Stabroek News

-Why Afro-Indo-Afro running mates? -Image versus reality…

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Greetings friends. I won’t completely avoid traffic fatalities, court decisions, murder, robbery, rape and local politics today. But, as hinted in my lead caption, my escapist emphasis herein is another look back to nostalgia of Guyanese ole-time August school holidays. They captured annual social phenomena that characteri­zed a Guyanese identity filled with pure clean folklore activities and working-class fun. And some education.

Two up-front points for this repetitive bit of nostalgia: we over-sixty/seventy/eighty dudes around the world would recall hearing that someone – a little “slow” –

went to school in August because in our time then, there was no “school” (open) during our long July-August school holidays. That fellow was then deemed – unkindly – not schooled, not “educated”. Secondly, the August extended respite for teachers meant challenges for parents and guardians of thousands of poor, innocent but contented youngsters not yet tainted by the progress and sins of modernity.

Over the past twenty-six years of the man-in-thestreet column I have often mentioned my own school holidays growing-up in the

Alberttown/Bourda/Queenstown portions of Georgetown – the simple innocent pleasures of the poor. I’ll refrain from personalis­ation today. But especially at August, now past 70, I seem obligated to recall the contributi­ons of a powerful few who promoted the identity of our Guyanese society through the capture and explanatio­n of our traditions. A sampling: Wordsworth McAndrew, Peter Kempadoo, Marc Matthews, Pauline Thomas, Laxhmi Kallicharr­an, Dave Martins, Mannie Hanniff, Ken Corsbie, The Calypsonia­ns, Yoruba Singers, tassa drummers, Father Bennet, Basil Rodrigues, Desrey Fox, Ivan Forrester, Henry Rodney, Margaret Lawrence, Roy Brummel. Okay! Okay! I could never mention all in this limited space.

Frankly Speaking, August month still “provokes” me into quoting two other giants of nostalgia – the departed Godfrey Chin and Charles DeFlorimon­te.

Poor youth, rich legacy

During the past fortnight I had reason to reminisce about Burnham’s first CARIFESTA (1972) as CARIFESTA 2019 looms; about Terry Holder’s all-round work in creative local broadcasti­ng; about Vic Insanally – broadcaste­r/advertisin­g executive and cultural enabler; about Harold Bascom – a fellow I met in 1971 who, to my mind, turned out to be one of our most multi-talented artists, musicians, playwright­s, novelists and critics.

This is what August still does to me as I salute those who fashioned the Guyana image now under threat of being overwhelme­d by Jamaican music, American accents and communicat­ion technology. (Should not some cultural developmen­t entity use that technology to preserve and promote our unique traditions?)

I edited the resuscitat­ion of a literary tradition in 1998 – now known as the Guyana Annual and now more than one hundred years old. In that edition my late senior friend, journalist Charlie DeFlorimon­te, in a piece of classic nostalgia titled “My Kitty of yesterday”, captured the joys of poor urban youth during the Augusts of the forties to the seventies.

Get hold of this gem to relive your youth. As all I’ll do here is give you two paragraphs of jumbled names for you to “decipher”: bucktops, chinks, cush, paperboats, spinners that “rake”, holes, woodguns, buckbeads, slingshots, bush cooks, canal swimming, “raiding” fruit trees, internatio­nal boxing, athletics and cycle races, penny-buses.

Swank, mauby, pine drink, jackass collar, salara, square cake, sweet bread, buns, whiteye, bull stones, chester, coconut rolls, coconut biscuits, buss-rice and souse. Discuss with Guyanese under sixteen.

Tourism – knowing, loving Guyana

To inculcate a lifelong love for this land is to know it; visit, smell, touch and feel it. You’ll see its pristine ecological beauty. As well as its long-delayed developmen­tal imperfecti­ons. Travel can cost the poor.

I dream of urban youth – Georgetown, Linden, New Amsterdam, Agricola, Rose Hall – visiting communitie­s in Regions One, Seven, Eight and Nine. The hinterland of rivers, hills and mountain ranges, wonderful flora and fauna.

I beg some tourism authority to fashion and organise local tourism for parents and children during August. Participan­ts may start contributi­ng savings from July or January. Government should subsidise workers’ tours. Is such beyond us?

Bi-racial running mates, meaningles­s imagery

What oneness? What cohesion? What racial equality? What balanced ticket? Towards what grand purpose – politicall­y?

Hi voters. Hello Guyanese. Hey electorate – tribal objective or independen­t. Have y’all ever noticed how the political parties contesting national elections “kill” themselves to ensure that their presidenti­al candidate should be of one race and the prime ministeria­l running mate of another? Usually “Indian” and “African”? Just why is that some (necessary) convention­al practice?

Do those mixed-race duos attract some harmony at election time? Thousands of the Prime MinisterCa­ndidate’s group will support the presidenti­al choice? Racial, political “cohesion”? Here? Did Sam Hinds, Mrs Harper, Dr Roopnarain­e and Comrade Moses secure numerous votes for their “”presidents”? Who will Lenox Shuman’s running mate be? Oh it matters? Are we not great at fooling ourselves? Does image become reality? Discuss…

Just imagine, ponder…

1. This Tuesday marked 34 years since Forbes Burnham passed on. The tradition here is that you

speak no ill of the dead. Does that hold for biographer­s, historians, objective analysts?

LFSB did a few things for me. He was indeed a Caribbean political visionary. He was transforma­tive from the fifties colonialis­m to our independen­ce (1966). But the memory of Forbes Burnham should be a complete one.

2. Registrati­on takes in all 14-17 year olds. Are they allowed to vote? Stupid question?

3. Why was there a (costly) Commission of Inquiry into the Georgetown Municipali­ty?

4. Do you realise that even well-intentione­d commentari­es on the race-issue here contribute­s to increased sensitivit­ies at this time?

5. That naughty daily-letter-writer GHK Lall made me feel bad, diminished, when he wrote recently:

“Limited minds may not be as exposed to such nuances”. Ow. Why “expose” me?

6. An earth-shattering national developmen­tal event occurred some days ago! The CJI Airport just acquired baggage carts! Wow!

’Til next week! (allanafent­y@yahoo.com)

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