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.

Thursday, March 27, 2025

Mayaro residents take historic building in hand

by

20121010

At least two com­mu­ni­ties have com­mit­ted to tak­ing charge of their her­itage el­e­ments fol­low­ing the in­au­gur­al LiT­Tour-Jour­neys Through the Land­scapes of Fic­tion from Trinidad and To­ba­go-last week. The Ma­yaro His­tor­i­cal So­ci­ety has com­mit­ted to take ac­tions for com­plet­ing ren­o­va­tions of the his­toric old Ma­yaro Post Of­fice, in­clud­ing set­ting up a restora­tion fund, "rather than sit and wait" as they have been for some eight years, for some oth­er body to re­pair the build­ing.

This break­through fol­lows a meet­ing with par­tic­i­pants in the in­au­gur­al LiT­Tour, led by au­thor Kris Ram­per­sad, who of­fered sug­ges­tions on how the com­mu­ni­ty could move for­ward to re­alise plans for the build­ing while en­gag­ing with oth­er bod­ies and au­thor­i­ties in the ef­fort.

The build­ing is iden­ti­fied as part of the lit­er­ary her­itage of the is­land in Ram­per­sad's book LiTTscapes-Land­scapes of Fic­tion from Trinidad and To­ba­go and else­where. "We have re­ceived some sound ideas from this vis­it and are ready to move for­ward," said lo­cal his­to­ri­an and au­thor, Michael An­tho­ny, who ac­com­pa­nied the tour and has been cham­pi­oning restora­tion of the build­ing for the last 30 years.

Ram­per­sad ex­plained that Ma­yaro be­came the des­ti­na­tion of the LiT­Tour to demon­strate how such his­toric her­itage el­e­ments can be put to use, stim­u­late eco­nom­ic ac­tiv­i­ty and gen­er­ate in­come for the dis­trict, while con­tribut­ing to the up­keep of the build­ings. The old post of­fice is fea­tured as an im­por­tant lit­er­ary house as the set­tings of many of An­tho­ny's sto­ries in LiTTscapes. LiT­Tours are be­ing con­duct­ed in col­lab­o­ra­tion with the Pub­lic Trans­port Ser­vice Cor­po­ra­tion's Know Your Coun­try Tours.

Dur­ing the LiT­Tour, which in­clud­ed read­ings from works like San­dra Street, Green Days by the Riv­er and A Year in San Fer­nan­do, An­tho­ny al­so gave in­sights in­to the Ma­yaro set­tings of his sto­ries and lit­er­ary char­ac­ters. Mean­while, San­gre Grande was al­so a PiTTstop for par­tic­i­pants in the in­au­gur­al LiT­Tour.

Chair­man of the San­gre Grande Re­gion­al Cor­po­ra­tion Kesh­war Ma­haraj wel­comed the LiT­Tour and an­nounced plans to re­store the for­mer San­gre Grande Post of­fice to serve as a mu­se­um of the his­to­ry of San­gre Grande. The old Grande Post Of­fice is al­so fea­tured as one of the dis­trict's sig­nif­i­cant his­toric her­itage build­ings in LiTTscapes. He al­so an­nounced plans for a lit­er­ary her­itage ac­tiv­i­ty cen­tre with­in the cor­po­ra­tion's new ad­min­is­tra­tive cen­tre.

In San­gre Grande, lo­cal scouts read se­lec­tions from LiTTscapes and the nov­el Be­tween Two Sea­sons by painter/au­thor James Isa­iah Bood­hoo's.

Oth­er par­tic­i­pants in the LiT­Tour in­clud­ed renowned sketch artist An­tho­ny Tim­o­thy who sketched as­pects of the jour­ney, head of the Min­istry of Work's His­tor­i­cal Restora­tion Unit, Rawle Mitchell; Gia Gas­pard Tay­lor of the Rur­al Women's Net­work; con­ser­va­tion­ist jour­nal­ist Heather Dawn Her­rera among oth­ers.

Cus­tomised and oth­er LiT­Tours are avail­able through re­quests to lol­leaves@gmail.com or 377-0326. LiTTscapes is avail­able at lo­cal book­shops and de­tails through www.kris-ram­per


Related articles

Sponsored

Weather

PORT OF SPAIN WEATHER

Sponsored