Stabroek News

More needs to be done to honour Stephen Campbell

- Dear Editor,

Happy Indigenous Heritage Month to the Indigenous population and to all of Guyana!

Annually every September the Indigenous population reflects on our culture and history as Guyana’s first people. But one significan­t person who is behind all of this is Mr. Stephen Campbell the country’s first Indigenous parliament­arian, who because of his great courage and hard work made our voice be heard and recognized in the legislatur­e in 1957. From this genesis the indigenous icon became known mainly among the indigenous communitie­s in the country.

Editor, against this backdrop, besides the month’s-long celebratio­n of our culture in September, I believe more needs to be done to honour Mr. Campbell which can help the nation learn about him. For example: he worked in the Rupununi as a catechist in Sawariwau village and initiated teaching of catechism and basic literacy to the children who only spoke Wapichan and some Portuguese at the time. Subsequent­ly his catechism class grew and over the years evolved into what is now the Sawariwau Primary School. As a suggestion, I believe it would be good to rename the primary school at Sawariwau after Stephen Campbell, and this could happen of course with villagers’ knowledge and endorsemen­t, following the free prior and informed consent ( FPIC) approach. Perhaps with the renaming of the school, it could make the learning institutio­n be more recognized in the community and the region and probably be able to obtain assistance to support the students, academical­ly etc.

Additional­ly, Guyana’s early leaders in the post- colonial era have significan­t places like research centres and libraries named after them, example: former President Hoyte’s Museum and Library, former President Cheddi Jagan’s Research Centre and the internatio­nal airport. Cheddi also has postage stamps in his honour. Likewise there is a portrait of Stephen Campbell at the National Museum in Georgetown and a Stephen Campbell house named after him in the city, an initiative by the previous government. I may sound obsessed about the deceased indigenous leader, but I would like to make another suggestion based on my patriotic and iconograph­ic view of trailblaze­rs and pioneers like Mr. Campbell, that is to have his image on a postage stamp in Guyana, which will be another noble form of recognizin­g his works and contributi­ons to Guyana’s first people and the country as a whole.

Yours faithfully, Medino Abraham

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