Stabroek News Sunday

Memorable Old Years/New Years

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“As a child, Christmas was the best thing for me even though I was a Hindu. Then I’d get sad because Christmas Day was over but then there was New Year’s Eve and New Year’s Day to look forward to. We cleaned up and stayed up late to welcome the New Year with neighbours and friends. At the stroke of midnight, I would shower and then go to my altar and do my devotions as a Hindu,” she recalled.

“When I came to live in Grove closer to my in-laws, who were church goers and who have since passed on, I joined in their tradition and I have kept it up, of going to church at Christmas Eve Night and Old Year’s night.

“The 2023 New Year was especially special. I went to mass at 8 pm on Old Year’s Eve. After that we had a get together and I rang in the New Year with my church family at Diamond.

“I always feel good being with my church family. They help me to stay calm. Because I needed to stay away from home, I went church-hopping on New Year’s Day. It was actually exciting. As is the custom I made sure that my home had cooked food to ensure the home has enough food throughout the year.

“At the end of this year, I am very grateful for life. I lost my best friend to breast cancer at the age of 46 this year and it is the first time I will be celebratin­g the

New Year’s without her. It’s the second year, I’m celebratin­g without my big sister. The good thing is that my son graduated from university and started a job on December 27. I am most thankful.”

Aranka New Year

For Collins Herman entering the year 2020 was memorable because he was in Aranka,

Region Seven (Cuyuni/ Mazaruni) when he would have preferred to be at home with his loved ones. Aranka is the site of one of the oldest of worked-out mines in the country yet with a high concentrat­ion of mining activities.

“I was in the gold mines in Aranka in Cuyuni. The son of the owner of the company wanted to spend time with his family on the

coastland. He had been in the interior for about six months without leaving the area. I was in Georgetown in November and I had gone back to Aranka at the beginning of December. He had asked me to stay and help the general manager. He said he was going to be back by the second week in January. That sounded reasonable to me. At the time I was supervisin­g the crusher. I decided I was going to stay, as much as I did not want to. It was really difficult to get workers committed to do any serious work because there was a lot of partying taking place in Aranka. The general manager, more or less, gave up on getting the guys to carry out their tasks. He said he didn’t know what to do about the men. ‘When them men start work they will work’. He said, ‘Who want go home can go and who don’t want to go, well that is it.’ He told me to take over and make sure work is done on the dredge too. I said, ‘Buddy how you gone do me that? I can’t be on the dredge and on the crusher too.’” Herman said he listened to the general manager, obviously homesick, relating not seeing his grandchild­ren and wanting to go home but he could not. Herman, on the other hand, had a lot of invitation­s to lunch, dinners and parties.

“The people knew I was the supervisor for the crusher and they believed I could have left the worksite at any time I wanted. That wasn’t the case. It was days and nights of partying. A lot of people didn’t want to reflect

on missing their family but I missed mine. I hadn’t seen my son, Diego, since the end of 2017. I was in Guyana and they were in San Martin in Venezuela at the time preparing to return to Guyana,” he said.

At the time, he noted, the mining camps gave workers a quota of drinks and they bought what they required.

“There were lots of drinks in the mining camps and people gave you once you passed by their camp. There was lots of food too. Lots of pepper-pot and baked chicken with pot bakes or bread flown in from Georgetown. All drinks were strong alcohol because Guinness and beers were expensive,” he recalled.

“Communicat­ion was also difficult. We congregate­d at a WiFi hotspot. You gotta pray you get a call before anybody else. Lots of time I had to send voice notes or just texted messages.

“There was also an influx of Venezuelan­s at the time. Some were still bringing down fuel and lots of women who were in the prostituti­on market. From 2017 to 2019 there were a lot of Venezuelan­s in Aranka to be exact.

“A lot of fights took place among miners once they had imbibed and the police became somewhat overwhelme­d by what was taking place that they themselves ignored the law breakers. People did what they did. It was the holidays. It was a Old Year’s/New Year’s season I’ll never forget.”

 ?? ?? Dr Gavrielle Cave (second from right) with other doctors and staffers who welcomed 2023 together
Dr Gavrielle Cave (second from right) with other doctors and staffers who welcomed 2023 together
 ?? ?? Dr Alex D’Aguiar (left) and other doctors marking an Internatio­nal Women’s Day
Dr Alex D’Aguiar (left) and other doctors marking an Internatio­nal Women’s Day

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