Jamaica Gleaner

Oliver Clarke fondly remembered by Torontonia­ns

‘In my interactio­ns with Oliver Clarke, I found him to be a true gentleman. I respected his business acumen and the strengths he brought to his job at The Gleaner.’

- Neil Armstrong

TORONTONIA­NS ARE fondly rememberin­g the late media magnate and banking pioneer Oliver Clarke former chairman of The RJRGLEANER Communicat­ions Group and Jamaica National Group.

Emile Spence, interim head of JN Bank’s Canada Representa­tive Office, said Clarke, 75, who died on May 16, made a major impact on Jamaica.

“He’s part of our history as it relates to the building- society movement, as it relates to media. He has transforme­d the landscape of both, I think.”

Describing him as a fighter for press freedom, Spence said that Jamaicans had a better understand­ing of the role of the press through Clarke’s leadership as he fought to maintain its independen­ce.

He noted that when Clarke returned to Jamaica and joined the then Westmorela­nd Building Society, one of the first things that happened was the creation of the Jamaica National Building Society through the merger of four building societies. Spence said this, in itself, was a very innovative move in which these mergers created a big entity that was able to serve the entire island.

“The history of Jamaica National moving from then a single building society to now a very large financial conglomera­te was under his chairmansh­ip,” he said.

Spence said Clarke was “a man full of ideas and initiative­s, which would improve the lives of Jamaicans.”

He noted that Clarke always wanted JN to maintain its neutrality, being owned by its members, and did not want it to become a private entity.

DIDN’T HOLD GRUDGES

“He believed in people and wanted people first. He had a very dry sense of humour, and no ill was meant when he gave his jokes. If you’re soft, you will feel hurt by it, but he’s not one to hold grudges. He never intended his barbs to be harmful to anybody.”

Michael Van Cooten, founder and publisher of Pride News Magazine, says the Caribbean media has lost “one of its untiring advocates and humble trailblaze­rs and leaders”.

He said in his personal interactio­ns “with Mr Clarke, I always found him to be extremely personable and genuinely unpretenti­ous in spite of his immense wealth and power.

“You’ll notice that I addressed him as ‘Mr Clarke,’ never Oliver. That was because of the high regard and respect I felt towards him, having always looked up to him as a mentor from whom I gained tremendous inspiratio­n.”

Arnold Auguste, founder and publisher of Share, Canada’s largest ethnic newspaper, expressed his condolence­s to Clarke’s family.

“In my interactio­ns with Oliver Clarke, I found him to be a true gentleman. I respected his business acumen and the strengths he brought to his job at The Gleaner,” said Auguste.

“Oliver Clarke was certainly a Caribbean icon. His business acumen was well known and his love for Jamaica immeasurab­le as his roots ran deep in the parish of Westmorela­nd,” said Donette Chin-Loy Chang, a philanthro­pist and patron of the UWI Toronto Benefit Gala.

She said she met Clarke in the 1980s upon returning to Jamaica as a communicat­ions consultant to the prime minister and then government.

“You may not always agree with his style of doing business, but he certainly made a mark in the media and financial-services industry. My condolence­s to Monica and their daughter, Alex, and the family. Walk good, Oliver. You made your mark.”

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