UWI Pays Tribute to Sir Alister McIntyre

Reading Time 1 minsRegional Headquarters, Kingston, Jamaica, April 20, 2019 – The following statement is issued by the Vice-Chancellor of The University of the West Indies, Professor Sir Hilary Beckles in immediate response to news of the passing of Sir Alister McIntyre, who served as UWI Vice-Chancellor during the period 1988-1998. Shocking is the news that our Sir Alister has passed. Larger than life in his long sojourn, it is difficult to embrace the finality of this existential fragility. The people of the Caribbean, and their University of the West Indies—which he served as Vice-Chancellor—will not be impoverished by his… Read More »UWI Pays Tribute to Sir Alister McIntyre

Sir Alister McIntyre, Titan of the post-Independence Caribbean has died

Reading Time 1 minsPrime Minister’s Office, Barbados Sir Alister McIntyre Statement by Prime Minister of Barbados, The Honourable Mia Amor Mottley QC MP on the passing of Sir Alister McIntyre. I am deeply saddened to learn of the passing today of one of the Caribbean’s most treasured scholars, Sir Alister McIntyre, a respected economist, educator, administrator and true champion of regional integration. This son of Grenada and son of the Caribbean will forever be remembered fondly as one of the Titans of the post-Independence Caribbean to whom we owe much. My association with Sir Alister goes back to my days as… Read More »Sir Alister McIntyre, Titan of the post-Independence Caribbean has died

TRIBUTE BY PRIME MINISTER, DR. KEITH MITCHELL ON THE PASSING OF SIR ALISTER MCINTYRE

Reading Time 3 minsWritten by Dr. Keith Mitchell It is with great sadness that I learnt of the passing of Sir Alister McIntyre. Grenada, Jamaica, and in fact the entire Caribbean has lost a dear son who has left us a rich legacy, characterised by profound knowledge and unwavering commitment to regionalism. Grenada was his homeland and Jamaica was where he lived but much of his life was spent in service to the people of the region. In his early career as a lecturer in economics at the University of the West Indies, at the St. Augustine Campus in Trinidad and… Read More »TRIBUTE BY PRIME MINISTER, DR. KEITH MITCHELL ON THE PASSING OF SIR ALISTER MCINTYRE

Celebrate 40 years of the Grenadian Revolution

Reading Time 7 mins Celebrate 40 years of the Grenadian Revolution March 13th 1979 – the day the Grenadian Revolution was launched. Given the small size of Grenada – 133 sq. miles – population of 100,000 – and the lopsided and dependent economy that the British Empire had lefton decolonisation, improving the economic performance of the countrywas always going to be an uphill struggle, with the only bonus being thatthe elimination of the previous government’s corruption gave an immediate boost to the exchequer. The Gairy regime had left no database of statistics, indeed there was no mechanism for collecting any… Read More »Celebrate 40 years of the Grenadian Revolution

Making A Way in this World: A Review of Dawad Philip’s ‘A Mural by The Sea’ — Winthrop R. Holder

Reading Time 7 minsFebruary 24, 2019 “I went away, I leave, and I come back home, I come back to stay.”Andre Tanker, “Back Home’, 1974“You should never leave home if you wasn’t comin’ America to make yuhself better.” Dawad Philip, “Invocations” 1979 The epigraph that frames this review underscores the challenge that most immigrants face: How to navigate a space for self and the larger band of fellow migrants in the not-always-friendly new setting. Little wonder, then, that from very early on in his sojourn in America, Dawad Philip beganorganizing and making a difference (as featured in the NY Times… Read More »Making A Way in this World: A Review of Dawad Philip’s ‘A Mural by The Sea’ — Winthrop R. Holder

Grenada at 45: Dr. Anthony Bridgeman Reflects on Grenada and Leadership.

Reading Time 7 mins Happy Independence Day Grenada! Today, Grenada marks the 45th anniversary of political freedom and sovereignty from British colonialism which was won on February 7, 1974. Such milestones provide apt opportunities for reflection on the path traveled together as a people as well as on the future course. Arguably, the most important ingredient in nation building is leadership. Martin Luther King, Jr. has said that “A genuine leader is not a searcher for consensus but a molder of consensus.” How has Grenadian leadership measured up over these 45 years? A reflection on some qualities of leadership from a… Read More »Grenada at 45: Dr. Anthony Bridgeman Reflects on Grenada and Leadership.

Giving Substance to Memory: A Review of Mervyn Taylor’s Voices Carry by Lennel George

Reading Time 5 minsJanuary 7, 2019 VOICES CARRY by Mervyn Taylor 102 pp. Shearsman Books. In this sixth collection of poems from Mervyn Taylor–a seasoned poet, whose brilliant, incisive, powerful first collection I had the pleasure of reviewing—the verse abounds with intensity, subtlety and a preoccupation with everyday matters, large and small.   Through humor and irony filtered into language that is both sublime and quotidian, the poet tackles a myriad of topics such as the disappearance of his favorite childhood spaces in Belmont, the rising violence in his native land of Trinidad, gentrification in Brooklyn, and the weight of… Read More »Giving Substance to Memory: A Review of Mervyn Taylor’s Voices Carry by Lennel George

In A World of Ironies: Taking Charge of Our Destiny – Yao Atunwa

Reading Time 7 mins By Yao Atunwa Though bearer of the name Butler, I could only imagine Uriah “Buzz” Butler (January 21, 1887 – February 20, 1977) uttering the sentiment, precisely: “We have been the butlers of our colonial masters’ house for too long, it’s about time we seek to own our place of homestead.” That place of homestead is obviously these islands on which our fore-parents were brought to toil from sunup to sundown with very little in return for their abundantly productive labor. And even when we were granted independence by Great Britain in 1974, there were still… Read More »In A World of Ironies: Taking Charge of Our Destiny – Yao Atunwa

CARIBBEAN ACTORS UNITE FOR TRIBUTE TO TRINIDADIAN PLAYWRIGHT ZENO OBI CONSTANCE

Reading Time 2 minsAn ensemble comprised of some of New York’s best-known Caribbean American actors will come together Monday, December 10th at 7 pm to pay tribute to one of the region’s most iconic playwrights.  From Page to Stage – a Caribbean Journey will celebrate the work and the legacy of award-winning Trinidadian playwright Zeno Obi Constance. The event takes place at Theater Lab Studios in Manhattan. Merlina Rich, Artistic Director of Banana Boat Productions, is producing and directing the program. According to Ms. Rich, “Mr. Constance is the author of several scripts in the Banana Boat production repertoire, and his work has,… Read More »CARIBBEAN ACTORS UNITE FOR TRIBUTE TO TRINIDADIAN PLAYWRIGHT ZENO OBI CONSTANCE

A Viable Plan for Grenada — Yao Atunwa

Reading Time 3 minsI am of the deep conviction that we in Grenada, by virtue of our small population, have an opportunity (a comparative advantage, if you will) to engage in the liberation of our populace that will typically pose a bigger challenge to many other nation-states, but one that is very practical and necessary for the said effect. In the midst of our relative poverty as a nation, one whose population for generations has been taken advantage of and continues to be vulnerable to capitalist/imperialist power centers and their forces, we collectively can provide real security for each other… Read More »A Viable Plan for Grenada — Yao Atunwa