Jamaica Gleaner

Come experience Caribbean tradition

Contributi­ons of indigenous people to tourism to be celebrated

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ASESSION at Sustainabl­e Tourism Conference in St Vincent and the Grenadines will demonstrat­e how indigenous communitie­s are embracing entreprene­urial opportunit­ies through tourism

Today’s travellers are booking experienti­al vacations that allow them to immerse themselves in the culture, people, and history of a destinatio­n. Recognisin­g this, indigenous communitie­s across the Caribbean are accessing tourism markets and welcoming visitors to encounter their traditiona­l ways of life.

The Caribbean Tourism Organizati­on (CTO) will highlight this important developmen­t in a general session at the upcoming Caribbean Conference on Sustainabl­e Tourism Developmen­t taking place August 26-29, 2019, at the Beachcombe­rs Hotel in St Vincent and the Grenadines.

The panel titled ‘Indigenous Conversati­ons – Celebratin­g Our Past, Embracing Our Future’, is scheduled for 27 Aug. The session will look at the changing compositio­n of local livelihood­s and demonstrat­e how the region’s indigenous people have a tangible role and stake in the Caribbean tourism value chain. Indigenous communitie­s are utilising tourism markets to embrace expanded entreprene­urial opportunit­ies, adding new dimensions to their sources of income and creating niches that are increasing­ly sought after.

Session speakers include Uwahnie Martinez, the director of Palmento Grove Garifuna Eco Cultural & Fishing Institute in Belize, a private island retreat owned and operated by local Garifuna people; Colonel Marcia “Kim” Douglas, colonel of Jamaica’s Charles Town Maroon Community;

a representa­tive of the Indian Creek Mayan Art Women’s Group of Belize; and Rudolph Edwards, the toshao (chief) of Rewa village in Guyana, a small Amerindian community of about 300 people, mostly from the Makushi tribe, who founded the Rewa Eco-Lodge in 2005 in an effort to protect their land for generation­s to come.

DEVELOPING INDIGENOUS HERITAGE

The session will be led by Dr Zoila Ellis Browne, who was born in Belize and is the head of the Garifuna Heritage Foundation in St Vincent and the Grenadines, where she is committed to the developmen­t of her indigenous heritage. A magistrate by profession, Browne also volunteers as technical programme consultant to the foundation, a Vincentian non-government­al organisati­on promoting Garifuna heritage and culture.

The conference, otherwise known as the Sustainabl­e Tourism Conference (#STC2019), is organised by the CTO in partnershi­p with the St. Vincent and the Grenadines Tourism Authority.

Under the theme “Keeping the Right Balance: Tourism Developmen­t in an Era of Diversific­ation,” industry experts participat­ing in #STC2019 will address the urgent need for a transforma­tional, disruptive, and regenerati­ve tourism product to meet ever-rising challenges. The full conference programme can be viewed https://www.caribbeans­tc.com/ program/

St Vincent and the Grenadines will host STC amid an intensifie­d national thrust towards a greener, more climate-resilient destinatio­n, including the constructi­on of a geothermal plant in

St Vincent to complement the country’s hydro and solar energy capacity and the restoratio­n of the Ashton Lagoon in Union Island.

 ?? GLADSTONE TAYLOR/MULTIMEDIA PHOTO EDITOR ?? Colonel Commander Marcia Douglas of the Charles Town Maroon community shows the usage of an old iron.
GLADSTONE TAYLOR/MULTIMEDIA PHOTO EDITOR Colonel Commander Marcia Douglas of the Charles Town Maroon community shows the usage of an old iron.

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