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.

Wednesday, May 7, 2025

Drama at first consultation on statues, monuments

by

Carisa Lee
251 days ago
20240829

There was dra­ma at the first pub­lic con­sul­ta­tion on the place­ment of stat­ues, mon­u­ments and oth­er his­tor­i­cal sig­nage yes­ter­day, af­ter one mem­ber of the au­di­ence used a phrase deemed to be of­fen­sive by some in the au­di­ence.

Not even half an hour had passed dur­ing the con­sul­ta­tion at the Gov­ern­ment Cam­pus Plaza, Port-of-Spain, be­fore a dis­rup­tion oc­curred.

The in­ci­dent played out af­ter the view of Za­kiya Uzoma-Wada­da, of the Eman­ci­pa­tion Sup­port Com­mit­tee, was shut down by an­oth­er mem­ber of the au­di­ence, Frank Fer­ri­er.

Uzoma-Wada­da had called for a change of stat­ues, mon­u­ments and oth­er his­tor­i­cal sig­nage to peo­ple of im­por­tance to Trin­bag­o­ni­ans.

“Who are im­por­tant to us, whom do we want to see in our spaces, who do we want our chil­dren to feel proud about and it can­not be Pic­ton, it can­not be Christo­pher Colum­bus,” Uzoma-Wada­da said.

Dur­ing her con­tri­bu­tion, how­ev­er, Fer­ri­er in­ter­rupt­ed, say­ing, “I dis­agree with you...you are ram­bling.”

He was told to wait his turn to con­tribute by the mod­er­a­tor Dike Ros­tant.

He did not, how­ev­er, and as Uzoma-Wada­da called for the re­nam­ing of Ox­ford Street to Kwame Ture Street, Fer­ri­er ex­claimed, “Well go back to Africa then.”

This com­ment did not sit well with the oth­er groups in the au­di­ence, who called for him to be “put out of the ses­sion.”

“Mr chair­man, he asked her to go back to Africa, at this time I think that is a lit­tle bit be­yond re­pair,” ac­tivist Shaba­ka Kam­bon said.

“Put him out,” po­et and cul­tur­al ac­tivist Ein­tou Pearl Springer shout­ed.

But Fer­ri­er did not stop there and dur­ing his con­tri­bu­tion, scold­ed the pan­el and au­di­ence for what he be­lieved was their one-sided view of his­to­ry.

He ques­tioned why Trin­bag­o­ni­ans would want to make Stoke­ly Carmichael, al­so known as Kwame Ture, a hero.

“A hero, re­al­ly, re­al­ly, I said no you can’t make that man a hero...Er­ic Williams must be turn­ing in his grave to see what you all could do to de­stroy Trinidad and To­ba­go,” Fer­ri­er said.

In 1969, when Carmichael burst on­to the scene in the Unit­ed States as a Black Pow­er leader, the gov­ern­ment of Trinidad and To­ba­go im­posed a ban on him pre­vent­ing him from re­turn­ing to this coun­try.

Fer­ri­er al­so chal­lenged the his­to­ry of the First Peo­ples present, say­ing “they com­mit­ted mur­der, you are a mur­der­ous gang of peo­ple.”

He de­scribed Colum­bus as an or­di­nary in­di­vid­ual and added that if the goal/in­ten­tion was to re­move the stat­ue of Colum­bus then he felt "sor­ry for T&T."

“You will find this coun­try will be a liv­ing hell soon­er than lat­er,” he warned.

Apart from Fer­ri­er, the con­tri­bu­tions of the oth­ers present were sim­i­lar, with all find­ing com­mon ground in the fact that the stat­ues, mon­u­ments and oth­er his­tor­i­cal sig­nage which ex­ist do not rep­re­sent this coun­try.

How­ev­er, the Grand Chief of the First Peo­ples, Er­ic Lewis, called for the re­nam­ing of the cap­i­tal Port-of-Spain.

“There is no rea­son un­der the sun that the city that our an­ces­tors in­hab­it­ed should be called Port-of-Spain,” he stat­ed.

Lewis al­so asked for the First Peo­ples com­mu­ni­ty to be added to the cal­en­dar of hol­i­days and for Wood­ford Square to be re­named.

Wendy Sealy, of the Wood­brook Com­mu­ni­ty Com­mit­tee, said 16 of the 38 streets in the dis­trict were named af­ter British gen­er­als. These street names in­clude Kitch­en­er and Baden-Pow­ell.

Artist Rubadiri Vic­tor mean­while said he be­lieves T&T has pro­duced enough no­table peo­ple who have done ex­cep­tion­al in­ter­na­tion­al work who can re­place the cur­rent stat­ues, mon­u­ments, and sig­nage.

Merikin de­scen­dant Abeo Jack­son said she agreed with the re­nam­ing and re­mov­ing of stat­ues, but asked the pan­el where this ex­er­cise was fit­ting in a wider con­ver­sa­tion.

She asked if there would be a na­tion­al dri­ve for re-ed­u­ca­tion, through the for­malised ed­u­ca­tion sys­tem and this coun­try’s cre­ative and cul­tur­al forms.

“Priv­i­lege might be the loud­est in the room at times but loud tru­ly doesn’t nec­es­sar­i­ly mean eq­ui­table or just,” she said.

While the re­nam­ing and re­moval of stat­ues and mon­u­ments were the pop­u­lar views at the con­sul­ta­tion, Jack­son did not agree with the call to put the stat­ues in a mu­se­um.

“I am a lit­tle less pre­cious about putting them in mu­se­ums, I feel rapists and mur­der­ers and de­stroy­ers of peo­ples and civil­i­sa­tions de­serve no space, but that is me,” she said.

On Ju­ly 21, 2022, the Cab­i­net agreed to the ap­point­ment of a com­mit­tee to re­view and re­port on the place­ment of stat­ues, mon­u­ments and oth­er his­tor­i­cal sig­nage and recog­ni­tion in Trinidad and To­ba­go by De­cem­ber 31.

The com­mit­tee in­cludes chair Emeri­ta Pro­fes­sor Brid­get Br­ere­ton, Dr East­lyn McKen­zie, Zai­da Ra­j­nauth, Chief Ri­car­do Bharath-Her­nan­dez, Lawrence Ar­joon and Kobe Sandy.

The com­mit­tee said they have al­ready spo­ken to 43 stake­hold­er groups and the sug­ges­tions from the pub­lic will be put in­to rec­om­men­da­tions and pre­sent­ed to the Prime Min­is­ter.


Related articles

Sponsored

Weather

PORT OF SPAIN WEATHER

Sponsored