Searchlight Logo
special_image

    • News
      • Front Page
      • News
      • Breaking News
      • Press Release
      • Features
      • Special Features
      • From the Courts
      • Sports
      • Regional / World
    • Opinions
      • Editorial
      • Our Readers’ Opinions
      • Bassy – Love Vine
      • Dr. Fraser- Point of View
      • R. Rose – Eye of the Needle
      • On Target
      • Dr Jozelle Miller
      • The World Around Us
      • Random Thoughts
    • Advice
      • Kitchen Corner
      • What’s on Fleek this week
      • Health Wise
      • Physician’s Weekly
      • Business Buzz
      • Hey Rosie!
      • Prime the pump
    • ePaper
    • Obituaries
      • In Memoriam / Acknowledgement
      • Tribute
    • Contact Us
      • Advertise With Us
      • Letters To The Editor
      • General Contact Information
      • Contact our Webmaster
    • About Us
      • Privacy Policy
      • Interactive Media Ltd
      • St. Vincent & the Grenadines
    • Subscribe
    • News
      • Front Page
      • News
      • Breaking News
      • Press Release
      • Features
      • Special Features
      • From the Courts
      • Sports
      • Regional / World
    • Opinions
      • Editorial
      • Our Readers’ Opinions
      • Bassy – Love Vine
      • Dr. Fraser- Point of View
      • R. Rose – Eye of the Needle
      • On Target
      • Dr Jozelle Miller
      • The World Around Us
      • Random Thoughts
    • Advice
      • Kitchen Corner
      • What’s on Fleek this week
      • Health Wise
      • Physician’s Weekly
      • Business Buzz
      • Hey Rosie!
      • Prime the pump
    • ePaper
    • Obituaries
      • In Memoriam / Acknowledgement
      • Tribute
    • Contact Us
      • Advertise With Us
      • Letters To The Editor
      • General Contact Information
      • Contact our Webmaster
    • About Us
      • Privacy Policy
      • Interactive Media Ltd
      • St. Vincent & the Grenadines
    • Subscribe
Groundings in remembrance of Walter Rodney
Walter Rodney
Dr. Fraser- Point of View
June 19, 2020

Groundings in remembrance of Walter Rodney

LAST SATURDAY, June 13, marked the 40th anniversary of the assassination of Walter Rodney. This year’s anniversary is a special one, coming in the midst of the Guyana elections recount and the protests in the US and throughout the world under the banner of Black Lives Matter. The irregularities, including the recounting, that have marred this year’s election are not new, they date back to the days of Forbes Burnham. I say this without a shadow of doubt, having once been asked in Canada to cast a vote for Burnham. Something has to be seriously done about the conduct of elections in the region. CARICOM should have been ideally suited to do so, but cannot, since many of its leaders stand accused in their own countries of electoral transgressions. But what is at stake in Guyana is the possibility of racial conflict arising from what was truly a farcical electoral process, the results of the March 2 election only now at the point of being finalised but not to the satisfaction of all.

How does Rodney come into the picture? Since 1955 when the Burnham-Jagan split, engineered by the British and US, broke the nationalist movement, race has become a key factor in Guyana’s elections, with the Burnham-led PNC appealing largely to the Black voters and Jagan’s PPP to the Indian electorate. Rodney’s return to Guyana in 1974 and being denied a post at the University of Guyana, found him increasingly involved in politics through the Working Peoples’ Alliance of which he was a co-founder. The 35,000 people who joined his funeral procession from Buxton to Georgetown was an occasion that foretold lost opportunities. Rodney seemed to have been on the point of doing what no one before him could, that is bringing Indians and Africans together and moving away from a politics based on race. I am writing this column on Wednesday, June 17, when the final stamp on the election is about to be done. What happens next is anyone’s guess, but we hope that racial conflict does not result. This of course is a good time to remember Rodney and what he hoped to achieve.

Then we are still into a period of what can be called global protests, moving beyond the US that holds centre stage. We can reflect as we think of Rodney on his involvement as an intellectual force behind the Black Power Movement. What Rodney sought to do was to reinterpret Black Power in the context of the Caribbean experience. In his view Black Power also involved the Indians in Guyana and the rest of the Caribbean. With the Black Lives Movement responding to the oppression of Black People, he would have, while identifying with the American struggle, asked who are the Oppressors in the Caribbean, who are pressing their knees on the necks of the Caribbean people who are overwhelmingly black. He would have focused on the black working people and on the politics of divide and rule. In a 1977 speech, while using the Guyana experience and the fake democratic operations and no doubt focusing on the wider Caribbean he stated, “When a monster grows, it grows out of control. It cuts up even those who created the monster and it’s time the people understood that”.

We in the Caribbean must stand in solidarity with the black people in the US as they continue a struggle that started a long time ago to be respected as human beings, whose lives matter. But we have to make the link with our own struggles which might not have to do with racial oppression in a narrow sense, but with demanding opportunities for us to grow as a people, to move off the plantations in our minds, and to have control over our path to full emancipation that was promised with the abolition of slavery, that was fought for in the 1930s and promised in 1979 when we partially broke the Imperial bonds.

Dr Adrian Fraser is a social commentator and historian

  • FacebookComments
  • ALSO IN THE NEWS
    Caribbean countries phase out Cuban doctors; French hospital welcomes them
    News
    Caribbean countries phase out Cuban doctors; French hospital welcomes them
    Forrest 
    March 10, 2026
    As pressure from the United States forces Caribbean governments to alter plans utilizing Cuban medical personnel, a hospital in France is planning to ...
    Protect against mosquito-borne diseases, Ministry of Health advises
    Press Release
    Protect against mosquito-borne diseases, Ministry of Health advises
    Forrest 
    March 10, 2026
    The Ministry of Health, Wellness, Environmental Health and Energy (MOHWEE) is encouraging residents across St. Vincent and the Grenadines (SVG), to re...
    RRU Station Sergeant completes Elite DEA training
    News
    RRU Station Sergeant completes Elite DEA training
    Forrest 
    March 10, 2026
    Station Sergeant Nigel John, of the Rapid Response Unit (RRU) in the Royal St Vincent and the Grenadines Police Force (SVGPF), recently completed the ...
    Saint James School of Medicine steps up to ‘First Tier’
    Press Release
    Saint James School of Medicine steps up to ‘First Tier’
    Forrest 
    March 10, 2026
    Saint James School of Medicine (SJSM) said it has been officially recognized as a “First Tier” institution in the latest 2024-2025 Caribbean Medical S...
    Grimble House upsets, and Reeves House maintains in joint Athletics Meet
    Sports
    Grimble House upsets, and Reeves House maintains in joint Athletics Meet
    Forrest 
    March 10, 2026
    For the past four years (2022, 2023, 2024, 2025, Headmistress House ruled supreme over Girls High School (GHS) sports, but on Friday, February 27, 202...
    Eight qualify for Carifta Games, 2026
    Sports
    Eight qualify for Carifta Games, 2026
    Forrest 
    March 10, 2026
    Following two days of the trials at the 2026 Dr. Lennox Adams National Junior Championships, four athletes added their names to the list of qualifiers...
    News
    Caribbean countries phase out Cuban doctors; French hospital welcomes them
    News
    Caribbean countries phase out Cuban doctors; French hospital welcomes them
    Forrest 
    March 10, 2026
    As pressure from the United States forces Caribbean governments to alter plans utilizing Cuban medical personnel, a hospital in France is planning to ...
    RRU Station Sergeant completes Elite DEA training
    News
    RRU Station Sergeant completes Elite DEA training
    Forrest 
    March 10, 2026
    Station Sergeant Nigel John, of the Rapid Response Unit (RRU) in the Royal St Vincent and the Grenadines Police Force (SVGPF), recently completed the ...
    Vinlec installs self-service bill payments Kiosk at Pembroke
    News
    Vinlec installs self-service bill payments Kiosk at Pembroke
    Forrest 
    March 6, 2026
    St. Vincent Electricity Services Limited (VINLEC) has expanded its self-service payment options with the launch of a new bill payment kiosk at Greaves...
    Citizens have their say at Police Customer Appreciation Day
    News
    Citizens have their say at Police Customer Appreciation Day
    Forrest 
    March 6, 2026
    Second in charge of the Traffic Department of the Royal St. Vincent and the Grenadines Police Force (RSVGPF), Sergeant Wendell Corridon, is appealing ...
    Man beaten to death in Kingstown
    News
    Man beaten to death in Kingstown
    Forrest 
    March 6, 2026
    A 63-year-old Redemption Sharpes man, who in 2019 accepted an offer to examine his common law’s wife private parts after accusing her of cheating, and...

    E-EDITION
    ePaper
    google_play
    app_store
    Subscribe Now
    • Interactive Media Ltd. • P.O. Box 152 • Kingstown • St. Vincent and the Grenadines • Phone: 784-456-1558 © Copyright Interactive Media Ltd.. All rights reserved.
    We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue to use this site we will assume that you are happy with it.Ok