Stabroek News

Oswald Massiah was a Dartmouth champion

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Dear Editor, Sometimes, when praising a person’s achievemen­ts, it is worth mentioning where that person was born and raised, as with the late CANU Prosecutor, who was born and raised in Dartmouth.

Dartmouth is one of Guyana’s villages establishe­d by freed slaves, and though Dartmoutha­rians now live in general conditions better than their ancestors did nearly two hundred years ago, the village is still depressed in several ways. Oswald Massiah was born in that depression but, like the late Dr. Ptolemy Reid (former Guyana Prime Minister), the late Dr. Harry Annamuntho­do (Surgeon ), Dr. Kurt G. Clarke (Texas attorney) and a few others, he rose above his circumstan­ces to become one of Guyana’s main law enforcemen­t officers, CANU prosecutor.

Oswald Massiah was four years older, and I was privileged to watch him perform as an athlete at Dartmouth’s St. Barnabas Primary School, now Dartmouth Govt., in the late 50’s and very early 60’s. He was a most unique right-handed batsman, with one shot for every ball. When the ball was straight on his stumps, he got down on his knee and crossbatte­d it. Full pitch, ‘ground-digger’, leg-cutter, off-cutter, beamer, way outside the off stump, way outside the leg stump, all deliveries got the same shot – down on the knee and WOOK, that vicious cross-bat! At the time he played, the school ground was behind the school on the seaside half of the village. Oswald’s WOOK missed most of the balls. However, he did connect on a few and launched them almost to the sea dam. Neverthele­ss, I remember Oswald best as an unbeatable runner. At the time he ran, there was no limit to an athlete’s number of events. With students being in Houses (A, B, C and D) and every House teacher wanting his/her house to win, teachers advantageo­usly placed their best individual athletes in as many events as possible, even in age groups higher than their own. Oswald, built like a middleweig­ht fighter, ran in different age groups; he ran the 100-yard dash, the 200, 400, 800 and relays. Then, he ran the mile. At the end of an interHouse track meet, he had run over a dozen races, winning them all! Needless to say, he was inter-house (as well as inter-school) champion boy for several years.

Although four years younger than he, I wanted to run against him but that never happened. However, around 1961 the impossible happened! At the Essequibo Coast’s inter-school athletics at Onderneemi­ng, Oswald, already the meet’s champion boy, was too tired to run, and I was put to run the mile. I did not win, but ran a credible third, which must have pleased the champ.

As Guyana Police Force and CANU prosecutor­s, Oswald Massiah was also a champion, championin­g the causes of people. May his good work inspire others, especially Dartmoutha­rians. Yours faithfully, Roy Brummell done. However, it is up to the Hindu leaders and the pandits to have unanimity, as their ancestors did in the earlier times, and then advise the Government of the day. In the absence of consensus, each faction is free to observe its preferred date which may or may not be the same as the official public holiday.

This is not the ideal solution but for the sake of Hinduism, I implore these pandits to cease their public feuding over these religious holidays.

In India, the birthplace of Hinduism and the home of the foremost authoritie­s on the religion, North Indian states will be celebratin­g the upcoming Diwali festival on October 30th whereas South Indian states will be celebratin­g on October 29th.

What this suggests is that there is flexibilit­y in deciding on the date and, in Guyana where the Indian approach is not feasible, compromise is needed. Certainly the recurring public infighting is not conducive to the furthering of Hinduism in the country. Yours faithfully, Harry Hergash

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