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OPINION | LAND, CLASS & EQUITY IN BARBADOS

In the lush hills of St. John, the land is speaking … but it’s not speaking to the average Barbadian.

Instead, it whispers through full-page advertisements in national newspapers, calling for bidders to lease plantations like Todds, Wakefield, Clifton Hall, and Hothersal, prime agricultural properties once tied to Barbados’ colonial economy, now available to the highest bidder under terms that effectively exclude the very people most in need of opportunity.

A recent ad published in the Nation (July 9, 2025) lists multiple plantations for lease in St.John, one of the island’s most fertile and underdeveloped parishes. But there’s a catch: no listed price, no public lease terms, no criteria for inclusion-just the fine print that interested parties must submit sealed proposals with financial offers.

Advertisement for leasing agricultural properties in St. John, Barbados, including details on various plantations with acreage and terms for submitting proposals.
Source: Nation

Let’s call this what it is: a quiet auction for the privileged. A modern-day plantation rebranding that pretends to be about opportunity but is, in practice, a coded gatekeeping mechanism.

Who gets to bid? Who can offer up-front investment at scale, propose full agro-tourism or commercial developments, and sit at the table with government agencies and trust boards? Not the average Barbadian farmer. Not the Black cooperative. Not the smallholder with a vision but no connections.

Plantations for Lease, But Not for Us

We have seen this before. Whether at Society Plantation, still overgrown, crawling with cow itch, a haven for rodents and criminal elements, right next door to a secondary school that  could  benefit immensely from agricultural training and community-based learning. Instead, the site sits abandoned, its overgrowth symbolic of everything wrong with land governance in Barbados.

And what of the recently concluded We Gathering in St. John? What pride can we claim when the very lands tied to our history  and  survival  remain an embarrassment; overrun and unmanaged? What message do we send to the next  generation looking across the road at a rotting legacy?

As the Barbadian poet Kamau Brathwaite once wrote:

“The sun’s going down /on the same canefield/ same  silence.” That silence now feels like complicity.

George Lamming said: “The architecture of colonialism was not just physical but mental.” And this architecture remains intact when access is denied, opportunity is auctioned, and development is dictated by wealth.

The Urban Enclosure: Pierhead and the Disappearance of the Public

In Bridgetown, the Pierhead Marina development stands as another testament to exclusion. Promoted as a symbol of national renewal, it has instead become a fortress for the elite.

What was meant to be an open waterfront, accessible to all Barbadians, is now   dominated by private yachts, elite condos, and concrete walls. The boardwalk, once envisioned as a cultural artery, has become a gated abstraction.

Where are the public markets?  The youth centers? The promised integration of heritage and modernity. Instead, access is cutoff, and the public is left to peer through fences at what was once theirs.

And to add insult to injury, the very companies executing these elite projects are often owned or heavily influenced by the descendants of the same plantation class that benefited from Barbados’ slave economy. Their names persist on contracts, on building sites, on policy boards ensuring that the nation continues to be built by and for the few.

What of the Poor? Forgotten, Again

The HOPE Project promised housing and empowerment. It delivered scandal and neglect.

Funding meant to transform communities vanished into consultancy fees and administrative limbo. Empty lots and unfinished home now dot our landscape, monuments to bureaucratic failure and broken promises.

Meanwhile, the average Barbadian continues to dream of land, home, and legacy but is denied by a system that elevates connections over community.

A Nation at the Crossroads

This isn’t just about leases or developments, it’s about who we are, and who we want to be. The systemic exclusion of Black, working-class Barbadians from land, ownership, and opportunity is not  an accident-it is a legacy perpetuated by silence and policy.

James Baldwin said it plainly:

“Anyone who has ever struggled with poverty knows how extremely expensive it is to be poor.” In Barbados, it is also expensive to dream.

The  Invisible  Hand  Still  Holds  the Pen

What is perhaps most insidious is that the decision-making power around these lands and developments remains entrenched in the hands of a modern- day gentry. Many of the boards tasked with  oversight and public trust today are quietly composed of  individuals from Barbados’ historic plantocracy, current plutocracy of the powerful and elite circles. Caucasian and most recent Indian  ethnicities, have  been able  to use their connections and influence to steer policies toward their friends, families, and business associates.

The average Black Barbadian, no matter how educated, experienced, or financially prepared, is too often kept at the gate, not for lack of merit, but for lack of lineage. These decisions are not just administrative, they are generationally damaging. Every bypassed opportunity, every sealed bid out of reach, every denied lease  is another door closed on Barbados’ future.

The result is a country eating itself from the inside. We distract ourselves by fighting on call-in programmes, defending political parties with allegiances so blind they border on worship. All the while, the true levers of control are  quietly  being  pulled, deals made, and  shifted, and futures decided without public voice or vote.

“The future will have no pity for those men who, possessing the exceptional privilege of being able to speak the words of truth…have taken refuge in an attitude of passivity, of mute indifference, and sometimes of cold complicity. Frantz Fanon

We  must  not  remain  mute.  We  must not let indifference become our inheritance.

Reclaiming the Nation from the Few

We must act now. We must:

1.  Demand public land lease pricing transparency, with published terms, eligibility, and community consultation.

2. Mandate that a portion of all government-leased  or managed land be reserved  for youth, women, and grassroots cooperatives, with staggered lease payments.

3. Establish a People’s Land Trust for smallholders, farmers, and eco-entrepreneurs to access land based on merit, not money.

4. Ensure that all major urban developments like Pierhead include public access guarantees, housing equity, and cultural preservation.

A Call to Conscience

Barbados is not just a brand or a beachfront—it is a birthright. And birthrights should not be auctioned.

If we continue to allow land—our most sacred  resource—to  be divided along class lines, we will become what our ancestors feared  most: a free nation built on fenced freedom.

Let the land speak again.  But let it speak to all of us.


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90 responses to “A Nation of Walls”


  1. I see where I would describe the islands with a few choice words, others prefer to beat around the bush. Sadly,this cautious exercise is more damaging than calling everything a con/scam/shakedown/3-card-monte.

    We are all at the same point, just our language is different. I would use the word whore; you would talk of “lady of pleasure who should receive compensation for her efforts”. A rose by any other name …


  2. @ Cuhdear

    Your example of self empowerment proves that even with small incomes, once you have perseverance all is possible. As for those banking on inheritance, I will say only what is YOURS, made by you in other words, is worth banking on.


  3. @ Baje,

    Wake up! This government is not a friend of the nigger man. I would advise you to listen to the extraordinary discussion on national radio between Santia Bradshaw (Mia’s right arm woman) and the black Building Contractor Anderson Cherry.

    The woman taunted, humiliated and abused Mr Cherry throughout the interview. Would she have addressed a white Bajan in the same manner. Absolutely not!

    The conclusions to draw are evident. The Maloney’s of this world have thrived in Barbados because they are backed by which ever government is in power. However under this government they have a glut of seemingly anti black male females whom appear willing to do the bidding of their masters.

    https://nationnews.com/2024/02/27/santia-refutes-cherrys-charges/#


  4. Cuhdear Bajan

    RE: “Mind you the price of land in Barbados has become ridiculous. Back in my day a nice house spot was $9,651. BDS fairly easy to do even on modest wages.”

    It is important to note that property/real estate prices APPRECIATE. In other words, they INCREASE in MARKET VALUE OVER TIME.

    Therefore, you cannot, in all seriousness, expect to pay what you would’ve paid in the 1970s, for land in the current market.

    I’m sure if you were to value your $9,651 property, you would realise it would have increased in market value.

    RE: “Perhaps the young people just don’t want to spend $100,000 or $200,000 on a house spot, and who can blame them.”

    Yet, these same “young people” prefer to LEASE a $257,995 Toyota RAV 4 Hybrid, which DEPRECIATES or DECREASES in VALUE, as soon as it is weighted, insured, licensed and delivered to the lessee……

    …… while using the vehicle for ‘pleasure driving,’ NOT business purposes to generate income……

    …… and LIVING in their parents’ homes.

    And, you’re saying, “who can blame them?”


  5. @TLSN

    You do not know if there is a bank story with Cherry. There is the saying when you sleep with dogs you must beware of fleas.

    #crabhill


  6. @ David
    So are you aware of any ‘back story’ behind Senior Minister ‘Tire-slasher’ cussing Trisha Watson and Browne stink in Parliament – over some shiite to do with the electric rate case?
    Bushie just assumed that once in government, these people (for SOME reason) become committed to supporting the albino-centric status quo …and attacking anyone who dares to challenge it, or them…

    David Come-and-Sing-a-Song is a classic example – WRT the same Malmoney and his Hyatt scheme..Presumably there is a ‘back story’ that explains David CASAS’s current stance on the issue since his appointment by his auntie…

    Wuh you sound like David on Brass Tacks…. taking up the role of moderation in SPITE of the facts, …but shiite is shiite Boss!!!

    If Cherry could be given land at Coverley under the same terms as Malmoney, …or Northern Observer’s 50 willing shareholders could get Haymans for the same deal as the Weatherman …. THEN you may have a point…

    …Until then, TLSN & BAJE are as right as shiite….
    …and you KNOW it.


  7. @Bush Tea

    The blogmaster will ask you the same question: can you provide a link where Mottley states she will lick up MAM2 if given the chance?


  8. @Bush Tea

    Regarding Cherry, was he in bed with Mottley and became flea infested or not.


  9. Boss…
    Bushie old as shiite …and don’t do no damn ‘links’…
    But FOR SURE the bushman recalls Malmoney being cussed left, right and center in a way that SUGGESTED that once there was regime change, his donkey would be on the straight and narrow…

    How did THAT go…!!?

    As to Cherry, 99% of business people are committed PIGS. (Party in Government Supporters). Bizzy, COW etc OPENLY discussed this tactic.
    Why would Cherry be any different..?

    So all Bushie cares about are the FACTS being presented, …not in any associated fleas.
    And Cherry was factually correct. Your point is that he DESERVED it – but that is NOT Bushie’s call…

    Shiite, otherwise what could we think of all the other PIGS such as Slasher, Mascoll, Thorne, every big business, etc – who previously had COMPLETELY different views prior to this government?
    For example…
    Do you think that Slasher STILL sees 1000 lbs of blubber…?
    …or is it about 1500 now…???
    LOL LOL
    murder!!!


  10. @ Bush Tea

    You avoided the question which answered it any way. Walk good.


  11. I have seldom bought into the white/ghosts/white shadows/Indian conversation.

    The role of the black politician/political class should be the primary driver of our conversation.

    Like you I am concerned about the outcome of goodies but we need to fix the problem upstream.


  12. Irrespective of what decisions our government makes and whose interests they serve. Which certainly is not the majority black 90% African population.

    We’re well aware that Mia would like to dilute our population with an influx of 85,000 foreigners.

    I was left cold that a man of Jewish extraction whose ancestry hailed from Europe; and that an American expat – I believe. Who hails from a country which gave birth to the Ku Klux Klan and was built on the back of slavery should be dictating to our government the future direction of Barbados. Least we forget, Barbados has one of the oldest synagogues in the Northern hemisphere. The Jewish presence on our island was due to their part-financing of the cross Atlantic slave trade. They also held plantations and were the possessors of Africa slaves

    Mia was adamant that Barbados should become a republic. What sort of message is she sending out to our young people when she is being influenced by a Jew and a white corporate American man who unsurprisingly appears to be trampling over the inalienable rights of possession to the majority population whose ancestors blood is etched in the soil of the island.

    Every black man and woman from Bimshire and the diaspora can see that this current government under Mia is selling out the island. May the spirits of our revolutionary Zanzibar ancestors come to the forth.


  13. There are parallels between what is happening in Barbados, Gaza and the West Bank. Donald Trump would like the Gaza strip to become a cosmopolitan Rivera; whilst Mia dreams of Barbados becoming a cosmopolitan Monaco.

    Do not underestimate the naked ambition of those masked actors who are micro managing her.

    https://www.pierheadbarbados.com/


  14. George Lamming said: “The architecture of colonialism was not just physical but mental.”

    Today’s “scoop” (200 or 300 years late)
    White Supremacist racist theories were manufactured in Edinburgh Uni..
    Edinburgh University had ‘outsized’ role in creating racist scientific theories, inquiry finds
    https://www.theguardian.com/education/2025/jul/27/edinburgh-university-outsized-role-creating-racist-scientific-theories-inquiry

    Sweet Sunday Sermon Reboot
    As the Barbados Underground loves religion like a drug
    and advocates the biblism boot boys beige bajan bloggers

    I would like to propose that being healthy is the same as spirituality
    So if you second that emotion
    Work your body

    This one is called Yoga
    And it’s good for you and me
    This one is called Yoga
    It’s good for the spirituality


  15. We should give thanks that the land cleared adjacent to the ABC highway between Norman Niles and Waterford roundabouts is not being sold to facilitate the planting of concrete: it has been cleared of river tamarind trees once meant to be used as raw material for an RE project. It is ironic a similar project that was hatched recently seems to have been still born.

    There is nothing new under the Sun.

  16. Cuhdear Bajan Avatar

    Artaxerxes July 27, 2025 at 10:28 am “Cuhdear Bajan

    RE: “Mind you the price of land in Barbados has become ridiculous. Back in my day a nice house spot was $9,651. BDS fairly easy to do even on modest wages.”

    It is important to note that property/real estate prices APPRECIATE. In other words, they INCREASE in MARKET VALUE OVER TIME.

    My response: I’ve known and understood this when just out of my teens.

    Therefore, you cannot, in all seriousness, expect to pay what you would’ve paid in the 1970s, for land in the current market.

    My response: I never said that I expect land values to remain stagnant. I do receive my tax bills every year, and pay theme very year, so I am aware.

    I’m sure if you were to value your $9,651 property, you would realize it would have increased in market value.

    My response: Had one property valued in the second half of 2023 so I am aware of the value.


  17. @David, we cannot talk globally about the deleterious impact of climate change impact and do the contrary locally. Highway trees and shrubs are not just nuisance or sore eyes to the public but help us to breath easier. In Barbados we just hate trees, grass and shrubs but love concrete and asphalt. Potentially, nitrates will eventually penetrate the aquifer as successive governments have not the wisdom to understand the need for virgin land buffers.

    They are critical environmental buffers that protect human health, infrastructure, and the climate. Removing them would have both immediate and long-term negative impacts. Vegetation absorbs carbon dioxide (CO₂) from vehicle emissions, playing a role in climate change mitigation.

    Trees provide shade and reduce the heat island effect from large paved surfaces like highways, helping cool the surrounding area and reduce heat-related health risks. Trees and shrubs absorb harmful vehicle emissions such as nitrogen oxides (NOx), carbon monoxide (CO), and trap particulate matter (PM2.5, PM10). Their leaves act like natural sponges, improving air quality near roads.

    Simpletons buy the biggest political deceit, that everyone needs to own their own home and therefore we can expect the lost of all our arable land. With the mad ill conceived idea of 10,000 houses no one seems to give a truthful thought of the carrying capacity of the Barbados environment.


  18. FASCINATING TRUMP AND MIA ARE ONE AND THE SAME.

    THEY SEEM TO HAVE PULLED THE WOOL OVER AND OVER AGAIN.

    EVEN THOUGH HAVE HAD THE OPPORTUNITY AS A CITIZEN TO VOTE IN EITHER PLACE HAVE NEVER BEEN FOOLISH OR GULLIBLE.


  19. CD

    Okay. You’ve known and understood (property values increase in market value overtime) when just out of (your) teens…… and you “never said that (you) expect land prices to remain stagnant”……

    …… yet, you made implicit/implied comparisons between, according to you, “the price of land in Barbados has become ridiculous,” and “back in (your) day a nice house spot was $9,651 BDS.”

    And subsequently mentioned “perhaps the young people just don’t want to spend $100,000 or $200,000 on a house spot, and who can blame them.”

    However, let’s not distract ourselves with lexical semantics, but concentrate on the substantive point in your comments.
    That young people may not “want to spend $100,000 or $200,000 on a house spot.”

    Are you not concerned that many of them prefer, for example, to invest in a $119,500 Honda Elevate from Platinum Motors or a $257,995 Toyota RAV 4 Hybrid from Nassco Limited, rather than ‘house & land,’ while renting or living in their parents’ homes?

    That while the ‘young people’ are more interested in purchasing depreciable assets, the ‘coolie men’ are now investing in real estate, used car and car parts outlets, for us to rent their houses, apartments and office spaces, purchase their cars, and car parts.

    They’re also into wholesale distribution, supplying small shops and stalls. We’ve discussed, in this forum, about seeing the youngsters smoking weed anywhere, at any time.
    For some reason, weed smokers are now mixing the weed with fanta tobacco.

    Guess who are among the biggest wholesale and retail distributors of ‘fanta’ in Barbados?

    The ‘itinerant salesmen’ have developed more creative methods to ‘quench our thirst for consumption.’


  20. Guess who are among the biggest wholesale and retail distributors of ‘fanta’ in Barbados?

    xxxxxxxxxxxxx

    THE INDIANS.

    MOST FANTA USE TO COME NEXT DOOR FROM ST. VINCENT.

    THEY ARE ALSO AMONG THE BIGGEST IMPORTERS OF ILLICIT DRUGS SINCE THEY HAVE AN INFORMAL BANKING SYSTEM AND READY AVAILABLE CASH.


  21. @Artax

    Nothing more to add.


  22. And who are the biggest consumers? We never focus on the structural issues.


  23. @ David

    You are correct and there in lies the problem. In the end the same ” lick out” generation that spent on $200,000 cars, will blame the government and system for not having a roof over their head in old age. They will never admit to spending foolish money or having failed to make the necessary sacrifices.


  24. @ Baje,

    Wake up! This government is not a friend of the nigger man. I would advise you to listen to the extraordinary discussion on national radio between Santia Bradshaw (Mia’s right arm woman) and the black Building Contractor Anderson Cherry.

    xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx

    @TLSN

    I SEE YOU JEST.

    I DON’T LIVE ON THE 2X3 ISLAND SO I AM NOT ONE OF THE ONE’S WHO ARE BAMBOOZLED BY THE FOOLISHNESS HAPPENING THERE.

  25. NorthernObserver Avatar
    NorthernObserver

    @TLSN
    Isdell is an Irishman, raised in Zambia, schooled in S.Afrika, joined Coke in Afrika, and essentially worked his way up all over the world, before reaching the CEO office in the USA.
    He has lived in Barbados for a while.
    Elsewhere, I noticed one day this weekend, I didn’t attend, Bajans had more than 50% of the mounts @Woodbine racetrack. And they have been winning at a solid clip. They can also be found at Ft Erie, Assiboia and Century Downs.
    Rico Walcott, Patrick Husbands, Jalon Samuel, Xarel Forde, Juan Crawford, Slade Callaghan, Keveh Nicholls, DeSean Gaskin, Desean Bynoe ( and I think he has a brother too), Slade Jones, Affrie Ward, Chris Husbands, Jason Hoyte.
    The trainer ranks are also growing.
    And the perennial top barn, Casse, has bases at many different tracks, the Cdn operation has been run by Bajan Adams for years. Soon to be renamed the Woodbine Garrison 😁


  26. Such disingenuous arguments all around.
    Blame young people. Gimme a damn break.
    Where did the young people pick up the damn consumer habits from? TV, books, school, the ether?
    No young person making $3000 a month is buying a new car.
    A starter house and land is 300-350K. who is buying that on $3000 a month.
    Getting married young is a bad idea. Why? They see no examples of marriages anymore because the previous generation is full of divorces and proud single independent women.
    We, all of us, have a culture problem. It manifests itself differently in each generation. To try and lay the blame on young people is more than disingenuous it is like cursing your shadow.
    It stops when we decide to do something because when the young people decide they have had enough, history has shown what happens and it isn’t nice.
    Fix the damn culture!!!


  27. Young people are not to be blamed. Most of them turn out as they were raised.


  28. Comprehension seems to elude many of us.

    I’m trying to understand how someone expressing an opinion that some young people preferring to invest in a $250,000 car rather than a house, is BLAMING them for anything.

    How is expressing such an opinion about CHOICES, be reasonably interpreted as assigning responsibility to young people for a FAULT or WRONGDOING?

    To any rational thinking individual, the example given of purchasing a $250,000 vehicle, would be an OBVIOUS reference to those persons who could AFFORD such a purchase, and NOT someone who earns $3,000 per month.

    I could understand the response if there were comments BLAMING young people for crime.

    However, I’ve seen advertisements on two bedroom, ‘cement board’ house, which could be considered a ‘stater home,’ for between $150,000 to $185,000.

    What about constructing a house based on what one can afford at the time, and making improvements later?


  29. Only hit dogs holler
    Define young people, because where I’m from young people are under 30.
    Which under 30s making more than $4000 a month
    You bring a totally unfounded argument based on broad generalisations of young people and then cherry pick the outlier and then harp on when you get called out for a shite argument. That is the definition of being disingenuous.


  30. Your ‘black guardish’ response was anticipated. Hence, I could likewise say, ‘only hit dogs holler, because, as usual, you came out BARKING. That’s WHO you are.

    Where is your evidence to substantiate the claim people under 30 years old don’t earn $4,000 per month?
    By doing so, you’ve also presented ‘a totally unfounded argument based on broad generalisations’ as well.

    Now, you’ve gone from your original argument about ‘BLAME’ to ‘cherry picking the outlier,’ to earning $4,000 per month. A clear indication you definitely lack comprehension skills.
    Now, that’s being disingenuous. Dishonesty.

    I know for a fact there are several young people in Barbados working for $4,000 per month.
    A gross salary of $4,000 per month less NIS and PAYE gives a net salary of approximately, $3,310.42.

    The repayment terms for a $119,000 Honda Elevate from Platinum Motors, is $995 per month, leaving $2,315.42.

    Anyhow, to quote the Blogmaster, the last word is yours.

  31. NorthernObserver Avatar
    NorthernObserver

    Be careful, the Brits call the act of exterior finishing as rendering, the render being the material used.


  32. @ NorthernObserver. You are “correct” but I was referring to Architectural CAD.

    ” Rendering is the process of generating a photorealistic or non-photorealistic image from input data such as 3D models.”


  33. ” Chairman of Barbados Sotheby’s International Realty, Peter Harris, also hailed the project as the “crown jewel” in the government’s redevelopment plans.”


  34. This land squabble in the making does not make sense.

    LAND BATTLE

    Church threatens to sue Govt if meeting not held

    By Antoinette Connell

    antoinetteconnell@nationnews.com

    In a conflict as old as biblical times, land is at the heart of a dispute involving two denominations and this time the Government has been accused of operating in bad faith.

    The land at the centre of the controversy is the Welch Village Junior property in St John which, on Tuesday in the House of Assembly, was the focus of a resolution to approve its sale to the Wesleyan Church.

    However, the Barbados Diocesan Trustees (BDT) is saying it is not the state’s own to sell and has threatened legal action if a meeting requested since June is not held.

    Chairman of the board of trustees, Adrian Elcock, confirmed that its lawyer had sent a letter to the Permanent Secretary in the Ministry of Housing since May 9 and there had been a response on May 16 but an email sent on June 4 requested a meeting with the ministry that had not taken place.

    “We are not anxious to get into legal battles, but we have to protect the rights of our land and the rights of our church. So, if a meaningful compromise cannot be met, then we will have to take whatever action we’ve been advised that we’re entitled to take,” Elcock said when contacted yesterday.

    The land resolution passed on Tuesday included a structure on the land in an arrangement that would see the Wesleyan Holiness Church paying $28 000 to the State.

    In the May 9 letter, the trustees had contended that when the Anglican Church was de-established in 1969, several lands and properties were vested in the trustees, including church schools and Welch Village Junior was on the list.

    “There can therefore be no doubt, or debate, that the Welch Village Junior property was vested in the trustees by the Act. Our client therefore has statutory title to the property. Statutory title to land is strong and difficult to challenge,” read the letter from Virtus Legal. It also said the board discovered the ministry had recently demolished the derelict building and was planning to take possession of the land to turn it over to the Wesleyan Church.

    Elcock said the board was disappointed in the action taken since they became aware that the Minister of Housing was interested in the land to be used by the Wesleyan Church as it was no longer in use by the Anglican Church.

    “We indicated that we did not think it was as simple as that. There would need to be some level of understanding as to who was the key owner of the land. The Permanent Secretary wrote back outlining their side of the issue. In June, we requested an urgent meeting to attend to that matter and that meeting has not been forthcoming. And subsequent to that request the property has been levelled, the church and the school knocked to the ground.

    “We find that very distressing – when you are under discussion on a matter and one party unilaterally decides to proceed without concluding the discussion,” Elcock said.

    The May 16 correspondence from the ministry said the Welch Village School site was leased by the Government from Bath Plantation and after the passing of the Anglican Church Act, the church continued to pay rent to the plantation. When the school closed and the BDT expressed an interest in using the building, the property was handed over to it. The BDT, said the letter, took over the rental and transformed the school into St Julien, paying rent to Bath Plantation until 1978 when the state compulsorily acquired the plantation and St Julien Church was listed as its tenant and thereafter paid rent to the State until the church ceased operations.

    Elcock said that based on the above, in a meeting with a previous chairman of the trust and which he attended, the response was that they would need to check that information.

    “I believe an appropriate way to bring a resolution would be to have the lawyers finish their consultation and for the parties to come to an agreement. But to go and knock down a sacred property that has been in use by the Anglican community and then to read the House of Assembly debate carried in the newspaper, that is extremely distressing. We, the trustees, take great umbrage,” Elcock stated.

    He said while it was good that the area was still being considered for a sacred place of worship, with discussion – if the Bishop of Barbados was not desirous of putting another church there – a compromise could have been reached.

    Source: Nation




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