Jamaica Gleaner

Journey of a Glorious Jamaican institutio­n

- Paul H. Williams Sunday Gleaner Writer

THE GLEANER predates the emancipati­on of African people in Jamaica from slavery, having been establishe­d in 1834.

It has recorded our social, economic and political evolution and history since then, and that of the world on a whole. Its voluminous archives are the envy of media houses in the Western Hemisphere.

From this invaluable repository, the company has compiled Jamaica’s Gleaner 180 – An Epic Journey with the Jamaican People, in partial commemorat­ion of its 180 anniversar­y in 2014.

The hardcover is 157 pages of text, pictures and minimised reprints of original pages that reflect our glorious and not-soflatteri­ng past.

It is segmented into five major periods of our post-Emancipati­on history: From Emancipati­on to the Morant Bay Rebellion; Crown Colony Government; From the Reintroduc­tion of Representa­tive Government to Labour Rebellions; The Making of Modern Jamaica; and Independen­t Jamaica 1962-Present. Within these segments are the reminders of the country’s most important social, cultural and political events as recorded by The Gleaner.

In the foreword, P.J. Patterson, former prime minister, said, among other comments, “No one can dispute that it ranks at the top of institutio­ns, including the Church and our political parties, which have shaped and influenced the course and contours of our nation state and its people. It has become an institutio­n indeed, because for many, many decades, it was Jamaica’s only newspaper and the word Gleaner, to most of us, was synonymous or interchang­eable with the word newspaper.”

But this institutio­n called The Gleaner was not without its critics, some of them very bitter, others unforgivin­g.

In ‘A Serious Threat of Censorship’, Edward Seaga, former prime minister and leader of the opposition, opens his contributi­on with, “I have a very special reason to commend The Gleaner for its coverage of news and views for 180 years. The publicatio­n has been responsibl­e for reporting shock-and-awe events, national tragedies, and the joys of triumphant

Jamaicans over this long period. But nothing can equal the most threatenin­g event of the history of the paper which occurred in the middle of the 1970s.”

He is talking about the acrimony that existed between The Gleaner and the People’s National Party 1970s administra­tion. “At that time, The Gleaner was faced with a do-or-die threat when the Government, using the awesome powers of the state of public emergency in 1976 to command and control, imposed on the media a requiremen­t to clear news for publicatio­n with the Government before printing. This would be the imposition of censorship of any news, oral informatio­n or advertisem­ent not officially approved by the Government. A state of censorship would then exist,” Seaga writes.

It is the respect for press freedom that has endeared The Gleaner to the public, and Ian Boyne, awardwinni­ng, long-time Gleaner opinion columnist, in ‘The Importance of Being The Gleaner’, sums it up as follows:

“I can truly say The Gleaner is a bastion of free speech. It is a cosmopolit­an paper, catering to the needs of a variety of readers. It facilitate­s serious intellectu­al discourse and scholarly engagement. In its pages the cerebral reader can feel at home. And those readers with other tastes can also have them satisfied. It is truly the people’s paper.”

And in commenting on the same stand-off between the PNP and The Gleaner, Boyne writes, “The Gleaner’s robust, raucous and, to some, reactionar­y opposition to Michael Manley’s PNP saved Jamaica, in many people’s view. Others disagree and see that decade as a low point in The

Gleaner’s journalism, a case study in partisansh­ip.”

Favouritis­m or not, this 180 compilatio­n is a musthave. Yet, sadly, one person who will not get the chance to own one is Junior Dowie, long-serving, award-winning photograph­er, who passed away very recently. His

Gleaner story is on page 93. Paragraph two says, “Dowie could shoot it all, from social to political, from the dignitary to the man in the street. His sense of timing was always top-notch.”

GREAT HEIGHTS

It continues: “Dowie is also known for literally going to great heights and depths to get the perfect shot. He won an Encycloped­ia Britannica bronze medal for ‘Thundering Hooves’, a shot of thoroughbr­eds at Caymanas Park in full flight where he lay flat on his stomach to get the right angle.”

But after 180 years, The Gleaner has ceased to be an independen­t media entity, having evolved into The Gleaner (Media) Company Ltd, a member of the RJR Group of Companies. To this, Garfield Grandison, the current editor-in-chief, says in the postscript, among other things:

“The Gleaner has changed, but our values have remained. Our reach is now global and our work, in many ways, much harder. But even as we adapt to the needs of the changing world our commitment to our readers today is as simple and honest as it was stated on our front page 180 years ago. We are thankful to you, our readers, for your never-failing loyalty, and remain dedicated to making our output worthy of your continued support.”

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 ?? FILE ?? The Gleaner building on North Street in Kingston.
FILE The Gleaner building on North Street in Kingston.

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