Stabroek News

Miles Fitzpatric­k represente­d cutting edge of the profession­al movement for reform and legality

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Dear Editor,

The passing of Mr. Miles Fitzpatric­k would be, at any time, an event of great loss to his family and his loved ones and friends, and to the country he has served in with such constancy. His passing at this time, from my point of view, is close to a calamity. He has left us at a time when the overlappin­g of constituti­onal and government­al issues, political choices and the life of the average citizen is most active and cannot be missed.

From this distance, I have the impression that for the last decade or so Fitzpatric­k had considerab­ly cut down his personal involvemen­t in the efforts of many to ensure that our social and political conflict ended in a way beneficial to those who suffered most and to the general peace and security. I am also certain that in this period of what, for him, can be called inactivity, he was continuall­y consulted by those who missed his full involvemen­t.

Ever since the early sixties, Miles Fitzpatric­k had been involved in liberating efforts for social change over a wide spread of public affairs, but especially in constituti­on making, art and literature, legal aid for those needing it, political reform, constituti­onal reform and human rights generally. Carrying the appearance of a member of the elite, and perhaps its location in society, he was, in fact, deeply concerned with those in the society who lacked rights and recognitio­n. To these causes he donated his energy.

I have always seen Miles Fitzpatric­k as a person very comfortabl­e in the world of ideas - principles, ideals, their conflict, their resolution and their practical viability. Soon after Independen­ce, he was known to be active with Caribbean citizens of his own generation in the effort of the region’s population to produce something new in the Caribbean. In my memory, he seemed to be teaming up with the late Lloyd Best, Ian McDonald, David de Caires and other males and females to launch in Guyana the New World Movement with its refreshing publicatio­ns. He and George Lamming, both friends and well-wishers of Walter Rodney, edited the New World Guyana Independen­ce Issue of 1966, which remains a useful cultural reader for the Region.

With the deformatio­n of the State in

Guyana and the rise of Vanguard Parties, especially in government but also in opposition, Miles Fitzpatric­k represente­d the cutting edge of the profession­al movement for reform and legality. If Chancellor Crane can be identified with the doctrine pronounced in a lecture at Bishops’ High School that “under socialism judges should be lions under the throne”, Miles Fitzpatric­k could be identified along with others of the legal profession as open dissidents opposed to the taming of judges and the courts.

For most of the time I knew him, Miles Fitzpatric­k was free of party membership. I clearly remember his published statement, “I joined the PPP for personal reasons and left it for personal reasons.” He did not respond to the discipline of power-seeking organisati­ons and individual­s. He was a free spirit, if ever there was one. It is no secret that he professed Atheism with a clear conscience, yet among his closest friends were Rev. Andrew Morrison, SJ, whom he called Andy, and Bishop Randolph George, whom he called Randy. He was also deeply involved with the Guyana Human Rights Associatio­n with the McCormacks, whom he advised legally. In a strange indirect way, it was due to Miles Fitzpatric­k that Guyana’s laws contained the most forward-looking provisions for equality of women with men. In a small committee studying the so-called “People’s Constituti­on” after its publicatio­n in 1980, Miles Fitzpatric­k made a startling discovery: The Fundamenta­l Rights’ provisions included no guarantees against discrimina­tion on grounds of sex or gender. I kept this omission in mind, and when the WPA sent me into the National Assembly after the 1985 General Elections, I raised it in a debate. I called on the Attorney General to tell the House whether the omission to protect women was an oversight or on purpose. Mr. Shahabudde­en hesitated for a moment and then told the House that the omission was on purpose. He said the Government had other plans. In a few sittings, he brought to the House 3 Bills, outlining provisions for the rights of women which, in the opinion of women activists, exceeded anything in the laws of other CARICOM countries. This legislatio­n must go down to the credit of the late Miles Greaves Fitzpatric­k.

He was about 10 years my junior in age, and would see me at a moment’s notice. I take this chance of expressing my deep sympathy to his widow, Mrs. Sultana Fitzpatric­k, a physiother­apist, and to their son, Samora. May his contributi­on not be forgotten.

Yours faithfully, Eusi Kwayana

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