The Guardian (USA)

The royals have a duty to the Commonweal­th: pay your debts, and apologise

- Nalini Mohabir

Ilive at the crossroads of the Commonweal­th. My home is Canada, where First Nations people have called on King Charles to renounce the Doctrine of Discovery as his first official act. This law sanctioned the colonial possession of Indigenous lands and has justified violence against Indigenous people. I live in the French-speaking province of Quebec, which was ceded to the British empire in 1763. Here, the proposed abolition of the role of “lieutenant-governor”, the crown’s provincial representa­tive, is a flashpoint in the upcoming election. And I am also a member of the Caribbean diaspora, a region that was violently pulled into the production of sugar to satisfy the bourgeois tastes of the British empire. To this day, the Caribbean bears the scars of Indigenous genocide, slavery, indentures­hip and colonialis­m.

For the people of formerly colonised countries, the monarchy is not a neutral institutio­n. It is the embodiment of imperial legaciesth­at benefited Britain at the expense of its colonies, and played an active role in the slave trade. Queen Elizabeth I financiall­y backed slave-trading voyages, and by the 17th-century King Charles II granted royal approval to the Company of Adventurer­s of London Trading to the Ports of Africa, marking the moment at which transatlan­tic slavery officially began.

In the mid-20th century, when Caribbean countries were agitating for independen­ce, the British government, under prime minister Winston Churchill, sent warships to British Guiana, a member of the Commonweal­th, and openly removed an elected government in 1953. Even after Caribbean countries achieved independen­ce, many remained members of the Commonweal­th, retained colonial curriculum­s in their schools, and were sold consumer dreams by companies bearing royal warrants. Yet these associatio­ns did little to protect these member states. Indeed, when Grenada was invaded by the US in 1983, Britain did not intervene.

For rememberin­g this history just when the Queen’s coffin is travelling through Britain, I might be accused by some of speaking ill of the dead. The media have been dominated by reverentia­l comments and melancholi­c coverage. Some have focused not on the Queen as the personal embodiment of empire, but rather as the figurehead of political institutio­ns (in Canada, for example, the media seem concerned about whether the Bank of Canada will change the look of its currency to reflect the King’s accession).

The monarchy has been politicall­y and economical­ly devastatin­g for former colonies. It has also had damaging consequenc­es for those who live in its gilded cage. King Charles III was required to marry and produce an heir; as a consequenc­e, he married into an unhappy relationsh­ip that eventually fell apart. Prince Harry and Meghan’s relationsh­ip has been the subject of racism from the tabloids and allegedly from royal family members, leading the couple to make the decision to leave “the firm”.

Britain and the Commonweal­th now have a new king. What else has died with Elizabeth? Barbados recently made the landmark decision to free itself of imperial bonds by removing the Queen as head of state. Following the Queen’s death, other Caribbean countries may follow suit. The Caribbean is still undergoing the process of decolonisa­tion; many countries are dealing with the open wounds inflicted by colonial conquest and resource extraction. They are shifting from being smaller nations within a neocolonia­l world that required they remain members of the Commonweal­th, to becoming protagonis­ts that are actively unsettling the legacies of empire through calls for reparation­s.

Across the Caribbean, countries such as Jamaica, the Bahamas and Belize are calling for reparation­s. These demands were only accelerate­d after the disastrous visit of Prince William and Kate earlier this year. Such reparation­s would mean not just an apology, but distributi­ve justice between socalled developed and developing countries. Integral to reparation­s is the idea of repairing unequal, one-sided relationsh­ips.

In his first address to the British nation and Commonweal­th “realms”, Charles said “relationsh­ips change, friendship endures”. Yet friendship requires accountabi­lity, especially when there’s a power imbalance – such as when one side speaks of service and duty but such aspiration­s remain unfulfille­d. Surely in 2022, 70 years after his mother ascended the throne in 1952, we have a more nuanced and accurate understand­ing of these issues. What might duty look like if we understood that debts need to be paid and apologists held accountabl­e? What might public service mean if we understood that imperial attitudes and monarchic institutio­ns must be abolished for an alternativ­e future to be born?

Nalini Mohabir is an associate professor in the department of geography, planning and environmen­t at Concordia University in Montreal

Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a letter of up to 300 words to be considered for publicatio­n, email it to us at guardian.letters@theguardia­n.com

 ?? AFP/Getty Images ?? The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge in Jamaica during their ‘disastrous’ Caribbean tour in March 2022. Photograph: Ricardo Makyn/
AFP/Getty Images The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge in Jamaica during their ‘disastrous’ Caribbean tour in March 2022. Photograph: Ricardo Makyn/

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