis and Johnny Walker


  44. I agree with Hants the Barbados coat of arms …two vendors rampant fighting over a tourist …represents the true spirit of the island rather than a poxy tartan bought not earned..

  45. TheOGazerts (cousin) - not Theo - me family run out of fake ids Avatar
    TheOGazerts (cousin) – not Theo – me family run out of fake ids

    From BT
    Robert Guibal, owner of Glasgow firm James Robertson Kiltmaker, commented: “In 29 years as a kiltmaker I’ve worked on some fantastic projects but never expected to be designing an official tartan for a Caribbean island.

    “When BTMI approached me two years ago, they were so passionate about the linked heritage of Scotland and Barbados and the need to create something special to recognise this. This tartan is the product of six months intense refining, to create the perfect design to represent the island of Barbados in a contemporary way.”

    🙂 Breaking News
    BTMI has scored yet another first. A boat load of white sheets wit two holes has been sourced fro Alabama USA. Mr K. Lan was amazed at the tenacity of the islands in securing these sheet. “I couldn’t believe it. My video of the sheets being used was well received. One BTMI member explained to me that as white reflect lights, the may make staying out in the sun more comfortable. I have been invited down for cropover”. Already have a song
    I’m jumping in white
    I’m jumping all night
    I accept de invite
    Jumping in dark and jumping in light
    Will give some a fright
    Not a darkie in sight
    🙂


  46. Is it just me… There seem to be more overlap of stories between BT and the Nation.
    Sometimes same photos are used.
    Merger, acquisition, laziness, cheapness? What?


  47. Who would have thunk it, Mia bigging up African roots, while behind the scenes a Gov’t entity is exploring connections to Scotland and appropriating its culture.

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