Jamaica Gleaner

Moving with the times

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THE EDITOR, Sir:

THE DEMOLISHED market at Manor Park remains in the news. The Reverend Garnett Roper, president of the Jamaica Theologica­l Seminary, has admitted that it was he who first responded to the ‘plight’ of the market vendors and pressed attorney-at-law Bert Samuels into service to champion, pro bono, the cause of the vendors.

Reverend Roper feels that the vendors should be moved to some ‘proximate location.’ Can you identify a ‘proximate location’ in Manor Park, sir?

Built just three years after Independen­ce, when Martin Luther King visited, the market in Manor Park was a godsend for vendors travelling from Portland and St Mary. They did not have to overnight at Half-Way Tree and then journey downtown to Coronation Market. Manor Park was nothing like what it is today. Fewer residents, fewer buildings. But it was an opportunit­y to meet people, learn their names and buying habits. So, in addition to selling their produce, it was a social event.

REFLECT ON HISTORY

But the world has changed, Reverend Roper. We now have supermarke­ts. I am inviting you to go into one of these operations, reflect on the history of how we buy groceries, and it will reveal a lot about socio-economic trends. Tell me, sir, if there is anything in your market that is not in the supermarke­t.

Commerce has evolved. We have debit and credit cards, warehouses and refrigerat­ed vans. The physical forms of markets has progressed. That type of operation no longer has a place in a modern urban setting. Fresh produce and the value of close-knit relationsh­ips have given way to convenienc­e and more formal human relationsh­ips.

And yes, sir, I do read the Bible – when I am in trouble. So, when you see Mr Livingston, the shoemaker again, apologise to him and tell him that Esau made a big mistake. GLENN TUCKER glenntucke­r2011@gmail.com

 ??  ?? Reverend Garnett Roper
Reverend Garnett Roper

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