Jamaica Gleaner

Nowhere like Ja

Globe trotter says she will never trade in her homeland

- Tamara Bailey/Gleaner Writer

SHE HAS travelled to approximat­ely 19 countries, explored a range of cultures, and lived in France for a little under a year, but Shari Kelly says nothing compares to her homeland, Jamaica.

For Kelly, patriotic expression­s should not be reserved for August 6 - Independen­ce Day - but should instead be a lifestyle.

That’s why Kelly has never left her flag when travelling and proudly acknowledg­es her roots before she is even asked.

The 30-year-old globe trotter said that her love for Jamaica grows every time she visits a new country.

“In high school, I thought I would never live here. But after living in France and living in a racist section, it was always interestin­g to me that people who thought I was African, when they heard I was Jamaican, they would just light up,” Kelly told The Gleaner.

“... Everybody is so excited to say to me, ‘You from the land of Bob Marley and Usain Bolt’. Living there made me realise that being Jamaican was a spectacula­r thing.”

When asked if she would ever migrate, Kelly, in all honesty, said yes, but only to make Jamaica better.

Despite her experience of superior infrastruc­ture, lower pollution, and more efficient modes of public transporta­tion on many of her overseas trips, Kelly says Jamaica’s food, people, and culture have a compulsive power.

“... When you live away from home for a long time, you realise how much a chicken patty means to you, some ackee and salt fish, plantain, simple things like seeing a Maggie seasoning, or Milo ... ,” she said.

With Jamaica celebratin­g the 58th anniversar­y of its Independen­ce today, Kelly had hoped that a mini version of the Grand Gala, a traditiona­l festival staged in the National Stadium annually, could be held in each parish, even with COVID-19 crowd restrictio­ns.

Kelly is hopeful that more Jamaicans understand the true meaning of independen­ce.

“I don’t think we know what it truly means . ... I think for the older persons, it may have more significan­ce. But I don’t think there has been enough effort to let it be understood by our generation,” she said.

“We are still clinging to aspects of the British system and archaic laws that are not serving us, and I want us to move away from that.”

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Shari Kelly flies a miniature Jamaican flag in Machu Picchu, Peru.
CONTRIBUTE­D Shari Kelly flies a miniature Jamaican flag in Machu Picchu, Peru.

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