The history of countries is often written exclusively about kings and queens, prime ministers, extraordinary contributors such as sportsmen and women, and outstanding acts of bravery and chivalry. Martin Terry Rondon, the late former chairman of the Sangre Grande Regional Corporation, which also has responsibility for Toco, displayed in his time diligence and commitment to the representation of an extraordinary kind.
In a previous period, the people of those country areas would have been considered to be living “behind God back”.
In his 27 years as a representative and chairman of the regional corporation, Mr Rondon found living space for poor people; he determined ways and means to assist his burgesses to regain their balance and to rebuild their homes and lives after one disaster or the other.
In his time in the corporation, he was the voice and the action man of ordinary people who needed assistance from the State; single women with a “string band” of children to feed, clothe and educate could depend on representative Rondon to find a way to assist them.
In all of the above and more, it did not matter to this man who was ordinarily devoted to his party, the People’s National Movement, whether those seeking his assistance voted for him, or whether they were supporters of the party he belonged to; if they lived in the geographic of the Toco/Sangre Grande area, that was all that mattered for him to somehow find foodstuff, water, dry mattresses, and school books for children.
In doing all of the above and more, it was never reported that Martin Terry Rondon was rude, uncaring, abusive or disrespectful to those who sought his assistance. Because of his sterling work in the Sangre Grande/Toco area, when his party seemed in trouble in national elections, there were voices raised in favour of Rondon becoming the candidate.
Ultimately though, this man of conscience, understanding and caring about the needs of people, was not removed from the ground floor and installed at the level of the national Parliament. His personality would not have fitted into that role; he was not the typical talk, talk, talk politician; he was a man out in the field seeking always to advance the condition of people on the ground; Mr Rondon would have been hamstrung by being consistently decked off in parliamentary garb; more than that, being in the legislative chamber meant that he was not in the field looking after the practical needs of people.
Details of Mr Rondon’s work as a representative of people at the local government level ought to be researched and made known in a permanent form. Such a project of the selfless work that representative/chairman Rondon did for people in communities can lay down a model for representative politics.
To the family of Martin Terry Rondon, who willingly served his people way up North in the country districts of Sangre Grande and Toco, the thanks of the people resound. And this is in a political environment when the most frequently heard complaint of burgesses and constituents is that they do not see their elected ones outside of an election season.
Martin Terry Rondon lived amongst his constituents and was at their service whenever needed.