UWI unveils controversial Garvey bust
LAST FRIDAY, Professor Archibald McDonald, pro-vicechancellor and principal of the University of the West Indies (UWI) Mona campus, and Professor Rahamon Adisa Bello, vicechancellor of the University of Lagos in Nigeria, unveiled a bust of the Right Excellent Marcus Mosiah Garvey in the courtyard of the Faculty of Humanities and Education at Mona. Professor Waibinte Wariboko, dean of the Faculty of Humanities and Education, in welcoming the gathering, said, “As a faculty dedicated to the study of human civilisations, we thought it befitting to erect this bust in our learning environment to constantly visually remind ourselves of the central place he occupies in our social consciousness.” Professor Wariboko, a historian and native of Nigeria, conceptualised the idea of mounting a bust of Garvey on the Mona campus.
He said he was encouraged and assisted by students from the Marcus Garvey Movement, Club Africa, and the History and Archaeological Society – three student organisations on the Mona Campus. He commented that the project was long overdue, and now that it is a reality, “it will strengthen scholarship relating to black nationalism, Garveyism and PanAfricanism”.
NEGATIVE FEEDBACK
But after the bust was exposed, many people, including some UWI staffers, appeared stunned by sculptor Raymond Watson’s representation of Garvey.
“Dat a nuh Garvey!” was the general remarks from onlookers. “Tek it dung,” one woman said calmly. “That statue does not represent Marcus Garvey – that’s a fraud,” pronounced an elderly Rasta, donning the colours of the Universal Negro Improvement Association (UNIA). With photos of Garvey, and sometimes using expletives, he ranted until way after the formalities were over.
The negative feedback led Professor Rupert Lewis, to comment on the onlookers’ ire, in his reflections on the life and work of Marcus Mosiah Garvey.
“I know there will be a lot of discussion, I heard some, about the image of Garvey. But there is no one image of him. There are many images of Garvey that you can get from his 52 years. So, I respect our artists when they present something new that we can reflect on, which will be different from the images to which we have been accustomed. So, congratulations to our artist Raymond Watson,” Professor Lewis said.
On the matter of the influence of the UNIA in Africa Professor Lewis wondered whether people are using the technologies available to them to forge links with African countries. He said he is hoping that “the bust of Garvey will be an incentive to us to make a path to the Motherland and put our house in order”.