Jamaica Gleaner

Continue to be faithful to Garvey movement – Moss-Solomon

- Carl Gilchrist/Gleaner Writer

DESCRIBING HIMSELF as the most unlikely Garveyite because of his mixed heritage, businessma­n James MossSolomo­n has urged followers of National Hero Marcus Mosiah

Garvey to be faithful to the Garvey movement.

Delivering the keynote address at the 14th annual awards banquet of the St Ann Homecoming and Heritage Foundation (SHHF), held Saturday night at the Jewel Dunn’s River Hotel in St Ann, MossSolomo­n said several of Garvey’s philosophi­es have been adopted by politician­s without giving him the credit.

GARVEY’S EXPLOITS

Moss-Solomon traced Garvey’s business exploits, which included restaurant, laundry, tailoring and dressmakin­g enterprise­s and which pre-dated several United States chain stores that are now in existence, saying they were “representi­ng black ownership, black manufactur­ing, black distributi­on, black consumers, a script later promoted in this country in the 1970s without any reference to Marcus Garvey; employee share ownership, all those words coming out of the late Honourable Michael Manley and the late Honourable Edward Seaga, and prior to them coming out from the most famous Jamaican politician in support of manufactur­ing, Bobby (Robert) Lightbourn­e. But nobody referenced this to Garvey’s thoughts; they should report them for plagiarism.”

“Nobody in the modern day has given credence to the man who was recognised as one of the major philosophe­rs of the 20th century,” said Moss-Solomon.

He said when the United Negro Improvemen­t Associatio­n held its national convention at Madison Square Garden in New York City in 1920, with a capacity crowd of 20,000, most of the attendees were women, yet nobody has credited Garvey for empowering women at the time.

The businessma­n lamented that nothing about Garvey is being taught in schools, while the people languish for want of understand­ing.

Meanwhile, Custos of St Ann Norma L. Walters, citing the adage, a king is without honour in his own land, urged the SHHF to be unapologet­ic in its honouring of the Right Excellent Marcus Mosiah Garvey, Jamaica’s first national hero.

AIM OF FOUNDATION

The mission of the foundation is to instil pride in the rich heritage and culture of St Ann as well as the island of Jamaica, with a strong focus on Marcus Garvey’s contributi­on to Jamaica and the world.

The contributi­on of the SHHF so far this year has included a ‘Children-of-the-Village’ mentoring programme, held in conjunctio­n

with the HEART/NTA North East Region and which benefited several students attending the St Ann’s Bay Primary School.

At Saturday’s event, the SHHF went a step further and awarded the first SHHF Scholarshi­p, valued at $100,000 annually to a student of the Marcus Garvey Technical High School.

The awardee, Kashwayne Dixon, who will enter grade eight in September, was happy for the scholarshi­p.

“Sir, I feel wonderful and delighted and I promise to keep doing well,” Dixon told The Gleaner.

His mother, Debby-Ann Ricketts, was equally excited and also grateful for the award.

“I’m excited, I’m just really excited and I’m really proud of him. He deserves it, he works very hard and I really and truly try with him as a single mom,” Ricketts said.

The SHHF also paid tribute to businessma­n Douglas Halsall of Advanced Integrated System and the Jamaica Money Market Brokers, with both receiving corporate awards, and to the HEART Trust/ NTA, which was awarded in the area of public service.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTOS ?? Scholarshi­p recipient Kashwayne Dixon, with a replica of the $100,000 cheque, poses with his mom, Debby-Ann Ricketts (left), and Custos of St Ann Norma L. Walters.
CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTOS Scholarshi­p recipient Kashwayne Dixon, with a replica of the $100,000 cheque, poses with his mom, Debby-Ann Ricketts (left), and Custos of St Ann Norma L. Walters.
 ??  ?? Moss-Solomon
Moss-Solomon

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