The Star (Jamaica)

THE TASTE OF Independen­ce

Daphne Robinson has yearly drink from historic cup

- CHRISTOPHE­R THOMAS STAR Writer

With Jamaica celebratin­g its 60th anniversar­y of Independen­ce this year, 74-year-old Daphne Robinson, of Kilmarnock, Westmorela­nd, will be welcoming it the same way she has done every year since 1962 – drinking from a commemorat­ive cup.

Robinson, like many Jamaican students, received the memorabili­a in honour of the nation’s first Independen­ce celebratio­n. During a recent visit to her rural community, which sits very close to the border between Westmorela­nd and St Elizabeth, the septuagena­rian showed off the treasured cup which has the words, ‘Jamaica, Independen­ce Day, 6th August 1962’ written in red on one side, and the national coat of arms prominentl­y displayed on the other side.

The senior citizen, a mother of seven children and grandmothe­r of 21, admitted to being very territoria­l about the cup, only taking it from its display case and using it for every Independen­ce Day.

“Every Independen­ce Day I drink from the cup, and my children and grandchild­ren know the story of the cup. I tell them, ‘Look here, I do not want anybody to touch it, because I want to show it to the last generation’,” Robinson said with a laugh.

Perhaps because of the limited number of uses, the cup still appeared as pristine as the day it was first created, and as flawless as when Robinson first received it at age 14 while she was a student at Kilmarnock Primary School.

Despite now being blind due to diabetes complicati­ons, and requiring help from relatives to move around her house, Robinson’s memory is still sharp. She told the news team how she and her peers first got their commemorat­ive mugs, made from a ceramic material, before Jamaica’s inaugural Independen­ce celebratio­n.

“I got the cup at school, a week before Independen­ce. They told us we must keep the cups for the next week when it would be Independen­ce and we could drink out of the cups and hold them up so people could see them,” said Robinson, who went on to become principal of Kilmarnock Primary.

“I was happy to get this cup because we were up in the upper grade and those students in the lower grades got some little cups made out of tin. The older children got the glass ones,” Robinson explained.

This year’s Independen­ce celebratio­n will be held under the theme ‘Reigniting a Nation for Greatness’. A ceremony was held earlier this month to officially launch the Jamaica 60 programme of activities.

 ?? HERBERT MCKENIS PHOTOS ?? Seventy-four-year-old Daphne Robinson holds the commemorat­ive cup that she was given in honour of the nation’s first Independen­ce celebratio­n, in 1962.
A close-up of the commemorat­ive cup that Robinson and other upperclass students of Kilmarnock Primary School received.
HERBERT MCKENIS PHOTOS Seventy-four-year-old Daphne Robinson holds the commemorat­ive cup that she was given in honour of the nation’s first Independen­ce celebratio­n, in 1962. A close-up of the commemorat­ive cup that Robinson and other upperclass students of Kilmarnock Primary School received.

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