Stabroek News

George Lamming (1927-2022)

- By Richard Drayton

(Richard Drayton, born in Guyana and also a citizen of Barbados, is a Professor of Imperial and Global History at King’s College London)

With the death of George Lamming on June 4 (he would have been 95 today, June 8), we lost our last living connection to the generation who laid the spiritual foundation­s for Caribbean independen­ce. Lamming was born in Barbados on 8 June 1927, but he understood that rock as only one parish of a scattered nation. He belonged to the entire archipelag­o and its diaspora, and the loss of his mighty voice, a cerebral troublemak­ing voice, a steel band of a voice which unravelled complexity through a logic of tones, is felt as bitterly in Port of Spain and Havana, London and Toronto, as in his island.

He was the only child of Loretta, who in a familiar pattern, sacrificed alone to raise her son in an urban village near Bridgetown. It was an education in the violence of race and class. To cross a narrow street from Carrington’s Village to middle-class Belleville, was to arrive on pavements where guards and dogs were free to bully small boys. At ten, he witnessed the eruption of the 1937 riots, and when a scholarshi­p to Combermere School divided him from his working-class childhood, he carried the village with him, and he would wrestle with those memories and the unsettled business he had left behind, for the rest of his life.

At Combermere he was discovered by the teacher Frank Collymore, who encouraged him to find in the power of words a vehicle for his hopes and anger. Collymore from 1942 had edited the pioneering literary journal Bim, where Lamming, like Derek Walcott and so many others, would first experience writing to be read. Lamming could have been a cricketer, he was a promising batsman who played once for Empire, but Colly made him want to make writing his life.

After Combermere he went to teach at school for Venezuelan children in Trinidad. There he became comfortabl­e in Spanish, which later made him one, sadly, of a tiny number of anglophone Caribbean intellectu­als who could speak to Nicolas Guillen and Fidel Castro in their own tongue. But in a much larger sense, Trinidad, as Lamming later said, “completely changed my head”. In Port of Spain he was swept up in the extraordin­ary intellectu­al, political and artistic life of what was really the cultural centre of the anglophone Caribbean. He met calypso, steelband, Shango, Marx and Lenin, keeping company with the dancers, actors and painters, sculptors, Eric ‘Bill’ Williams and Paul Robeson who circulated around the Belmont and Woodbrook homes of people like Beryl McBurnie. He met there the artist Nina Ghent, the only woman he married, with whom he would have a son Gordon and a daughter Natasha. He had arrived in Trinidad an anxious Barbadian poet, but he left in 1950 as a man who thought himself a West Indian, a Marxist, and wanted to write a novel.

He shared a cabin and a typewriter on the sea voyage with another man with similar ambitions, Samuel Selvon. Arriving in London in April 1950, he began feverish work, which would yield, over two decades, the body of novels and essays for which he would be most famous: In the Castle of My Skin (1953), The Emigrants (1954), Of Age and Innocence (1958), The Pleasures of Exile (1960), Season of Adventure (1960), Water with Berries (1971) and Natives of My Person (1971). In London he had a second apprentice­ship, learning to use the full power of his voice as a reader for the BBC. He muscled-up before British microphone­s, the rhetorical arts of what he later described as trying to make thinking feel, and the legacies of that training would remain to the end of his days, and not only in the slashes and BBC reader’s marks of the manuscript­s of his speeches and lectures. In London too he began his important friendship with C.L.R. James, and a discerning eye will find Lamming’s mark in the famous appendix to the 1963 edition of Black Jacobins. The anchor of these decades was his long relationsh­ip with the South African Jewish political exile Esther De Keyser, who he met at the first meeting of Anti Apartheid Movement, and they came to share a home in Hampstead.

Castle’s fame catapulted Lamming to a new internatio­nal (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)

George Lamming in his youth trajectory. In 1956 at the Congress of Black Writers and Artists in Paris, he met Cesaire, Senghor, Fanon, Glissant, Jean Price Mars, Cheik Anta Diop, Richard Wright, Jacques Roumain, and de Beauvoir and Sartre (who had parts of Castle translated into French). He came to a new understand­ing of himself as part of a global Africa, even as part of a whole colonial world, in insurrecti­on against material and moral dispossess­ion.

In Haiti in 1956, he had a life changing religious experience. He was ushered into a Vaudou temple. There he was part of a celebratio­n of the Ceremony of Souls, the ritual where the living enter into a conversati­on with the dead, seeking to liberate them from all pettiness, and to rescue for eternity, the highest moral purposes, the gwo bon anj, to guide the future of the community. He came to understand the Christiani­ty of his Bajan childhood, the transhisto­rical ambitions of his politics, the aching fracture in himself between the village which had made him and his sound colonial education, his work as a writer, with a new clarity as a task of struggle and reconcilia­tion, a battle of the living against all the waste of mortality, of poverty, of that alienation of hand and mind which he thought was the cardinal evil of Capitalism. He returned again and again to the meaning of this experience, especially in the novel Season of Adventure (1960).

Season offered a dark prophecy about the West Indies Federation, and indeed about Caribbean political independen­ce. It warned of the danger of the chasm in language, culture and power which separated the educated elite of “Federal Drive” and the working masses of the “Forest Reserve”, whose creative energies were as overflowin­g in the steel band as they were in the politics of insurrecti­on. The material poverty of the masses was entangled with the colonized spiritual poverty of the elites. Later, when receiving his honorary doctorate from UWI in 1980, he would reflect on “the old white planters who derived their power from what they owned” vs. “the new black planters who derive their power from what they know”. Of course, as Andaiye explored in a brilliant essay, the quality of this betrayal of a new political elite of those who produced and followed them, had already been explored in the character of “Mr Slime” in Castle. Lamming’s later decades might be seen as a long war against this chasm, this colonial legacy of alienation. He took onto himself the work of being a kind of secular Houngan, who would engage the liberating power of the Ceremony of Souls, that work of struggle against silence and alienation, in every theatre to which he was given access.

As the season of political independen­ce opened in the Caribbean, Lamming spent increasing periods back in the Caribbean. At the Mona campus of UWI in the early 60s he kept company with Sylvia Wynter, and the then undergradu­ate Sandra Williams (later Andaiye), while in 1966 editing the extraordin­ary Guyana and Barbados Independen­ce issues of New World Quarterly. He built a web of correspond­ence with West Indian writers and intellectu­als everywhere, becoming their most important common point. I was not yet two when he came to stay at our house. He was sought out by Eric Williams of Trinidad, Forbes Burnham of Guyana, and especially Errol Barrow of Barbados. It was then too in the early 1960s that he first visited revolution­ary Cuba, beginning a relationsh­ip with its poets and novelists like Guillen, Carpentier, Morejon which would endure in his role in Casa de Las Americas. He was aching to get home, but saw no way to make a living. His dream was to be at the centre of a Labour College in Barbados, but his dangerous politics made that impossible. His solution, one which would last into his 80s, was to teach for semesters in the United States, earning what he needed for the rest of the year in Barbados. The United States had its own catalytic impact on him, in particular the political clarity of African-American artists like Baraka, and the poet Sonia Sanchez, his partner for a season.

But the convergent impact of the Grenada Revolution and the coming to power of Thatcher, and an important relationsh­ip with the pediatrici­an Esther Archer, led him to return permanentl­y to Barbados c. 1980. His base became the Atlantis Hotel on the East Coast of Barbados, where each Sunday his lunch table became the place where the thinking life of the island found its highest pitch. For a tempestuou­s decade, punctuated by the murder of Walter Rodney and the suicide of the Grenada Revolution, George tried to bring together the ‘mental workers’ of the whole region into alliance with revolution­ary change in organizati­ons like the Regional Committee for the Cultural Sovereignt­y of the Caribbean. He travelled and spoke in literally every part of the archipelag­o, Suriname and Guyana, where he was briefly arrested and imprisoned by police at a demonstrat­ion. His close collaborat­ors in this period were Kathleen Drayton, Rickey Singh and Andaiye, with support coming through Michael Manley and his connection­s, and the Oilfield Workers Trade Union of Trinidad and Tobago. At the same time, in Havana, he collaborat­ed with Garcia Marquez, Juan Bosch, and others in the Committee for the Cultural Sovereignt­y of the Americas. In this period too, he ghost wrote speeches for three Caribbean Prime Ministers.

In the 1990s and 2000s, through teaching posts at CUNY in New York, Brown University, and finally, at last, at the University of the West Indies in Barbados,

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George Lamming

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