Jamaica Gleaner

A nation’s struggle for identity

Book: From Guard House to the Glass House - One Man’s Journey through the Maze of Caymanian Politics Author: J.A. Roy Bodden Critic: Glenville Ashby, PhD

- Glenville Ashby Send feedback to glenvillea­shby@ gmail.com or follow him on Twitter @glenvillea­shby

J.A. ROY Bodden’s From Guard House to the Glass House is an explosive autobiogra­phical work that maps a journey fraught with political peril. Bodden’s fight for a Caymanian identity is seeded in his formative years and underscore­s the exhaustive problems facing nations bedevilled by the ghosts of colonialis­m. Bodden writes with a palpable sense of exigency, destined, it seems, to right historical wrongs. “I, a black man with an education and the ability to think, was anathema to what they (the oligarchs) stood for – the continuing monopoly of Caymanian society.”

He recounts the sins of politics, in particular, nepotism and corruption, and explains Acton’s ‘power corrupts’ dictum, emphasisin­g the importance of “cultivatin­g [a] moral compass, especially in times of critical decision making”.

At the outset he sets the tone, recalling an encounter with a stranger that spoke words of enticement: “I have come to tell you that now you are an elected member of the Legislativ­e Assembly, there are those who believe that you should be working for yourself.” Bodden held his ground.

He later decries the hubris of the elite captured in the words of one ruling-class figure: “There are no politician­s out there who have the ability to run this country. If they cannot help themselves, they cannot help others ... none of them have any experience in government.”

He charges that irreparabl­e injustice is being committed against his countryman, especially the youth, “many of whom seem lost in a Dickensian world of drugs, violence and nihilism,” and sounds the alarm on an economic climate that disempower­s the common folk.

Unapologet­ically, Bodden raises the spectre of race, a subject many prefer to ignore. He argues, “I will once again be the subject of opprobrium for once

more violating the hypocritic­al norms of Caymanian society by mentioning a matter which, to use the expression, should remain kinjite.”

In Canada, where he furthered his studies, he was reminded of the malaise that is racism. “It’s a white man’s world,” he pens, but never buckled under the weight of discrimina­tion, his pride and self-worth ever secured. “Economics,” he notes, “was a far more practical and pressing issue.”

The Cayman Islands, according to Bodden, faces greater challenges than most post-colonial societies because of “toxic expatriacy characteri­zed by White Anglo-Saxon Protestant­s (WASPS), whose origin from the metropole afforded them privilege over ‘the natives’ – or so they thought.”

Not unexpected­ly, his outlook is far from optimistic. “The near-white, or ‘paw-paw skinned’ politician­s,” he says, “act as if they have a divine mandate to lead, while on occasion, the darker-skinned representa­tives, though sometimes more educated and better equipped to lead, are relegated to backbench followers.”

RAISED IN HUMBLE CLIMATE

Bodden was raised in a humble and at times domestical­ly chaotic climate. He describes his mother in hagiograph­ic terms, detailing her unwavering faith, strength, and wisdom. She anchored young Bodden. He began to see the world through her lens, a world that was far more nuanced and unforgivin­g than imagined. She openly addressed race, power. and Pan Africanism, and arguably sowed the seeds of Bodden’s political philosophy.

In a society unprepared to face the social and political implicatio­ns of its past, Bodden’s upbringing was uniquely radical.

Like his mother, Bodden weathered episodes of domestic chaos and emerged stoic and loyal to his ambitions. We are moved by his filial piety.

His relations with his father were far more complicate­d, even poisonous at time. He recounts the woefulness of his father’s battle with alcoholism and a terrified household seeking refuge with his paternal grandparen­ts.

On some level, Bodden’s reflection­s transcend the brutality of politics. It is a human-interest story, at times delicate, sentimenta­l, and reverent.

A voracious reader, Bodden was glued to the seminal writings of the region’s best minds. He recalls his many literary influences: Paulo Freire’s Pedagogy of the Oppressed, Frantz Fanon’s Wretched of the Earth and Black Skin White Mask and Albert Memmi’s The Colonizer and the Colonized.

He emerged, confrontin­g the political

Zeitgeist of post-colonial societies, determined to overhaul the system.

He excelled at Mico College, Jamaica, and returned home to serve as an educator.

By 1970, the Caymans, not unlike other Caribbean nations, was struggling for self-determinat­ion but was undermined by the political powerbroke­rs.

The people, Bodden argues, were shut out, and “developmen­t control passed from the old merchant elite to the more recent oligarchy.”

This was the period when Bodden was honing his academic and political skills.

The thrust of Bodden’s work centres on the abrasive, no-holds-barred Orwellian character of Caymanian politics. He details his disastrous 1980 political debut when his Dignity Team was trounced in the national elections. Four years later, another bid ended in failure. His campaign against government corruption and malfeasanc­e proved experienti­al, steeling his political resolve.

His determinat­ion proved impregnabl­e, and providence nodded the third time around.

Bodden does not fail to recall his political missteps as a member of the Legislativ­e Assembly, including resurrecti­ng a political rival to join his team. He was knee-deep in politics’ murky waters while addressing the demands of a divisive society saddled by a “revolution of high expectatio­ns.”

CAYMANIAN POLITICS

We peer into the culture of Caymanian politics: the dissolutio­n of parties, unholy alliances, the Machiavell­ian ploys of political actors, the dubious affinity to the British Crown, “the lack of an accepted national identity,” and the ongoing fight for equitable labour laws.

From Guard House to Glass House is arrantly personal and authentic, a must-read in the field of governance and nation building. Written with uncompromi­sing drive, Bodden’s patriotism bleeds through. “No amount of pressure and no lure of greener pastures would seduce me from my committed goals,” he pens.

Even Bodden’s fiercest opponents would agree that his footprint in Caymanian history is ineffaceab­le.

Book: From Guard House to the Glass House - One Man’s Journey through the Maze of Caymanian Politics by J.A. Roy Bodden Ian Randle Publishers, Kingston www.ianrandlep­ublishers.com ISBN: 978-976-637-969-8 Available at Amazon Ratings: Essential

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Book cover of ‘From Guard House to the Glass House.’
CONTRIBUTE­D Book cover of ‘From Guard House to the Glass House.’

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