Author, playwright, politician and journalist Lennox Raphael (no relation) is cautioning politicians that Trinidad and Tobago as a society runs the risk of being turned into a pillar of salt if we continue referring to the past for our present-day challenges. Raphael, who lives in Denmark, in taking a critical look at the country's politics, is confident that we will emerge successfully out of our present challenges, but warns that we must stop playing the blame game and unite for the sake of the country.
Mr Raphael, about ten years ago when we were sharing a meal you ate a large hot pepper without even once muttering "Ouch." Are you still a pepper connoisseur?
(Having breakfast at the Hotel Normandie, in St Ann's, Wednesday, with a reminiscing smile) Oh yeah. But you see, there is a way of eating pepper: you mustn't eat the seeds, just eat around them. It is the art of eating, in general (a mischievous chuckle).
If my memory serves me right you consumed the entire thing. I don't recall you throwing away any of it.
That was a weak pepper (loud laughter).
Ok, bro. You are returning to Denmark, where you now live with your family, in a few hours. What brought you back home this time around?
(Well attired in tuxedo, with black bow tie) Well, I wanted to bring my family here-Papaya (daughter) and Helga (wife). They love Trinidad and Tobago very much and I got tired of making excuses for not bringing them to my native land as often as they would like. Presently I am working on a very long novel called Naipaul and I have been wrestling with it for some time now.
You are quite a colourful...well, I wouldn't say character, but rather, gentleman: you are a playwright, author, politician and former journalist at the Guardian. Which of these vocations excited you the most?
I started to work at the Guardian on January 2, 1958, the same year with Gerry Samuel, Frank Arlen and June Cartar. What I feel most comfortable with-it is the art of writing, creating, discovering and excavating a whole new way of looking at things...challenges and opportunities in terms of language.
Has local journalism appreciated or depreciated over those years?
It hasn't depreciated; I find it is very lively, and you cannot blame the press for anything, because the press merely reflects and illustrates what is happening in the society. We have a very vigorous press and we need all sections of the news media, because they are integral in any democracy.
What have you been doing in Demark?
I do a lot of writing and lecturing, which involves travelling, and for instance I went to Birmingham, where I met a fellow Trinbagonian, Roi Kwabeena, who was the Poet Laureate of Birmingham. Unfortunately he has passed on, but he was a fantastic individual who did a lot for so many people out there.
Let's look at your political side. In 1981 you were the Organization for National Reconstruction (ONR) candidate for Port-of-Spain East.
Yes. Lamentably we lost that election...
You also lost your house, which housed your theatre, on the morning of that election.
Yes. I had returned home, built the theatre in Belmont and it was destroyed by fire. It was pretty sad, but I continued in politics and in '82, I became a member of the ONR executive and the party was the start of new politics. If we had been accepted in 1981, I think things would have been different in Trinidad and Tobago today. We missed out at a very crucial point in the turning around of the society into a new kind of emotional, mental direction.
No doubt you have been keeping up with events at home through the social media. How would you rate the performance of the PP administration?
Before answering your substantive question, Clevon: after the PNM lost for the first time the popular vote in the 1983 local government election, the ONR started creating the A Accommodation and creating contact teams, trying to deepen the coalition process, which I was a part of. These groups included Winston Dookeran, Kelvin Ramnath, Karl Hudson-Phillips and ANR Robinson.
Did you meet any of these guys-of course with the exception of Ramnath, who recently passed on-during your current trip?
Yeah, I met Mr Robinson last Friday, where we had a lovely and animated conversation and he is fine. I think there is a bit of exaggeration in his being hospitalised. I even read him three poems. And then I became member of the NAR executive again with Karl, Dookeran, Robinson and Kamla Persad-Bissessar-who I know very well and like her very much.
Ready to answer the substantive question?
Yeah. Yeah. I have been following the situation and have been briefed in many ways and the Government by and large is doing excellent.
Excellent?
Yes.
You know PP detractors would berate you for saying that...that you are not living here so you don't know what is going on in TT?
Well (intense expression), well, the PNM is doing well also....
In what way?
The party is carrying out the functions of an opposition, as in any democratic state, and is fulfilling its responsibility as an opposition.
In a responsible manner?
Yes. I mean when you are in opposition you oppose creatively and politically because you are actually lobbying against the government, and they cannot applaud the good deeds of the government.
Aren't you being politically correct in praising the performance of the loyal opposition party, when its detractors are saying the complete opposite?
I think the PNM has to be applauded for the fact they have recovered from the excesses of Patrick Manning-and they need to do a lot more.
How is this recovery being manifested?
I mean the PNM is not in government so they don't have the means of directly lobbying the citizenry, in terms of material goods, and the party has done a lot of good for Trinidad and Tobago. It has also been involved in things which were not proper in terms of governance and attitude.
Mr Raphael, if a general election is called tomorrow, would you support the PNM?
I wouldn't say that and, I don't want to be too judgmenta,l but in Trinidad and Tobago we have to appreciate those who come forward to serve (frowning) and there is too much of you know....too much blaming or casting stones, too little appreciation of those who are involved in public life. We do have a rich future, but we have to stop blaming each other and let us build the nation together. We keep looking back, and while looking back, the entire society is in danger of turning into a pillar of salt.
Are you saying, Mr Raphael, that we should not look back at the past performance of the PNM, and I am sure you have heard the maxim that if a people who don't their history they are domed to...
(A sharply dismissive tone) That is a waste of time, Clevon, to criticise the past. The past is dead. And that maxim you referred to is a stupid one. It's a stupid maxim. Human nature is beyond maxims, Clevon. (Sipping black coffee the sum total of his breakfast.) These are ill-serving maxims, and history is no judge of human character.
So the PP is being wrong when they remind citizens of the political misadventures of the PNM, especially the Manning administrations?
(Wringing his palms between his legs) A lot of that has been done and is being done, but as time goes on, less of that should be done, because it is all a waste of time. People are not stupid. They know what happened and what is happening. The government should spend much time as possible creating new programmes, doing new things and fulfilling its manifesto.
While this is being done, Government is severely criticised by the opposition and is it that they should simply roll over and say or do nothing by way of rebuttal?
By its works the public will know the Government; by its work, not by its words. So the Government right now has the opportunity to go out there to reconfigure and restructure. What I am also saying it is the opposition's duty to distract the Government, and it is Government's corresponding obligation not to fall for the distractions..that is the nature of politics.
The nature of the beast?
(With a poker face, which preceded loud laugher) The beast and the angel.
Mr Raphael if fate willed it, would you be interested in contesting a general election in TT?
Of course. Of course. I can see it happening.
Which party?
Whether PNM or the PP, it really doesn't matter to me, because you know I have been away for 20 years, and I have spent many years fighting the PNM, but I started in politics with the PNM.
What? You were a PNMite? So many years we have been close friends-soul brothers-and I never knew this?
When I was 17 years old I was the secretary of the party group in Kelly Village, Caroni, and the last PNM convention I went to was at SWWTU in Port-of-Spain. But you know you cannot bury the PNM, the PNM is part of the life of Trinidad and Tobago. Neither can you bury the UNC or Basdeo Panday.
It has been said by its critics that the PNM has lost its moorings, that it has moved away from certain sections of the national community.
Well, once you aware of losing your moorings, it is a wonderful opportunity to change, and every challenge is an opportunity, so the future would take care of those things. And I don't think the PP has lost its moorings. I like Kamla very much-who I consider a friend-and I think the state of mind of the population appears to me to be creatively confused.
Is that a good thing or a bad thing?
It is part of the growing-up process, and because we are a very young country I am extremely confident we will come out of whatever problems we may be going through at this time. But as I said, we have to stop playing the blame game and unite for the betterment of all our citizens.