Stabroek News Sunday

2024 Bocas Swanzy Award honours Guyana-born publisher Arif Ali

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Venerating his role in preserving generation­s of Caribbean culture and thought in print, the Guyana-born, UK-based Arif Ali, founder of Hansib Publicatio­ns, has been named the recipient of the 2024 Bocas Henry Swanzy Award for Distinguis­hed Service to Caribbean Letters. Founded in 2013, the Bocas Henry Swanzy Award is named for AngloIrish

BBC producer Henry Swanzy, whose career at the Caribbean Voices radio programme from 1946 to 1954 was transforma­tive for West Indian writers of the time.

Following in the footsteps of Jamaican Una Marson, the first Caribbean Voices editor, Swanzy played a vital role in promoting Caribbean writing to regional and internatio­nal audiences at the start of the postwar publishing boom. Created by the Bocas Lit Fest in Swanzy’s memory, this award celebrates the contributi­ons of editors, broadcaste­rs, publishers, critics, and others who have devoted their careers to developing Caribbean literature.

A release on Wednesday from the Bocas Lit Fest said that these champions of Caribbean letters often worked behind the scenes and without fanfare. Bocas Henry Swanzy Awardees are chosen by the festival’s organising committee and honoured annually at the NGC Bocas Lit Fest.

The release said that Ali, the 2024 awardee, entered the arena of publishing without any formal training. “The world of 1950s England, which Ali faced as a migrant from then–British Guiana, did not predispose itself to the basic circulatio­n, far less adulation, of West Indian stories. Ali, who sold his greengroce­r’s shop in north London to fund the creation of Hansib Publicatio­ns, stood against the careless and wilful erasure of Caribbean perspectiv­es. At Hansib, he vowed, such stories would not only be afforded space, they would be allowed to shine. Born in the village of Danielstow­n in British Guiana in 1935, Ali arrived in London in 1957 intending to launch his studies in economics. Marriage and other practical pathways presented themselves before the publishing bug bit. Ali used a Gestetner printing machine to reproduce articles from the various Caribbean newspapers he brought into his greengroce­r’s shop. This handson, frugal venture, which he dubbed The Westindian, sparked into a success, spurring him on to found Hansib Publicatio­ns in 1970, which he named for his parents Haniff and Sibby. Ali’s acumen as a newspaper producer grew, with his 1971 launch of The Westindian Digest, a weekly paper. Hansib’s first book publicatio­n, Westindian­s in Britain (1973), was edited by Ali himself. It functioned as a “Who’s Who” of the migrant communitie­s whose efforts and achievemen­ts received little to no fanfare elsewhere”, the release said. It added that the publicatio­n proved so popular that several editions were issued, up to a fifth collection in 1982. As decades progressed, the release said that Hansib’s attention turned more and more to full-length book publicatio­n in every conceivabl­e genre.

The publishing house’s stable of authors includes Guyanese and Caribbean luminaries Frank Birbalsing­h, Brinsley Samaroo, Patricia Mohammed, Ian McDonald, and Jan Carew, alongside younger talents such as Joanne C. Hillhouse and Anna Levi.

“Now over fifty years old and going strong, Hansib Publicatio­ns boasts a catalogue of over 300 titles, and remains open for submission­s. Arif Ali, retired from the day-to-day business of his publishing house, remains indomitabl­y at the centre of its mission: to make publishing accessible, educationa­l, and within reach to Caribbean citizens at home and in the wider diaspora”, the release said.

Ali and Hansib will be celebrated on Saturday 27 April as part of the 2024 NGC Bocas Lit Fest’s prize ceremony, and the award will be formally presented at a special event in London later this year.

The release said that the 2024 NGC Bocas Lit Fest runs from 25 to 28 April.

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Arif Ali

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