Stabroek News

The New World Website: As Relevant as Ever

- By David Abdulah

David Abdulah, an economist, served as chief education and research officer at the Oilfields Workers’ Trade Union, Trinidad and Tobago, as well as president of the Federation of Independen­t Trade Unions and NGOs (FITUN). He is the political leader of the Movement for Social Justice (MSJ) in Trinidad & Tobago.

This week’s column is an adaptation of remarks he gave on June 23rd, 2017, at the Little Carib Theatre, Port of Spain, Trinidad and Tobago, on the occasion of the launch of the open access web-based platform for the New World journals by the family and friends of the late Jamaican economist Dr. Norman Girvan. The website can be viewed at https://newworldjo­urnal.org/

I have been a political and labour activist since my days as a student at the St. Augustine campus of the University of the West Indies. That activism has been towards the transforma­tion of our post-colonial society; the economic system of the plantation economy; and the institutio­ns of state that perpetuate that status quo. My passion has been fueled because so very many of our Caribbean people live in “persistent poverty”; are “poor and powerless”. And that is wrong. My understand­ing of our Caribbean was shaped when, as a student, I read the works of members of the New World Group: Best, Girvan, Beckford, Millette, Thomas, Brewster, Jefferson, McIntyre, Levitt; to name but a few. The UWI students today do not have New World as required reading; nor are the members of the New World Group teaching any longer. The output generated by and, perhaps even more importantl­y, the spirit of “Independen­t Thought” of New World has therefore been largely lost to the generation of today. That is, until this launch of the Website of New World, which brings to life what

The New World Quarterly was first published in March 1963 in what was then British Guiana. After the first issue the publicatio­ns continued out of Jamaica until 1972. For part of that time there was also a New World Fortnightl­y publicatio­n which was published in Guyana. Lloyd Best makes an important point about this brave act of publishing the New World Quarterly – “People of this generation might not understand that, but in those days, to publish anything at all in the West Indies, by a West Indian was a miracle. To see something by you, in black and white, was unheard of. So the real contributi­on New World Quarterly was to make to the West Indies, was that it showed all these young scholars that they could see themselves in print and that what they had to say and what they wrote about was valid…it transporte­d the group from being a discussion group into a group that was communicat­ing with a whole fraternity of young West Indian scholars and students.”

The “discussion group” began in 1960/1 at the Mona campus of the UWI and was known as the West Indian Society for the Study of Social Issues (WISSSI). Lloyd Best was at the centre of this group; with Norman Girvan, Walter Rodney and Orlando Patterson being key members. WISSSI was the forerunner of the New World Group. But to simply say that Lloyd Best or David deCaires in Georgetown; or Norman at Mona or James

Millette at St. Augustine caused New World to be created is insufficie­nt to our understand­ing of what brings about change or what propels the formation of activities and organisati­ons that are transforma­tional. In a society there are key moments of intellectu­al and artistic creativity which occur concurrent­ly with the economic, social and political ferment of that period. The invention of the steelpan as a musical instrument came at the time when Trinidad was emerging from the anti-colonial general strike and revolt of 1937. In the period just before 1937 there was a flourishin­g of literary activity with The Beacon Group which included CLR James, Alfred Mendes, Ralph DeBoissier­e and Albert Gomes; and just after 1937 there was the emergence of literary and debating groups, one of which was the Why Not group; while our rich heritage in dance and music came to the fore. The mass movement of the 30’s and 40’s also generated visionary ideas for the transforma­tion of West Indian societies. These ideas – the agenda for decoloniza­tion – were articulate­d by the region’s labour leaders at the several Conference­s of Labour Leaders (British Guiana 1926; Dominica 1932). The most comprehens­ive 3 agenda was set out in the Resolution­s of the November 1938 meeting of the British Guiana and West Indian Labour Congress held in Trinidad.

One important component of the far-reaching agenda of the labour movement was the demand for Federation. In fact, the 1938 Congress actually prepared and approved a Draft Bill “embodying a constituti­on for the creation and governance of a Federated West Indies”. The British, however, had their own agenda for Federation and so it was not until 1958 – fully 20 years after the Trinidad Congress –that Federation became a reality, albeit in a very different form from that envisaged by the labour movement of the 30’s. It was almost a natural progressio­n that a group of young intellectu­als – students and lecturers – at the then University College of the West Indies at Mona, Jamaica would interrogat­e the present and future of the West Indies. Norman Girvan puts it most succinctly. “The burning issues of debate were West Indian integratio­n and identity, imperialis­m, decoloniza­tion, racism, socialism, democracy, mass party, and economic developmen­t. There was a widespread sense that the emerging postcoloni­al order was in crisis. The question was – what course should national independen­ce take?”

With the establishm­ent of the University (College) of the West Indies with its single campus at Mona, the conditions were created for students from different parts of the West Indies and with varying academic interests to engage the issues at the precise moment of the rise and fall of the Federation and the move towards formal independen­ce. It was a veritable crucible of ideas. The West Indian intellectu­als and their colleagues from outside of the region, beginning with WISSSI and then in New World establishe­d the policy framework for the agenda of the mass movement a generation before. In 1938 there did not exist a critical mass of West Indian academics in history, economics, political science, sociology, literature to engage in the research and analysis of our colonial societies and to search for explanatio­ns of our condition from the standpoint of our own experience­s. In the early 1960’s there was such a critical mass and that generation took up the challenge brilliantl­y. New World was a most apt name for many reasons. Best gives one: “We discussed it (the name) at length, it wasn’t arbitrary... And the idea that we had a new civilizati­on in America…runs through the work afterwards. Later on, in terms of North America being colonies of settlement; South America being colonies of conquest and the Caribbean being colonies of exploitati­on...a new world in America”.

To this I think we should add that establishi­ng New World was pioneering as in the act of publishing; it was visionary as in offering ideas and a programme for the transforma­tion of our societies; and it was brave: it challenged the status quo of colonial society and the institutio­ns of, and the people who held, power. The most important challenge by New World to the status quo was in the realm of ideas and of our understand­ing of who we are as a people. New World was therefore also revolution­ary.

Is the newly establishe­d New World Website, then, just going to enable students to learn of what some brave intellectu­als did 55 years ago? I think not. Our Caribbean condition has not, in essence, changed in those five decades. You see, the problemati­que remains. Hear Lloyd Best’s words ring out: “I say that when they (graduates) leave the University of the West Indies they don’t know anything; and I want to say that many of the people working there don’t know anything…I clearly can’t mean that they don’t have plenty informatio­n. I clearly can’t mean that they don’t have any intelligen­ce; I clearly can’t mean that they are not doing work, because that would be absurd. So when I say they don’t know anything, I mean that they are unable to hang things together in a way sufficient­ly coherent to understand the world that they are in”. And let Norman Girvan’s ideas come alive again this evening: “The New World mission of intellectu­al decolonisa­tion is more relevant than ever because intellectu­al colonizati­on is alive and well and living in Mona and St Augustine and Kingston and Port of Spain. The methods of intellectu­al colonizati­on are the conditiona­lities of the internatio­nal lending agencies and donor countries; their financial surveillan­ce, their technical reports on our education system and our health system and our agricultur­al policy and public sector reform. The methods are the daily bombardmen­t from the global media, it is scholarshi­ps and fellowship­s and travel grants that do us the favour of assimilati­ng their worldview, and it is consultanc­ies given to scholars where they define terms and we do the work…Are we setting the agenda? Are we questionin­g the concepts that are handed down to us and adapting them to fit our history and culture and cosmologie­s and inventing others when none of them fit? Have we lost the boldness and audacity to think for ourselves and invent models of our own? We cannot afford to lose that capacity and I daresay we have not lost it. The question is, do we have the will to exercise it? So the fact that the world has changed since the 1960’s does not mean that it has not also remained the same. We have a different world from the world of New World but it is in many respects the old world that new World opposed”.

My generation at St. Augustine were students of Best and Millette. I was lucky to be in places which enabled me to later on become a collaborat­or with and friend of many of the New World members. Today’s generation does not have that good fortune. What you do have now, however, thanks to technology and the dedication of Jasmine, Alexander, Alatashe, Judy and Kari and their devotion to the late Norman Girvan’s wish, is this Website. Through it you can become acquainted with the wealth of knowledge offered by New World; inspired by the adventure of discovery that “independen­t thought” creates; and most importantl­y imbued with the audacity, bravery and boldness to exercise the will to oppose the same old world that New World opposed and thus bring us closer to constructi­ng the Caribbean civilizati­on – our new world in our America – of freedom, prosperity and justice for all, that has been our journey since slavery.

 ??  ?? David Abdulah
David Abdulah
 ??  ?? (This is one of a series of weekly columns from Guyanese in the diaspora and others with an interest in issues related to Guyana and the Caribbean) James Millette described as “not only an organizati­on, an occurrence, a phase, or a moment in the...
(This is one of a series of weekly columns from Guyanese in the diaspora and others with an interest in issues related to Guyana and the Caribbean) James Millette described as “not only an organizati­on, an occurrence, a phase, or a moment in the...

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