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#EachForEqual- BDN Editorial

Reading Time 1 minsWhile March is celebrated as Women’s History Month in the United States since 2016, March 8 is a special day in this most special month. It is celebrated globally as International Women’s Day (IWD). Originally organized by the Socialist Party of America, the celebrations first took place in February 1909 and were called International Working Women’s Day.  What began as a suggestion in 1910 following an International Conference of Working Women in Copenhagen, grew into an international celebration by 1911. Today, IWD growing in popularity. Buoyed by women’s rights activism globally and the #MeToo movement, IWD is… Read More »#EachForEqual- BDN Editorial

Each Contributing to the Whole – Keisha-Gaye Anderson

Reading Time 2 minsMarch 8, 2020 Big Drum Nation [BDN]: We have seen lately a resurgence of International Women’s Day as a global movement. What does the International Women’s Day slogan, #EachForEqual mean for you in your work life? Keisha-Gaye Anderson [KGA]: I think it is time for us as human beings to see each other as equal in every way, uniquely positioned to contribute something that only we can contribute something to society and essential, and know that we are essential to our collective evolution.  BDN: Much of your work is centered on self-empowerment and self-determination. How does your… Read More »Each Contributing to the Whole – Keisha-Gaye Anderson

God, The Press and Uriah Butler – Hollis ‘’Chalkdust’’ Liverpool

Reading Time 8 minsFebruary 20, 2020 Preface In the year 1976, being a History teacher employed with the Ministry of Education in my own Trinidad and Tobago, I was posted to Couva Secondary school in Central Trinidad to teach Caribbean History. At the same time, my friend and teaching colleague, Lance Heath, was posted to Tranquility Secondary school in Port of Spain to do likewise. One cool afternoon, in 1976, after drinking a few beers on Prince Street in Port of Spain, Lance informed me that he was taking his class to meet Tubal Uriah Butler at Filtration Road in… Read More »God, The Press and Uriah Butler – Hollis ‘’Chalkdust’’ Liverpool

Is Tubal Uriah Butler Relevant Today?–Roger Toussaint

Reading Time 2 minsFebruary 20, 2020 Feb 20th, 2020 marks the 43rd anniversary of the passing of Grenadian born Tubal Uriah Butler, central to the founding of the Oilfields Workers’ Trade Union and leader of the 1937 workers uprising in Trinidad and Tobago. Feb (26th) 2020 also marks the 50th anniversary of the 1970 ‘Black Power’ uprising in T&T. 2020 also happens to be a national elections year in T&T.  So, especially for T&T, it is entirely appropriate to reflect on where it all came from, where things are, and are headed. A direct continuum connects 1937, Independence in 1962, the 1970… Read More »Is Tubal Uriah Butler Relevant Today?–Roger Toussaint

Congo: Mangled, Severed, and Mined for Profits -Martin P. Felix

Reading Time 3 minsFebruary 28, 2020. Peter Bate (Director). Congo: White King, Red Rubber, Black Death (2004, English/French/Dutch with English subtitles). Congo: White King, Red Rubber, Black Death documentary brings to the silver screen the unspeakable horrors of Belgian colonialism in the Congo. It begins with scenes of terror; Congolese children, men, and women without hands. Their hands were cut off by the colonizers and their puppet troops in a macabre system of accounting. Hands were severed because ‘workers’ didn’t work fast enough. Even children’s hands were chopped off as punishment for late deliveries of rubber. Units of mangled hands… Read More »Congo: Mangled, Severed, and Mined for Profits -Martin P. Felix

Valuing Self and Celebrating our Own Creativity… (Excerpt)–Merle Collins

Reading Time 1 minsExcerpt of a February 5th cyber chat, on the meaning of independence, with Merle Collins,  the renowned Grenadian writer, in which she reflects on Kamau Brathwaite’s seminal work on ‘nation language.’  BDN: If the advancement of literacy was a key goal of the revo–and even today– why then should authors privilege creole/nation language in their writing?  MC: This is a great question to think about just at the point when one of the great advocates of nation language (Kamau Brathwaite), has passed on.  Brathwaite, a revered and thought-provoking Barbadian writer, died today, February 5, 2020.  Of what he termed “nation… Read More »Valuing Self and Celebrating our Own Creativity… (Excerpt)–Merle Collins

The Great Lord Burgess*–Clevil James

Reading Time 3 minsThe great Lord Burgess (July 28, 1924 – November 29, 2019), real name Irving Louis Burgie, is a champion in the calypso arena and a person of great historical significance in this esoteric artform. Mr. Burgie played a major role in the popularization of calypso music in the 1950s, when he wrote eight of the 11 songs on Harry Belafonte’s 1956 album called Calypso; the first album to sell one million copies, which included the Irving Burgie’s interpretation of the Jamaican banana boat folk song, Day-O Irving Burgie was born in Brooklyn, New York on July 28, 1924.… Read More »The Great Lord Burgess*–Clevil James

BEAT EIGHTY DRUMS FOR KAMAU – Caldwell Taylor

Reading Time 5 minsFebruary 10, 2020* “We lived in a society which denied itself heroes” – V.S. Naipaul in the Middle Passage. Rejoice; Kamau is 80 –years- old today. We wish him a happy eightieth as we hasten to proclaim our filial indebtedness to this outstanding Caribbean scholar, who has tutored both our self-image and our self-knowledge during his more than fifty years of heavy intellectual toil. In a half-century of fierce intellectual exertions, Kamau has been at once poet, philosopher, playwright, literary critic and theorist, surveyor of the Caribbean spirit (in space and in time),  teacher, student of Caribbean… Read More »BEAT EIGHTY DRUMS FOR KAMAU – Caldwell Taylor

Kamau Brathwaite Revisited – Margaret Prescod-Cissé

Reading Time 3 minsIn a performance of his poem,  Kumina, Edward Kamau Brathwaite, counts consecutively and deliberately, the days and the activities encompassed in this spectacle of loss.  Grief is laid bare, in words that are hauntingly plain and emotive, as the speaker comes to terms with the death of a beloved.  The poem ends in an African chant that is at once an invocation of the ancestral spirits and a profound benediction of mourning.  Since Brathwaite’s passing on February 4, eulogists, in their grandiloquence, have spoken of his intellectual prowess and his contributions to the arts, the fashioning of a… Read More »Kamau Brathwaite Revisited – Margaret Prescod-Cissé