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Friday, May 2, 2025

Our survival project

by

Wesley Gibbings
304 days ago
20240703
Wesley Gibbings

Wesley Gibbings

In case we were ever in­clined to for­get, Hur­ri­cane Beryl an­nounced the dra­mat­ic start of a pre­dictable, an­nu­al scram­ble for Caribbean sur­vival much ear­li­er than has been record­ed in an ex­cep­tion­al­ly long time. This di­min­ish­es (or per­haps re­in­forces), through im­me­di­a­cy, the broad­er metaphor of frag­ile so­cio-eco­nom­ic per­sis­tence be­cause at stake are lives, liveli­hoods, and oth­er as­sets that as­sure vi­a­bil­i­ty in the face of ex­treme vul­ner­a­bil­i­ty.

Time to painful­ly re­call the ad­mo­ni­tion of a young Kit­tit­ian stu­dent in Ja­maica, an­gri­ly moved by my sug­ges­tion that there ob­jec­tive­ly ex­ists no re­al rea­son why some coun­tries of our re­gion con­sid­er them­selves suf­fi­cient­ly im­preg­nable to de­clare a no­tion of sov­er­eign­ty. Every sin­gle year, you see, we are con­front­ed by the threat of dev­as­ta­tion and the need to re­build ahead of an­oth­er in­ter­minable round of po­ten­tial de­struc­tion. In some in­stances, else­where, hu­man con­duct in the form of vi­o­lence and po­lit­i­cal in­sta­bil­i­ty ex­ists as ul­ti­mate­ly man­age­able traits. We can end wars, in­ter­vene in con­flicts, stand in sol­i­dar­i­ty against atroc­i­ties, and help bring per­pe­tra­tors to jus­tice, even across bor­ders. We can learn to ne­go­ti­ate, un­der­stand each oth­er bet­ter, and pun­ish those who thrive on vi­o­lence and dis­rup­tion.

How­ev­er hope­less it may cur­rent­ly ap­pear, the plights of Pales­tini­ans, the Su­danese, and Ro­hingya, there have been paths traced by Rwan­da, Cam­bo­dia, and Bosnia that in­di­cat­ed res­o­lu­tions … of sorts. There are al­so episod­ic nat­u­ral­ly oc­cur­ring events that de­fy pre­cise pre­dic­tion, and we know some of them well right here: earth­quakes and vol­canic erup­tions.

Short­ly be­fore mid­night Sun­day, there was a mag­ni­tude 3.7 earth­quake off Trinidad’s north­west tip bare­ly no­ticed as we scoured on­line re­sources for word on Beryl. In St Vin­cent, the folks of the vil­lage of Fan­cy, who faced vol­canic ash in 2021, now feared surg­ing tides as the winds and rain raged. Yet here we are, as usu­al, as ex­pect­ed, as of­fi­cial­ly de­clared, in “hur­ri­cane sea­son.” It flows from our tongues in the midst of crick­et com­men­tary, de­fi­ant fetes, and po­lit­i­cal ex­changes. Over the week­end, a long-re­lo­cat­ed rel­a­tive quipped about T&T and hur­ri­canes that “they threat­en but al­ways avoid,” as if to sug­gest that avoid­ance re­duces di­rect and in­di­rect vic­tim­i­sa­tion and in­volve­ment. Dev­as­ta­tion in Car­ri­a­cou is our is­sue in T&T, in the same way a vol­canic erup­tion in St Vin­cent clear­ly was, and so will any num­ber of weath­er events yet un­leashed off the west coast of Africa, wher­ev­er they land in our neigh­bour­hood … or right here. The state­ment ought to al­so in­voke an im­pli­ca­tion of col­lec­tive re­spon­si­bil­i­ty–the stuff of which the re­gion­al sur­vival project, aka “Cari­com”, was meant to ad­dress.

What, there­fore, is there to sug­gest the cen­tral­i­ty of this ques­tion in our for­mal process­es? Ac­knowl­edge­ment of the grow­ing cli­mate cri­sis has helped close some ranks. The fact that while we oc­cu­py dif­fer­ent ves­sels, we sail on the same ocean or that, in many re­spects, we share cab­in space on a small, brit­tle ves­sel ne­go­ti­at­ing hos­tile waves. We can ori­ent the nar­ra­tive in dif­fer­ent di­rec­tions, but it al­most al­ways de­scribes sus­cep­ti­bil­i­ty to ex­treme out­comes.

How, in the face of this, there­fore, is a psy­chol­o­gy of “in­vin­ci­bil­i­ty”–as pre­scribed by my friend and col­league, Tony Fras­er, with re­spect to crick­et–a re­al­is­tic pos­si­bil­i­ty; and not sim­ply self-delu­sion of the high­est or­der? This is not to dis­miss the prospects for con­fi­dence and self-be­lief–for which we are well known in se­lect ar­eas of pub­lic life–but to ac­knowl­edge some stark re­al­i­ties in­clud­ing our de­fi­cien­cies.

And here, in my view, is where the skills of adap­ta­tion, change, and mit­i­ga­tion of risks are left to be de­vel­oped and honed. The sug­ges­tion that per­ils “threat­en but al­ways avoid” T&T may fur­ther weak­en the de­ter­mi­na­tion we em­ploy to en­gage our own sur­vival project and the wider re­gion­al res­cue. Maybe Beryl has opened an op­por­tu­ni­ty to re­for­mu­late the Cari­com agen­da, not by sup­plant­i­ng ex­ist­ing ar­eas of con­cern but by at­tach­ing stronger aware­ness of their sur­vival im­pli­ca­tions. We have sev­er­al months left in this long sea­son, and next year it will re­turn. We can­not, as is­land and coastal states, re­lo­cate.

The sci­en­tists say that at the cur­rent rate, things will wors­en. When the post­poned Cari­com Heads of Gov­ern­ment Meet­ing, ini­tial­ly due this week in Grena­da, even­tu­al­ly con­venes, it might be use­ful to en­sure this com­mon thread of re­spon­si­bil­i­ty to our­selves is in­sert­ed. The agen­da needs to re­flect such ur­gency through all is­sues re­quir­ing thought and ac­tion, and 12 months a year.


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