Saturday, April 20, 2024

CARICOM Reparations Relay launched in Barbados

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BARBADOS The CARICOM Reparations Commission (CRC) has launched an International Reparations Relay & Rally Initiative in Barbados that in coming months will take a reparations baton and reparations torch from one CARICOM country to the other.

The baton and torch will be presented to the national reparations commissions across the region at youth rallies organised under the banner Roots, Rock, Reggae, Reparations which will celebrate the principles and programmes of the Caribbean and global reparatory justice movements.

The Barbados launch of the reparations relay coincided with the bi-centennial commemoration of the death of General Bussa, the inspirational leader of the Barbados slave rebellion of 1816.

At a cultural/historical ceremony entitled “From Bussa to Barrow,” last Saturday, at the site where Bussa was killed, Professor Pedro Welch, chair of the Barbados Reparations Task Force passed the reparations baton to the Deputy Consul General of Guyana in Barbados Monique Jackman who, in turn, will soon pass it to the Guyana Reparations Commission, which is planning to hold their reparations youth rally in May. 

From Guyana, the baton will be taken to other CARICOM countries during the course of 2016.

Beautifully carved from fine Barbados mahogany wood, the baton is a symbol of justice that has engraved on it, a map of Africa, the words “Reparations Now,” and rings representing the 15 CARICOM countries. The relay will culminate in Jamaica later this year where the Emancipation Rebellion led by Sam Sharpe will be remembered and celebrated.

“In Barbados this weekend we are celebrating and eulogising the over 1 000 enslaved persons who were massacred by British professional troops, and slave owners, in an effort to gain freedom in the War of General Bussa, from April 14 to 20, 1816,” said Professor Sir Hilary Beckles, chairman of the CARICOM Reparations Commission. 

“We shall create a memorial to the million enslaved Africans whose existence was destroyed in the Caribbean freedom and reparations quest. Between now and then, we will publicly engage many moments in regional history where a million ancestors fought and were destroyed in search of liberty, restitution and reparations.”

Welch added that the passing of the Reparations Baton from Barbados to Guyana represented an historic moment that “symbolised the maturing of the reparations initiative in the CARICOM countries.”

He said that it linked the struggle in Barbados with a wider Caribbean and global movement.

“From the very inception of the Task Force on Reparations in Barbados, it was felt that while there was a Barbadian component to the initiative, there was a wider sphere of operations that would require a Caribbean-wide collaboration. It is in its fraternal association with the regional body that the celebration of the 200th anniversary of the Bussa rebellion of 1816 provided an opportunity to initiate the symbolic passing of a reparations baton, sequentially, to other CARICOM countries. 

“Quite apart from the regional focus, the local events in Barbados also provided an opportunity to see how the issue of commemorating a special moment in the historical narrative, namely a slave rebellion, ties this local event into the larger global struggle,” added Dr Welch.

David Comissiong, prominent attorney/activist and member of the Barbados Reparations Task Force, said “the sacred mission of our generation of Barbadians must be to live up to and honour the heroic struggles and sacrifices of our ancestors by demanding reparatory justice, and by claiming and appropriating our full human dignity.”

In an address on Friday at a ceremony where a number of Barbadian nationals were recipients of awards for the invaluable contributions they have made to the island, Barbados Prime Minister Freundel Stuart, who is also Chairman of the Prime Ministerial Sub-Committee on Reparations, urged the audience to keep the issue of reparatory justice at the forefront within the region.

“We must sensitise our people to the ingredients of this debate and of course to the need to be part of this struggle to ensure that a lot of the damage that has been done as a result of our slave and colonial experience can be repaired not only by our own efforts, which of course we cannot forsake or ignore, but repaired by those who caused the damage in the first place,” said Stuart. (PR)

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