JavaScript is disabled in your web browser or browser is too old to support JavaScript. Today almost all web pages contain JavaScript, a scripting programming language that runs on visitor's web browser. It makes web pages functional for specific purposes and if disabled for some reason, the content or the functionality of the web page can be limited or unavailable.

Saturday, May 3, 2025

T&T celebrates Black History Month in NY

by

20120228

The Trinidad and To­ba­go Con­sulate in New York was trans­formed in­to a vir­tu­al palais as mem­bers of the Orisa and Shouter faith, backed by drum­mers, ig­nit­ed the packed au­di­ence. The oc­ca­sion was Black His­to­ry Month cel­e­bra­tion, the first of its kind at the down­town Man­hat­tan con­sular of­fices. In her open­ing re­marks, con­sul Gen­er­al Rudrawa­tee Nan Ram­goolam stressed the im­por­tance of cul­ture in the lives of peo­ple the world over. She lament­ed the cul­tur­al dis­con­nect by many of the na­tion's youths, and beck­oned them to re-ex­am­ine their rich cul­tur­al her­itage and the peo­ple who have ex­celled in every field de­spite strug­gles and ob­sta­cles. "Too many of our youths are with­out pos­i­tive men­tors and even he­roes and we feel that cel­e­brat­ing the great per­sons in our past and present will of­fer a point of ref­er­ence," she not­ed. She iden­ti­fied the un­par­al­leled con­tri­bu­tion of Dr Er­ic Williams, ANR Robin­son, CLR James, Rudolph Charles, Boscoe Hold­er, Len Boogsie Sharpe, Giselle La Ronde, Janelle Com­mis­siong, Hasley Craw­ford and a host of oth­ers promi­nent Afro-Trinida­di­ans. She al­so made men­tion of the dis­tinct­ly Afro-cen­tric faiths that make up the twin is­land's re­li­gious mo­sa­ic, and the con­tri­bu­tion of the com­mu­ni­ty to the unique is­land cui­sine.

Her ad­dress was fol­lowed by a his­tor­i­cal pre­sen­ta­tion by Mobu­tu Sek­ou, and a per­for­mance by Ifa priest, Ma­ha­ba Olufe­mi, whose riv­et­ting po­et­ry read­ing, against the back­drop of light drum­ming, set the tone for an ex­plo­sive cul­tur­al fan­fare. The event al­so fea­tured dancer Lichelle Joseph, and a com­pelling drum­ming ex­hi­bi­tion by Earl Noel and friends. The evening event was well at­tend­ed and at­tract­ed lead­ers of the In­do-Trinida­di­an com­mu­ni­ty, in­clud­ing Imam Ahmed Ali, Gopaul Lall of the East In­di­an Mu­si­cal Acad­e­my, and Deep­ak Ra­man of the Arya Spir­i­tu­al Cen­tre. Black His­to­ry Month which be­gan in 1976, cel­e­brates the ac­com­plish­ments of the African Di­as­po­ra and is pop­u­lar in the Unit­ed States, the Unit­ed King­dom, and Cana­da. Con­sul Gen­er­al Nan Rudrawa­tee pledged its year­ly ob­ser­vance at the Con­sulate. "We on­ly test­ed the wa­ters," she said, re­fer­ring to the in­au­gur­al event, "but by the look of things, we may have to get a big­ger venue next year."

Dr Glenville Ash­by

New York cor­re­spon­dent


Related articles

Sponsored

Weather

PORT OF SPAIN WEATHER

Sponsored