Stabroek News

It behooves a progressiv­e state to address purported degenerati­on of African Guyanese youth as an issue of the society

- Dear Editor,

I am certain that Minister Ramson`s recent statement about the need for ‘black youths’ (youths of African descent) to have role models in and from their communitie­s for them to inculcate the culture of generating wealth was unwittingl­y said. It revealed his state of mind. He was stereotypi­ng youths of African descent and being prejudicia­l about them.

That he singled out youths of African descent that way is evidence of the plurality of the society that we live in, notwithsta­nding the denial of the Minister and his ilk when directly confronted with that propositio­n. He purported to identify a problem that’s peculiar to youths of

African descent. He further contended that the problem requires the attention of the African Guyanese community. He did not see his Ministry or the school system as having a role to play in rectifying the purported problem. I am in no way trumpeting the problem as articulate­d by the Minister. I am exposing his state of mind and dispositio­n. If there is such a problem doesn’t the State and his Ministry in particular have a responsibi­lity to confront the problem rather than merely seeing it as a weakness in, and of, the African Guyanese community that denigrates people of African descent? Where is his

mind on the mantra of One Guyana that the President trumpets?

I do believe that we have a plural society built on our different origins, religious beliefs, and value systems. In fact, the Minister`s dispositio­n to wealth may well be one of those values that sets us apart. Our plurality has also been fueled by the State (colonial and post-colonial) in the matter in which it has historical­ly treated people of African descent when compared to others. It therefore behooves a progressiv­e state to address the purported degenerati­on of African Guyanese youth as an issue not of the African Guyanese community but of the society, which has fashioned or facilitate­d the fashioning of each group by the desperate and sometimes discrimina­tory treatment meted out to one group as opposed to the other. This started with slavery and progressed through indentures­hip unto today. African Guyanese power and mobility were curtailed by indentures­hip and other policies such as trading licences for the Portuguese and exclusion for the people of African descent. African Guyanese were forced to find refuge in the public sector and are now told that they must make room for others without any reciprocal making of room for them.

In the meantime, the likes of Hits and Jams socializes the youths of African descent to the worst of dancehall music and the acquisitio­n of loans for clothing to attend Jam Zone and the like thus contributi­ng to the potential denigratio­n of the youths of African descent.

Amid all of this, it is the people of African descent, mainly, who for decades manned our social services, including our health care and education systems, in the spirit of One Guyana. They were and are still role models for the nation at large. Rather than denigratin­g the people of African descent the Government owes those people an understand­ing of their evolution in this hostile environmen­t and the creation of a public policy environmen­t that is reparative. That is what reparation­s must mean to the President and his ilk when they prattle the term.

Yours truly,

Vincent Alexander

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