Throughout his career, spanning more than half a century, the outstanding Guyanese, Caribbean and international political journalist known as Rickey Singh has had five great loves, prioritised in this way: his God, his family, his country, his work, his friends.
No influence … ethnic, national, political, cultural, regional or international ... was ever strong enough to distress these essentials in his very active life, many elements of which have never really come to public attention, although everywhere he worked or went ... in Guyana, in T&T, in Barbados, in the United Kingdom, in the United States of America, his skill and courage brought him admiration from the public, but also into conflict with officialdom, many of whom tended to feel that being in public office accorded them the right to do as they damn well please. So, heaven help those who dared to present them with a challenge, as Rickey Singh so often did.
In Guyana, he dared and challenged Forbes Burnham, the country’s first executive president, who must have breathed a sigh of relief when Singh left with his family to work in T&T as editor of “Caribbean Contact”, the official newspaper of the Caribbean Conference of Churches (CCC).
However, in time the Government there could not tolerate his delving into matters they did not wish ventilated and withdrew his work permit, which had been issued on application by the church organisation.
It was to Barbados he came with wife, Patricia “Dolly” Singh (an Afro-Guyanese), and their six children, and he proceeded to, as with T&T, produce a quality of “Caribbean Contact” that excelled in local publications with its in-depth reports and analyses about the critical domestic and regional issues that deserved serious examination and exposure.
The crux for him in Barbados came when he “crossed swords” with then prime minister John Michael Geoffrey Manningham “Tom” Adams over the United States invasion of Grenada in 1983 to topple the communist administration of Prime Minister Maurice Bishop.
The Barbados administration withdrew Singh’s work permit, but generously ignored the fact that his wife and children remained resident on the island. Singh devised a means of somewhat neutering the Government’s action against him, though it proved a financial strain.
He left Barbados when first put out, but shortly afterwards returned as a tourist, spent the time given by Immigration, but only to return shortly, to vacation for a while … and that strategy kept the Singh family together.
My presumption at the time was that the Government must have perceived what was happening, but decided to wink at it, lest any further action to keep Singh out incited international criticism against Barbados.
Rickey Singh, 82, today (February 1, 2019), knows that he has much for which to thank God, principally, his life, for as a 17-year-old office boy in the Editorial Department of the “Chronicle” newspaper on Main Street, Georgetown, he and another young employee were accidentally poisoned when they poured out and drank from what they thought was a bottle of iced water but was a chemical stored by the Photographic Department for developing photographs to be submitted to the Editorial Department.
They were rushed to hospital and admitted. The other youth died.
Even before then, death had prowled within the home and he lost his mother while still a child. He was raised by his sister Betia, who married at just 15. Later, elder brother Richard, who had advanced to a good position at Sandbach Parker & Co in Water Street, Georgetown, became stand-in parent, guided his education and social activities and was a close confidante during his long career.
Rickey Singh developed almost into a legend in Guyana, and his voracious reading and knowledge accumulation skills led to a wide array of friends, acquaintances and informants in very high places. When I first saw his roster of confidential contacts throughout Guyana and the entire English-speaking Caribbean I was flabbergasted ... the very highest levels in politics, business and commerce, police and defence forces, culture and the arts, education, sports everywhere.
Rickey Singh maintained close relationships with writers and artists … among the closest being Martin Carter, George Lamming, Wilson Harris, Derek Walcott, Edgar Mittelholzer, Vidya Naipaul, Dennis Williams, and so many others in the Region and further afield. His associations and the quality of his work earned him an honorary doctorate from the University of the West Indies. Those who knew him best trusted his professionalism and honesty.
For one who has known him better than most, I would say just about everybody admired the person and professional journalist he is–certainly not a conservative, but far too disciplined and religious to be communist.
Once when he accompanied me to No 40 Village on the West Coast of Berbice in Guyana to visit some of my relatives, an old man who had long been a great fan of his writings and radio broadcasts shook his hand with great enthusiasm and in classic rural style (like the Bajan “Speechifyers”) said out loud “Superfine introductions to you Mr Singh.”
Many people throughout the Caribbean, and especially in the US State Department, considered Rickey Singh a Communist, for they feared his courage, his knowledge, his work, his passion, his capacity for eliciting crucial information, and his remarkable gift of speech, without knowing the man outside of his journalistic endeavours.
I might also add his disarming personality, for few in the profession laugh as naturally as he. Some US diplomats being posted to the Embassy in Guyana with a distressing dossier on Rickey Singh came to ask after getting to know the man “What are they talking about?” as one remarked to me in Georgetown.
‘Exciting and dangerous encounters’
His moderate radicalism and expansive knowledge and warm personality attracted into his circle of friends and adherents bright and ambitious youngsters who were to flower into leadership positions in the Caribbean. They supped at the table of Rickey Singh’s enthusiasm, knowledge and political savvy, and some later ascended to prominence.
Among them can be counted Dr Compton Bourne, who as a youth I saw coming frequently into the Graphic’s Editorial Department to consult Singh as he researched for his first degree. Dr Ralph Gonsalves, Ms Gail Teixeira, Dr Kenny Anthony and many others now prominent were attracted toward the friendship and political guidance of this enthusiastic, bright young reporter from Guyana.
Young intellectuals and political initiates found value in his company when they were going through the critical and exciting stages of their upper teens. Many have maintained a steadfast friendship over the years, with their locations extending from Cuba, Jamaica, Leeward Islands, Windward Islands, T&T, Barbados, Guyana and Suriname.
Indisputably, during the latter half of the 20th Century, a goodly number of other aspiring young politicians sought out Rickey Singh, a journalistic legend in his lifetime, for counsel and guidance.
He gave much and inspired many others, but also received in return. I remember his friend Clive Thomas coming nightly into the Editorial Department of the Guyana Graphic when most other staff members had gone to tutor Singh in preparation for the A-Level examinations.
As to his less-known religious commitments, many parishioners within the Pentecostal Church, of which he is still a very active member, know him as a strong believer and a very dynamic preacher whose leadership has taken many followers onto the path of God.
He preached. He taught Sunday School. And at one stage he left Georgetown, the Guyana capital, weekly to go into the rural areas to preach at bottom-house services, to the dispossessed and those who might have felt they had no appropriate clothing for attending a formal service in a traditional church building.
There is today a senior priest at a major church in Georgetown who at times recounts to his congregation the very influential role he said Rickey Singh played in his life and religious development.
For years he had attended the church and Sunday School classes conducted by Singh. Then one Sunday, amid the class, teacher Singh called to him by name and said “You no longer have need of these classes. You are ready. Go forth and spread the Word.”
And thus he began. Now he is a highly qualified and influential religious leader in Georgetown, connected to one of that city’s largest religious congregations.
Once on an official visit to the USA on invitation from the State Department, Singh was taken by a host officer to attend a Sunday morning service at a large church in Washington. As an official guest from the then colony of British Guiana, South America, he was asked to address the congregation.
He delivered a fiery short sermon focusing on their finery, their values, their concept of God and religion, their sincerity, and their evident lack of compassion for the poor; and compared what he was seeing with the dispossessed, ill-clad but sincere and deeply religious flock to whom he preached weekly in villages under “bottom houses”. They rendered their hearts, not flaunted their wealth and garments.
The priest later informed Singh that he had been told afterwards by a State Department official “You should never have allowed that young man to speak.”
On Singh’s return home, the shock of his in-church performance had preceded him and he was summoned (or “invited”) to Government House by the then British Governor who expressed his disquiet over the reports out of Washington and remarked that in the US capital, Singh had by his actions bitten the hand that had fed him.
When Singh first went to the USA, even the Americans at the then Consulate in Georgetown did not know, though he did not deliberately seek to deceive them.
He had applied for his first passport, but the local immigration officials presented a barrier, insisting that the passport could only be issued in the name on his birth certificate: just “RAMOUTAR”… some Hindus say that means a god on earth. He used that passport for early travels, but after some time there was a formal change and a new passport issued in the name by which he is known.
Well ahead of the prominence of celebrated Evangelist Billy Graham (deceased at 99), another great American crusader of Pentecostalism (Revival Time), the Rev Charles Morse Ward (1909-1996) had for months spoken in his international religious broadcasts of the remarkable young man he had met in South America–Rickey Singh, who he said had a gift for preaching. He was captivated by the religious knowledge, fervour, style and dynamism of the 5’ 4” young East Indian Christian who impressed greatly wherever he did his part-time preaching.
It was therefore natural that in addition to his very active schedule in journalism (at the time for the “Guyana Graphic”, then the country’s leading Sunday and Daily newspapers) he maintained a very hectic religious programme within the church walls and in villages around the countryside.
In the darkest days of Guyana’s ethnic split when Africans and Indians were killing each other and marauders with guns and cutlasses murdered innocents and caused the segregation of mixed communities along the Atlantic Coast and up the many large rivers, Rickey Singh and colleague journalists, including me, had to face the music, protect our own lives, defend our colleagues and get the story and action photographs.
There were so many, many incidents of daring, at times death-defying action, on occasion rescuing innocent people from known terrorists, some of whom later rose to prominent positions in the state. But that is life.
One day there was even a radio report that Rickey Singh’s body had been found floating in a canal in Albouystown, a ward in southwestern Georgetown. His wife collapsed into hysterics. Later we were all in the home with doors locked when someone rapped. As the door was opened from the inside, Mrs Singh burst into tears of joy, for, unbelievably, her husband was standing there uninjured, and we later understood that the killer had sought Singh but misidentified the victim.
As we pursued our work, there were many situations in which we came under direct threat, with one of the most memorable incidents being on Middle Street, Georgetown.
Singh and his wife, and me and my wife, had just left a night-time political meeting at the Parade Ground in Middle Street when a gang of Black youths attacked us shouting “Kill the coolie, and the coolie-lovers.”
That was a very dangerous situation for us, with nowhere to run. We had nothing in our hands and there was no place to hide. Just like that, the heart starts pumping in fear. Then out of … it seemed … nowhere came a commanding voice, a God-send, saying “Who is that? Hubert??? Rickey??? Back off boys … back off … Don’t touch them.”
It was one of the leaders of the People’s National Congress hit squad, known as “Bonny Limpy”, who walked with a “hop and a drop” from an injury early in life.
We had been in “Lil ABC” Class together at “Miss Friday School”–St Ambrose Anglican School at Third and Light Streets, Alberttown, and for many years lived a few houses away from each other. He had been to me a principal informant about the activities under “PLAN X 13”, the terrorist manifesto of one of the political parties.
“Bonny Limpy” took my group out of the encirclement and accompanied us up to the intersection of Middle and East Streets before bidding us safely on our way.
Singh by himself has had many exciting and dangerous encounters, the most memorable has to be that which occurred in the office of a then senior Cabinet minister.
As he later told it, he had gone to the office on Brickdam to trash out a matter and the argument became so heated that the minister, not able to cope with this bright and articulate journalist, slapped him in the face. Singh, though much smaller in physique, immediately sprang, grabbed the throat and had him gasping for breath when the armed security guard, who was at all times in the office, intervened and pulled him off his boss.
As I said at the time, Providence was on Singh’s side that day, as the guard could have shot him dead and claimed justification, for here was someone choking his boss in his boss’ office and there was no other witness but him to the initial slap to Singh’s face.
On numerous occasions during Guyana’s racial cleavage in the 1960s, we had faced danger together, almost always in the company of other colleagues.
At that time, the Guyana Graphic’s editorial policy was to cover all events and send out mixed teams of Blacks and Indians … In Black villages, the Black staff members would protect their Indian colleagues from attack, and in Indian villages, the Indian staff members would do the same. Only rarely did it not work and we had to run for our lives.
Once in Buxton Village, on the lower East Coast of Demerara, when an elderly couple (George and Elizabeth Stephenson) were murdered in the Backdam, we had a mixed team of six including driver Mr Adderley, a bespectacled Barbadian.
It seemed that the whole village had assembled on the eastern bank of the Middle Walk Canal to await the arrival of the boat bearing the two corpses. When it was sighted in the distance, a mournful wail began and grew louder as the boat got closer.
Then it became almost deafening, but not so loud that we could not hear the angry chant “Don’t let dem coolie get out of here” and they came towards our group with clear intent. We did not hesitate. All plunged into the vehicle, with the Bajan first in at the wheel.
Mr Adderley gunned the engine and the Graphic van lunged down the path at the approaching crowd which when they realised what was about to happen parted like the Red Sea and our team sped safely out of Buxton Village.
Singh and I can say much about those dark days when political madness by the three major parties (each had its terrorist squad) brought death and destruction to many areas, resulting in a separation of communities, the stain of which the country still bears.
In those testing times, it was critical to have the correct information, so senior journalists understood there were situations in which they had to give to get, without being considered an agent of state security.
In those days, Guyana was blessed with one of the cleverest ever chiefs of security, Henry Fraser, who used the code name “Uncle” and picked his team of officers with the utmost skill. He was later to become Commissioner of Police, and a few years ago died in the United States.
In the challenging environment of a virtual civil war, an excessively sensitive Government sought to dispense with those independent journalists they could not control.
In my case, having delinked from the increasingly government-influenced Graphic to work from my home as a Reuters Correspondent, the then Minister of Information unknown to me wrote to Reuters headquarters in London making complaints and requesting my dismissal. They not only refused but sent me copies of his letter and theirs in response.
In Singh’s case, the technique turned history on its head. Following a lengthy meeting at the Pegasus Hotel in Northwest Georgetown involving local representatives and officials from the British group which then owned the Graphic newspapers, a decision was taken to send Rickey Singh away from his country and family to England to work covering court cases for a provincial newspaper.
As I said at the time, it was a reversal of historical practice where those in disfavour or causing dissatisfaction to the powers-that-be were banished from England to the colonies. Now here was Rickey Singh being virtually banished from his ex-colony homeland and sent to the “Mother Country”.
He tolerated it for six months and then, unknown to everyone else but me, booked a flight and hightailed it back to Guyana. I received him at Timehri Airport, drove him to the Singhs’ residence, went up and rapped at the locked door, and was there to witness the absolute shock, then joy, as Dolly Singh saw her husband, then embraced him.
He was determined to raise his children as Caribbean people. In October of 1974, he took them to Trinidad, found a Pentecostal Church and with hard work and determination and the support of friends, educated his six children in the Caribbean school system entrenching a strong West Indian identity and keen sense of independence. His four girls went on to higher education and professional careers while the two sons completed high school, though later not always reflecting their parents’ values.
Singh strongly believes that the daily family prayers said around his bedside each morning and at mealtime over many years, will somehow serve its primary purpose, to have all his children live a God-centred life.
During his long career, he has been buttressed by his faith, stoically endured much, but there have been occasions when he cried like a child–for family matters close to his heart, one of those being the death of his beloved wife on April 8, 2015. He was also very devastated when his great friend Dr Walter Rodney was murdered in Georgetown on June 13, 1980.
But he continues to say he is blessed, prays at every meal, knows the myriad times that he barely escaped from tragedy, exults in the love of his children, the very many good friends he still has; and even at 82 as he battles declining health, finds resuscitation in his church, his children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren, it is more than likely that he will find the energy to produce a masterpiece on the life and times of “Ramoutar” Rickey Singh, the celebrated Guyanese journalist of the 20th Century … All he needs to do is search his files and reproduce.
Singh turned 87 on February 1.
This article was written by Hubert Williams, a former journalist and friend of Singh, in 2019.