Stabroek News Sunday

Former logger turned conservati­onist hoping ...

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From 4A

Fiedtkou was born and raised in Muritaro, a riverain community 25 miles from Linden in the Upper Demerara River. It is accessible by river. It has an itinerant population of about 300 as people migrate looking for better education and jobs.

Muritaro has been in existence since the 1800s. Fiedtkou’s paternal grandfathe­r was born there in 1909 and attended the then Anglican school there.

“I farmed and went logging with my parents in the creek. My paternal grandmothe­r was into handicraft. All of my childhood Indigenous knowledge, such as cutting the ite palm leaf, stripping the tibisiri, boiling and drying it to make craft, I learned from her.

“I know a little about the mucru, not that much. I know to make the maswa (fish trap) and quake. I can knit seines for fishing. I crochet and I do nine different embroidery stitches. I sew all my children, grandchild­ren clothes and whoever asked me to sew clothes for them. I know to use the cutlass, brush cutter, chain saw, axe, everything. I tell you these things because I told myself that anywhere I go and I have to earn my living. I must be able to survive using my knowledge.”

Muritaro’s first toshao

Prior to Fiedtkou becoming Muritaro’s first toshao, Fiedtkou was the chairperso­n of the community developmen­t council (CDC), which was in place before Muritaro was given land title. She was in the forefront seeking title for the community “because the whole place where we are now living was taken up by coastlande­rs. So if you didn’t get permission from the coastlande­r and you cut wood and if their rangers caught you, you lose the logs, you lose your money, you lose everything. Because of that, a lot of youngsters, including my brothers left the village and sought jobs elsewhere.

“Growing up I never knew about malaria. As I grew older we had an outbreak of malaria in the community. When we did the research, we found it was brought in by the men who went to work in the mining areas and returned to the village.”

After she became chairperso­n of the Community Developmen­t Council (CDC) in 2004, one of the council’s priorities was obtaining title to their land and managing their affairs. The council held discussion­s with the then Minister of Amerindian Affairs, Carolyn Rodrigues-Birkett, and followed up their proposal in writing.

In 2005 at the toshaos conference in Mainstay in Region Two – Pomeroon/Supenaam, she was sworn in as a toshaos prior to Muritaro being granted its land title in 2007.

Sacrifices

When her children were young she joined her husband in the upper reaches of the Demerara where she learned to spin the batel to find gold and ‘to throw a spade.’ “I told myself if a man can do it, I can’t do it too.”

When they started school she got into logging and farming crops and poultry.

When her eldest daughter secured a place at Christianb­urg Wismar Secondary School in Linden after writing common entrance, Fiedtkou rented a place in Wismar to ensure her daughter gained a

secondary education. “A lot of people never allowed their children to come out for secondary school. I told myself my parents never gave me that opportunit­y and I am going to cross the bridge many people did not want to cross. So I went to Linden, did domestic work with a doctor for some time and worked at the Star Bonnet Hotel while my children went to school.”

Shortly after her younger daughter and her last son were in Linden also attending secondary school.

“There were a lot of comments about why I left my husband at home with my first son and third child who has cerebral palsy. Someone told me I was a mad woman to go away with my children and leave my husband at home. My husband was very supportive even with my community work. I was with my younger son until he was in the higher forms in secondary school when he stayed with a guardian.”

She continued, “I made that sacrifice for my children to get a secondary education. Other parents decided if Loretta could make it they could make it too. In spite of negative comments, it did make an impact for children to get a secondary education.”

Fieldkou’s eldest daughter is now the acting head teacher of the school in Muritaro and the second daughter has her own business in Coomacka. Her last son also runs his own business in the community.

During her spare time in Wismar she took some courses in floral arrangemen­t

and cake decorating that were offered by Silver City Secondary where another of her children attended. She had also done a course in business management. After her daughters wrote their Caribbean Secondary Education Certificat­e examinatio­ns, she returned fulltime to Muritaro.

“We were rearing chickens. My husband was left with the chicken and the farm. Every weekend I went home. We came out on Monday mornings returned on Friday afternoons. We went to church on Saturdays and farmed on Sundays and back out on Monday. It was a challengin­g experience but I did it.”

Speaking about her 31-year-old son with cerebral palsy, Fiedtkou said, “He is very determined like his mother. He walks, feeds and bathes himself. Although he never went to school, he is skillful and creative in craft and makes cutting/kneading boards for people. He earns. He is not just lying there doing nothing. He has a computer and he uses his toes a lot. You can imagine what he does with his toes on that computer. He does a lot of things including putting music on flash drives for people. He uses his left hand and toes more because his right hand is immobile.

After she returned to Muritaro she was elected the CDC chairperso­n in 2004 and the toshao in 2005. Her focus was on village improvemen­t and village forestry plans. She served one term as toshao and took a break until 2015 when she was reelected and served until 2020.

“As a council we built walkways, benabs, boats, refurbishe­d the village office and other small projects for the village.”

Currently she is not on the council due to term limits.

During her tenure as toshao, she undertook a number of training programmes in relation to women and gender, domestic violence, child developmen­t, leadership and management, mental health and social protection.

It has not always been easy in the village. “With the titling of the land, I got a fight down but I held out. At the end of the day, the villagers accepted and now they appreciate what was done. When I told them we were going to get a landline in the village from GT&T in 2007, they were like, in which dream you talked about a phone to come in this village. When GT&T put down the phone they saw it happening.”

She was representa­tive for the restorativ­e justice committee and served on the NTC executive as assistant secretary/treasurer from 2018 to 2020. She was previously a commission­er on the Family Life Commission. At present she is a member of the Juvenile Justice Board and the local Indigenous Peoples representa­tive on the board of the Guyana Extractive Industries Transparen­cy Initiative.

Fiedtkou was instrument­al in getting Muritaro as the pilot community in the National Opt-In Mechanism package which was part of Guyana’s Low Carbon Developmen­t Strategy (LCDS) which was launched in 2009. The LCDS sought to create a low deforestat­ion, low carbon, climate resilient economy to combat climate change.

 ?? ?? Loretta Fiedtkou (centre) with colleague fellows Imaculata Casimero (right) and Althea Harding
Loretta Fiedtkou (centre) with colleague fellows Imaculata Casimero (right) and Althea Harding

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