Stabroek News Sunday

McDonald and Jailall eulogise people of Guyana

-

[Ian McDonald and Peter Jailall, People of Guyana, Canada: MiddleRoad Publishers, 2018. 91pp.]

Estate Talk

Auntie Finey

Standing by de pailin

Engaging in discourse:

“A wen you cum, bet?”

“Me cum yestiday, Auntie”

“A how you do na bet?”

“Me deh auntie”

“How you du?”

“Wa me gu tell you, me picknee pain a kill me

Ya walk all ova me baady”

“ah how uncle do, Auntie?”

“Beti, da man a ge me too much worries As soon as e get e money

E gaan a rum shap

Night an day ya dhakolay daru

Da man da

Na kay if

Good Friday faal

Pan a Sateday.”

- Peter Jailall

Kowsilla

The bosses made demands:

‘Weed cleaner!’

“Weed lower and faster!”

They had to eat standing in the rain Or eat sitting in the scorching sun.

But Kowsilla and the women said:

“No!”

Only to face the deadly colonial machine That mowed her down.

March 6 1964 was a dreadful day When the tractor at Leonora Crushed Kowsilla.

All Guyana stood still.

The wailing began

Followed by the long, angry procession Moving and moulding the movement.

The people buried their heroine – Young, beautiful, courageous.

- Peter Jailall

Nani Goes to Vote

My Nani Painee turns out to vote.

The English-speaking returning officer asks, “Lady, do you want to swear by the Bible?” “Na!” Nani Painee replies.

“By the Gita?”

“Bell a wa den,” Nani says, disgusted. “Well, repeat after me, the officer says.

“I, Painee, do solemnly swear…”

“Eh Hey,” murmurs Nani.

“Lady, please repeat after me.”

Nani, who hardly speaks a word of English, answers

“Me dun taak am in me mine aredy.”

- Peter Jailall

In 2018 two friends, Ian McDonald and Peter Jailall, who they admitted, “come from very different background­s and living experience­s”, but who, “over the years, formed a strong friendship”, jointly published a collection of poetry titled People of Guyana. They declared: “We write out of different poetic traditions and inspiratio­ns but in this book our theme is the same – the nature and, in particular, the marvellous fortitude of people in all their variety”.

They quite appropriat­ely dedicate the collection “To the people of Guyana in their variety and vitality One Nation”. Almost all the poems by both writers are portraits of Guyanese from different stations of life, of a range of ethnic, class and cultural background­s, especially presenting colourful, vivid, sometimes humorous, but often solemn, sad or moving pictures which tell something of the Guyanese experience.

McDonald is among Guyana’s most establishe­d poets with several very well-known publicatio­ns and quite a range of poetic styles firmly in the literary tradition. Jailall’s work as a poet might be new to many readers, since he has not had the same level of circulatio­n and exposure.

Jailall belongs to the tradition of performanc­e poetry, or spoken word. This is so because his poems appeal more to the ear than to the eye. They work better in performanc­e than they appear on the printed page, and indeed were written as narratives with the rhythm and oral quality of speech. They are dramatic and one of the more striking things about them is the use of language. Jailall covers the continuum of Guyanese English from the standard, most used in narration, to varieties of the Creole language. Many characters come to life through their rendering of Creolese, mainly the basilectal quality of the East Indian plantation speech.

A number of critics have commented on the collection in a way that gives an insightful understand­ing of the content and impact of the book. Historian and critic Prof Clem Seecharan, formerly of London Metropolit­an University, had this to say: “Every encounter with these two gifted Guyanese poets (both of whom I have known for over thirty years) fill my soul with laughter and tears, but always remind me to see silver linings rather than lamenting areas of darkness.” He finds the poems, “shaped by their generosity of spirit and abundant capacity for empathy and fun – a celebratio­n of the full life.”

One of Guyana’s prominent women poets, who has published a number of her own collection­s, Janet Naidu, observed that the poets “preserve powerful moments that are rich in the experience of our Guyanese people. The poems profoundly draw upon the diversity of our Guyanese people, in terms of gender, race, social existence and offer deep philosophi­cal insights into what it is to be human.” There are “poems of strength, respect, courage, compassion, love and loss, as they depict folks in society . . . thus taking readers through life in the city as well as villages of Guyana,” she added.

McDonald’s contributi­ons to the collection are mostly pieces that were previously published or anthologis­ed, including a number of gems from Mercy Ward (1989). Jailall’s publicatio­ns include Jottings (2014), When September Comes (2003) and This Healing Place (1993).

 ?? ?? Ian McDonald
Peter Jailall
Ian McDonald Peter Jailall
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Guyana