Percival James & Leona Aurelia Hanna (nee Butler)

 

 

PercyHanna_6c. 1954

PercyHanna_4

2011 

Our house at Anderson Street and Gaol Alley was built in 1934. My parents, Percival James and the former Leona Aurelia Butler were married on 4th November 1925.  The pictures below left were taken on their wedding day. My two oldest siblings were born at the Butler homestead on Market Street and the rest of us were born at Anderson Street, which was at that time called Harding’s Lane.

Below is the article about my parents’ wedding that was published in The Tribune on the day of their marriage:Percy_Ona Weding_1925

WEDDING BELLS!

Percy_Ona_1924Percy_Ona_2A very pretty wedding took place at St. Agnes Church this morning, when Mr. Percival J. Hanna of Meallett’s Orchestra, and organist of St. Agnes Church, was married to Miss Leola [Leona], eldest daughter of the late Mr. Chas. Butler and Mrs. Butler of the Southern District, by Rev. Canon George, assisted by Revs. Senior and Tillard.   The bride and party arrived at the church at 7:30 a.m. where they were met by the Choir, and the Gym Club, (of which Miss Butler was a member), under Nurse Wood.  The club formed a guard of honour and strewed their colours on the ground as the bride passed, leaning on the arm of her uncle, Mr. Herman Butler, who gave her away.  Mr. John Forbes stood as best man. Miss Gladys Bailey presided at the organ and some of Mr. Hanna’s friends in the Orchestra provided other music.  After the wedding a photograph of the party was taken by Mr. A. E. Armbrister of Armbrister’s Studio, and the party proceeded to the groom’s home in Meadow’s Street, where they will hold a reception this evening.Percy_Ona_4Percy_Ona

 

 

JoAnn DeVeaux-Callender – Soprano

DSC09934JoAnn DeVeaux-Callender, Soprano, is a living treasure of The Bahamas. Singing since the age of three, and performing in Canada, Europe, the Middle East, the USA, and the Caribbean including:  Cuba, Jamaica, Trinidad and Tobago, and Guyana. Joann DeVeaux-Callender has performed for numerous heads of state under the patronages of the Governor General and Government of The Bahamas, the United Nations and the Organization of American States. Most notably, she sang the role of Sister Josetta in the presence of Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II, in the October, 1985 production of the Bahamian Folk Opera “The Legend of Sammie Swain“, and reprised the role in October 2013. On June 15, 2013 JoAnn presented an all Bahamian composed concert, “A Celebration of Bahamian Composers” held at Christ Church Cathedral, Nassau, Bahamas.

1 (707)JoAnn DeVeaux-Callender is guest soloist on three recordings by The Bahamas National Youth Choir; her solo debut album ‘Christmas Joy’ was released in 2007. She has performed with the Florence South Carolina Orchestra, University of Miami Orchestra, Chamber Orchestra of Nazareth College Rochester, New York, and the highly acclaimed Moscow Soloists Orchestra under the direction of violist/conductor Yuri Bashmet. 1 (161)She is also a poet, lyricist, playwright, composer and author with works featured in publications of In Tune, the weekly devotions booklet published by UMI Inc., in Chicago, Illinois. In May 2010, JoAnn produced and directed three of her original stage productions, War, (E.R.P.) Earth Restoration Patrol and The True Leader, at the Global Summit on Leadership and Prayer at The Milwaukee Theatre in Wisconsin.

 

JoAnn Callender can be heard online at: myspace.com/joanncallender

 

 

Bahamas National Youth Choir Press Release

Bahamas National Youth Choir
PRESS RELEASE
Dec. 8, 2015

Cleophas_2The Bahamas National Youth Choir under the direction of Cleophas R.E. Adderley, Founder/Director, will present its Seventh Annual Concert of Music for Christmas on Tuesday, December 15, 2015 at Trinity Methodist Church, Frederick Street and Trinity Place at 7:30p.m. The concert is under the distinguished patronage of Her Excellency, Dame Marguerite Pindling, DCMG, Governor General of the Commonwealth of The Bahamas. There is no admission charge but a collection will be taken to help defray expenses. A number of talented new singers will make their debut at this performance.BNYC Christmas_2015

The Bahamas National Youth Choir was established in 1983 under the direction of Mr. Adderley as a part of the celebrations marking the tenth anniversary of Bahamian independence. During March, 2015 it presented its 25th Annual Concert season at the Dundas Centre for the Performing Arts and in May celebrated twenty-five years of continuous existence with a church service at Christ Church Cathedral and in October an Exhibition of Photographs and Materials at The Central Bank of The Bahamas Art Gallery. The singers are between the ages of 15 and 25 years and give of their time and talent without remuneration as a form of national service.

Over the years the choir has toured and given performances in twenty-five countries on four continents including The United States, Canada, Mexico, England, France, Germany, Finland, China, South Africa, and Swaziland. They have also sung in twenty-five languages including German, French, Spanish, Mandarin, Hungarian, Italian and five African languages.

The singers have graced the stages of internationally acclaimed venues including the Concert Hall of The John F. Kennedy Center For The Performing Arts (Washington, D.C.), The Weill Recital Hall at Carnegie Hall (New York City), The Grand Hall of The Moscow Conservatory (Russia), Beijing Symphony Hall and The Poly Theatre (China), Oxford University Playhouse and The Barbican (England); and have rendered anthems and sung the responses at mass at St. Peter’s Basilica, Vatican City.

Sydney GuillaumeDuring the summer of 2015 the singers toured the Dominican Republic and performed with Maestro Darwin Aquino and the seventy plus member National Youth Symphony Orchestra of the Dominican Republic. The singers also toured The Republic of Haiti and were delighted and honoured to meet and perform on the same programme with internationally acclaimed Haitian composer Sydney Guillaume. The Bahamas National Youth Choir will perform Mr. Guillaume’s Dominus Vobiscum at this year’s Christmas Concert. Mr. Guillaume’s music is in great demand and has been performed on five continents. It is the first time that his music is being performed in The Bahamas. “This piece is quite challenging and is a wonderful synergy of the European music of the Roman Catholic Church and ever emerging African rhythms and Haitian Creole and culture” comments Mr. Adderley.

Garrad RigbyAlso included on the programme is music from Handel’s Messiah featuring Guest Artist Garrad Rigby (tenor), and well known carols Sleigh Ride, Joy to the World, The First Noel; a gospel carol Pretty Little Baby arranged by James Cleveland/Rollo Dilworth; Nigerian carol “Betelehemu” and Bahamian carol “O Mary” written by Cleophas Adderley.  There are also works by C.P.E. Bach, Phillip W.J. Stopford, John Alexander, and Heather Sorenson amongst others.

Nathan LightbourneMr. Nathan Lightbourn, the Choir’s 2nd Assistant Director will perform two piano solo works, Sonata Number 8 (Second Movement) by Ludwig Van Beethoven and Concert Etude No.1 by Nikolai Kapustin. The Choir’s Assistant Director, Mr. Dexter Fernander will be on the harpsichord and will assist Mr. Adderley with conducting. He is also responsible for rehearsing the Bahamas National Youth Choir Alumni who will make a special appearance as the Choir brings its twenty-fifth anniversary celebrations to a close.  The Alumni will augment the choral forces on some of the larger works.Dexter Fernander

The director and members are grateful to Reverend William “Bill” Higgs and the Trustees of Trinity Methodist Church for their continual support of The Choir, the Government High School for the loan of handbells and to all others who have helped to make this performance possible. The concert should run for approximately one hour and fifteen minutes, so please try not to be late.

The Bahamas Press Club – Welcome Address at the Pioneer Awards Recognition Banquet – 21st November 2015 – British Colonial Hilton

© 2015 Anthony A. Newbold

Press Club_13Welcome to all of you and thank you for coming out tonight and supporting this first ever Pioneer Awards Recognition banquet.

This is indeed a wonderful evening and I am hopeful that more of you will be involved I t this process next November!

I consider the night a success already, just by virtue of the fact that so many of you are here! I have to admit, that we planned for a little more than seventy persons. This then is a more than pleasant surprise.

That occasions me to sing the praises of my team without whom none of this would be possible, nor would the press club have reached this far: Anthony Capron, Vincent Vaughan and Lindsay Thompson – fantastic people!

Press Club Awards_5Deryn Prabhu from the Hilton and her team – all of the reputation I had built up over my life, I have to rebuild with her – because every time we’d agree to something – dealing with the wonderful people who are the Bahamian press, I had to go back and change it… and she is a professional of the highest order. So, you can imagine two of us having to go through that dance… thank you Deryn.

I hate long speeches, and I believe so do most of you. However, there are a few things I would like to bring to your attention.  This night and what it means and does, has been a dream of mine, ever since a group of us first talked about a press club back in 1996. We must do more and I hope that this becomes a yearly must attend event on your social calendar.

Press Club_10The goals of the Press Club today remain much as they ere back in 1996 when Darold Miller became the first president in the modern era: a forum for social intercourse, further training and education, especially of the younger members, through seminars and presentations by senior members of the profession, both local and international; exchanges with like organizations worldwide and the enactment of a Freedom of Information Act, with teeth.

As we recognize some of those who paved the way, we also recognize the sacrifices they made and the examples they set. And I say some because, and this is especially for those who have been giving me instructions and directions since we announced these awards, we cannot recognize everyone at once.

Press club Awards_1As we gather here on this balmy Nassau evening, I remind you members of the press, that the group of citizens who most come under the glare of our scrutiny comprises mostly of the political class.

Remember also that both of our vocations, professions, require, no, demand that we all be above reproach! That we be as honest as possible with each other, as both groups work to build up the common good! We are not always that, but even if those who are our targets aren’t, we must strive to be!

Press Club_14We must also be careful and vigilant lest we are beguiled by the serpent called social media and the internet.  Someone not long ago called it a sewer. I will not go that far tonight, but let me say that it is the perfect venue for a tar baby experience. So if we are not careful, some of the sewage that floats around in there will stick to us.

And finally for this part of the evening… the last month has been the press’s finest hour. But we are better than that, or we should be! The public has no time for the press to be sniping at each other!

Press Club Awards_7We all should know the rules of civility and decent behavior, and almost instinctively hew to those principles. I cow that young people, especially, are not always friends with patience and are not always as politic as they ought to be, but they must learn as quickly as they can, especially those in responsible positions. It is a requirement, otherwise, you will crash and burn and wonder whatever happened to your career.

There is still some work to be done in the media… I still believe, for example, that ZNS should be a public broadcaster, in order to really do what it should e be doing. Meaning that it would not be under the control of any Government! There is always BIS and the Parliamentary Channel… The private stations still need to pull up their socks because they are far from perfect, so don’t roll your eyes at ZNS… one of my beefs wit private radio is the often unacceptable, churlish behaviour of too many of the talk show hosts, who seem to always eek the lowest common denominator

Press Club_20 Press Club_15Remember, the media in general, but the working press specifically , is part of the leadership of the country… and what is distressing is that some of us may not even realize it, which is quite scary!

I often ask if those who sit in front of microphones daily understand the tremendous power resident in that position… and the consequent responsibility that goes with that power?

We help to shape pubic opinion! We determine what goes on the front page, what is the top story and what makes the line up at all! The public look to us for guidance.

Press Club_19 Press Club_16Keep the language out of the gutter and practice a high level of standard English… the public mimics you… there is no such word as “assessories” and the expression “You Guys” is an affectation and abomination, that is so impersonal, demeaning and insulting that it should carry with it five lashes with the cat o nine tail… we members of the press and media.. we can’t afford to be mediocre or pedestrian. Our country needs us now more than ever, to be at the top of our game… be judicious… be fair…be balanced… be accurate…and be on time!

Enjoy the wonderful repast prepared for us, and the great company… and then we will get to the real reason for the evening.

Enjoy!

 

Anthony A. Newbold

© Photographs BIS/Derek Smith

History of The Bahama Brass Band – Church of God of Prophecy

Bahama Brass Band 1938Music is a heavenly gift. It is one of the only gifts that transcends the barriers of language and creed. The inspirational and charismatic music of the Bahama Brass Band stirs a range of emotions from overwhelming peace and contentment to sheer bliss.

The Bahama Brass Band (or The Big Jumper Church Band) of the Church of God of Prophecy came about as a glaring need for a music ministry in the oldest Pentecostal denomination in The Bahamas in 1925. From the outset, a handful of ordained Ministers of the Gospel who were musically gifted introduced brass instruments to the church service-, which was still in its fledgling stages during those years. The names of the founding members were Bishop Hermis A. Ferguson (first director), Bishop James R. Cooper, Bishop Alvin S. Moss and Pastor Frank H. Cunningham.

Bahama Brass Band 1974By 1927 after much preparation and rehearsals the band made its first public appearance during the church’s colonial convention which held at the Taylor Street Tabernacle.

In 1938 the membership grew to sixteen (16) and twelve (12) of the most seasoned players were selected to perform at the worldwide General Assembly in Cleveland, Tennessee. This group of musicians traveled via the motor vessel Ena K from Kelly Dock on Bay Street to Miami, Florida. Following a fund-raising concert in Florida, they rode to Tennessee on the back of a truck. Today, the world famous Bahama Brass Band (the Official Assembly Band) has been ministering to the international gathering for almost 78 years.

Recording sessions and tape mastering became an integral aspect of the Bahama Brass Band musical influence in 1956. There have been over 11 successful “Music with Spirit” albums documented that was also used as a marketing thrust for The Church of God of Prophecy globally.

1006024_703306433029780_2053763809_n227203_221691154524646_4450797_nThe Bahama Brass Band- the all-male, generational, ministry oriented brass band, which comprises of membership belonging solely to the Church of God of Prophecy New Providence, Grand Bahama, Turks & Caicos, Andros, Eleuthera and Florida has ministered extensively throughout The Bahamas, Caribbean, United Kingdom, Continental USA, South America and Carnival Cruise Line destinations.

Other notable achievements:

  • Appearance at the Bahamas Independence in 1973
  • Playing at the funeral services for the late Sir Milo B. Butler (first Bahamian Governor General) and Sir Lynden O. Pindling (former Prime Minister).
  • The official brass band for the international AZUSA Street Centennial in Los Angeles, California etc.

Church of God of Prophecy - East Street, Nassau, Bahamas

Since its inception in 1925 over 300 members have served in this band which helped to contribute to the Gospel of Christ and the building of our Bahama Land.

We are also proud to say two members of the Bahama Brass Band produced solo albums, which were distributed internationally. These were Vanderson Ferguson (on Trumpet) and Dr. Albert S. Ferguson (on Clarinet).

Today, the National Band Director and Director of Bands is Mr. David G. Beneby and he is assisted by John L. Butler, Charles Hanna, Jr., Pastor Barry Morris (G.B.), and Billy Dickerson (G.B.)

© 2015 G. Sean Gibson

 

 

The Bahamas Press Club – Presentation to the Kiwanis Club of Fort Montagu – 7th July 2015

© 2015 Anthony A. Newbold

Anthony NewboldThere is so much going on I don’t know where to start, but I guess a safe bet would be to say: Good evening Kiwanians… and thank you executives for this invitation. Let me also thank especially for this invitation, Distinguished President Thompson, Chairperson Davis and, of course, Karen, who got the ball rolling.

Preparing for this presentation I checked the names of some of your former executives and I went way back… a couple of citizens for whom I have great respect… former MP Sylvia Scriven; Senate Vice President Joseph Curry… your tradition is good, proactive and active leadership continues, and it is always a singular pleasure for me to speak to anyone involved in good community works, with works being the operative word. More about that later.

“Who are we (Bahamians) and where are we headed as a country?” What  wonderful question! It is certainly most appropriate in the circumstances. In three days we will mark 42 years of independence, and I say mark, because a whole lot of people don’t have a whole lot to celebrate this year. Independence though, took a lot of work, and effort and sweat and tears, and most of all courage. Where are we headed? Disaster if we don’t find the grit and mettle that took us to independence.

I note that your theme this year is “Getting Back to Basics by Recommitting to Kiwanis Objects”. Kiwanis is a global organization of volunteers dedicated to changing the world, one child and one community at a time. That is a part of what happened at the first Independence on a hot July night in 1973. There was change. And we need to change The Bahamas again but, unfortunately, we don’t have the luxury of doing so one child at a tie. Because I believe we are facing some challenges that are not going to stand still and wait for us to muddle our way through. In fact, that is not what the founders of the modern Bahamas did! They took decisive action! That is why we can mark / celebrate on Friday! So who are we and where are we headed?

Whether we are from the Americas and called Lucayans and Tainos, or from Senegal and Sierra Leone and called Africans, whether we came from Bermuda or jolly old England, or whether or not we were brought here by a wind from the Carolinas, we have always been a melting pot of the world’s peoples, an amalgam of those who looked for adventure and a better way of life and were prepared to reach for it, wherever they could find it! So, it is a little disconcerting to see the xenophobia that is sometimes so visibly exhibited in our little country.

As early as 1834, one Stephen Dillett, originally of Haiti, became the first person of colour to be elected to our Parliament. He was also Postmaster General and Solicitor General. He was one of those we now despise.

Another Bahamian of Haitian extraction, with a little Jamaican thrown in, once occupied the highest office in the land! His name is Foulkes, Sir Arthur! The early 20th Century saw a few Greeks, some Panamanians, some Cubans, a few Chinese and more of the much vilified Haitians, make their way to these shores. Where do we go? One way is to undertake to integrate the Haitian underclass / underground into our wider economy and society as we did the others and stop pretending that they are not here. There is so much evidence, more than enough actually, to disabuse us of that notion!

That ostrich like approach threatens to further loosen us from our societal moorings, as we struggle with the challenges not acknowledging their presence creates. Later in the 20th Century there was a flood of West Indians… in fact most of my teachers throughout five years of high school were West Indians… Jamaicans, Barbadians and Trinidadians. A lot of them also came to police us and to work in other areas of the law… and because some of the name sound like ours, you may not know that they did not originate here… Williams, Carter, Smith, Deane, Thompson… as others have pointed out, we’ve had Trinidadian prison overseers, Barbadian policemen (Babb & Mason), Haitian tailors, Guyanese surveyor (Carew & Yaralli)… and then there are names that reflect our French connection… like Bodie, Deleveaux, Dupuch, Duvalier, Godet, More and Marche, Benjamin… for Cuba, we get Palacious. And let us not forget the Turks and Caicos… at one time they were a part of us. And so, again, we have always been an amalgam of peoples, borrowing from the United States a little… e pluribus unum… one out of many. We should also not forget that before the change of Government in 1992, the men occupying the two top jobs in the country, the only two men to serve in every cabinet form 1967 to 1992, had West Indian roots… Jamaica and Barbados… Sir Lynden Pindling and Sir Clement Maynard… So, who is a Bahamian, or should be considered one?

Well, to my mind… that’s a Sir Clem expression… a Bahamian is anyone who swears undying loyalty to this country, shares its overriding values, has an appreciation for its culture and is prepared to build upon it and defend it with his or her last breath. That person to me is a Bahamian. You can have whatever name you want, be whatever colour, speak whatever language you want, plus English.

There are many of us prepared to do the work needed to move The Bahamas into the 21st Century and beyond but I don’t think there are enough of us at this time. Would you believe that The Bahamas is under populated? For economies of scale we are no good for manufacturing locally. Did you know, for example, that the City of Freeport, built 60 years ago, can accommodate 250,000 or a quarter of a million people? At resent you probably have about 60,000 in all of Grand Bahama. Our Islands are under populated, 1,000 here, 2,000 there won’t do.. We need lots more worthy, committed people to do what needs to be done, And, in the absence of a birth explosion, controlled migration.

I am speaking to you tonight in my capacity as the president of The Bahamas Press Club.  My Treasurer, who has been recording the history of this country over the last 46 years, Vincent Vaughan, is with me… a Philly boy who has called The Bahamas home for that long. I don’t know too many people who I consider more Bahamian than he is! This, by the way, is my fourth and final time engaging in any such effort with the Press Club. I just mentioned the need for more worthy and committed people. I am having the same challenge with the Press Club. Not enough people are committed enough to drive an organization such as that to reach heights it can reach. The press, of course, serves a necessary role, in and of itself, as the fourth estate… Societies’ watchdog, societies’ mirror, but we all, all of us need to be engaged!

Where are we headed? Well, I put it t you, that each and every one of you, holds that determination in your hands. But we must seize the time… as advocated by Huey P. Newton, Bobby Seale and Eldridge Cleaver 45 years ago as they fought against racism in America. Sir Lynden Pindling and is comrades seized the time. He was 36 when he took over this country… scared the crap out of some people! Where are the young people? At 42 years old Lynden Pindling took The Bahamas to independence! That’s seizing the time! Young people must find something to commit to; something that wakes you up in the morning and puts you to bed at night!

What was it that drove black Bahamians and a few really brave and committed mulattoes? Actually, it was the mulattoes who started the PLP! Finding that common vision is part of what is needed to take us where we need to go. That is one of the challenges of the 42nd anniversary of independence. I also believe that we need change the way we govern ourselves! The system used today was left by our colonial masters even though you will find many who say there is nothing wrong with it, there is, because, the masses or the lumpen proletariat as my friend Lionel Carey would say, are still operating at a disadvantage. Do you know who Lionel Carey is? Did you ever hear the slogan “Dare to struggle, dare to win”? Well, Lionel was one of the founders of the Vanguard Nationalist and Socialist Party, part of the Bahamian story that I try to continue to tell with “Legends, The Untold story”.

Speaking of disadvantage… it is now legal to own a web sop… primarily to sell numbers. Where are these places located? I call it a plague and a pox on all of our houses. I believe we will rue the day the law was passed… instead of  rooting them out we legalized them.

But back to governing ourselves….Why not local government as opposed to just the central government? Should the people not have more say in how their affairs are governed, other than every five years going to the ballot box?

Is our education system serving our needs? Why is the College of The Bahamas not the crucible in which national ideas and national initiatives are birthed? Are we embracing technology as much as we should and, are we educating our people to be able to do so in a healthy way other than surfing the net? What about our civil servants? Remember, no politician works for the education / finance / health or works/ or customs.  Our cousins, brothers, sisters, mothers and fathers do. So who is screwing up the system with bad attitudes, when you go to access service at BTC or BEC or Water & Sewage Corporation? And in addition to bad attitudes, we’ve allowed our politics to corrupt us. We are prepared to do damage to those we believe are our political opponents at the expense of the country. That’s a recipe for disaster!

Are we training ourselves to own the economy or will we continue to put ourselves at the mercy of the mega investors like Kerzner or Izmirlian? Bahamar was and is a bad idea, in my estimation, because the lives and well being of so many Bahamians should never be placed in  the hands of one man! What is wrong with 4 stand alone  hotels, all showcasing Bahamian food, and music an dress, a little wood carving and straw work to go with it… that signals what is Bahamian? Why do we not think that visitors to The Bahamas want the same thing we want when we visit another country… a taste of that country’s culture?

Where are we headed? Glory or disaster, but that depends on us; each and every individual! I have said and continue to say that we talk too much as Bahamians, we love to talk, but not too many of us are prepared to act! Until we change that attitude, outsiders will continue to determine where we are headed, why, after 50 years have all of these brilliant black Bahamians, not been able to improve on the financial model left to us by Sir Stafford Sands… a man who is still vilified today?

Is it okay to invest $9 million in Carnival and not spend that kind of money on the Crab Fest, or the Cat Island Rake and Scrape Festival, or even Junkanoo? Are we going to have the wherewithal to fight off what will surely be a challenge from a reopened Cuba?  You have heard many of the ideas and propositions I posited tonight, before. You will probably hear them again.

As I close: a lesson for you, as I constantly remind fellow writers of a quote from writer Elizabeth Engstrom:

I have come to believe that there are no new photos and few new stories, only unusual recombinations of things that have been told before, but what is new, and fresh and original, is the author’s lens through which these situations are viewed. Our gift and consequently our responsibility as writers, is to view life situations in our naturally unique way and report the truth about their meanings and values to the reading public, so they can have fresh insight into the human condition. We are each unique in the universe and therefore, so are the stories we tell.”

 We are back again, I believe to personal responsibility and involvement. And so, I say to you lift up your heads to the rising sun… there is still much land to be possessed. Each of you must pledge to do what you can to build up the common good. As we say in the Anglican faith, I you would commit to that, then a glorious future awaits us all.

Thank you and good night!

Anthony A Newbold

 

 

Tribute to Edmund Moxey – Musician, Cultural Icon and former Parliamentarian

As Delivered on Friday, 1st August, 2014 at The Church of the Most Holy Trinity, Stapledon Gardens

© 2014 Anthony A. Newbold

Anthony NewboldGood Morning! I accept the protocols as established by our esteemed former Parliamentary Commissioner and say first, that you will hear me refer to Ed Moxey as Ed or Edmund. Let me reassure you that it is not an attempt to diminish him in any way, and I don’t know if I could, even if I wanted to. No! I always called him Big Ed from I first met him as a man in 1984, and I will tell you more about 1984 in a minute…. because he had a big heart. And I called him Edmund because Sylvia called him Edmund It was a running joke between us when I wanted to pull his leg…I also admit that this tribute has gone the way of all written communications between Ed Moxey and I. this is the 10th version with not enough time to really say all that I wish. I wrote it wanting to give justice to Ed Moxey… not wanting to embarrass myself. Not wanting to step on any toes and not wanting to ore you so that you wonder why I was still standing up here in front of you. In the end, I could not only be what I am.. as for stepping on any toes, if you did not do right by Ed Moxey and you come to his funeral!!! (shakes head)..

Ed Moxey_Roberts_HOAYou have heard some of these words before and you will probably hear some of them again. Most of them are mine… and some of them belong to Mr. Shakespeare! I wanted to get that out there because even though I’m not running for the presidency or anything this morning I know how we go…I don’t want anyone to go from here saying: “You hear Ace Newbold this morning – trying to claim these words…” So: Friends, Bahamians, Countrymen, lend me your ears. I come to bury Edmund. I also come to praise him!

Edmund Moxey PortraitThey say that that the evil that men do lives on after them, and the good is oft interred with their bones. Normally, that may have been true but, I for one, I refuse to let it be so with Edmund! Our leaders said Edmund was ambitious, or only for himself, but he put his family on the line, and were they ever on the line! When he gave up a good paying job to run or the PLP, who while they were peaking for the people, when the name was still associated with rabble rousers and ne’er do wells and they were considered the outcasts of pariahs of society! But our leaders said Edmund was ambitious and had to be stopped and punished. And so they did!! And our leaders were all honourable men.

Not long ago I described him s one of the last of the warrior class of Bahamians. They don’t make them like Edmund Moxey any more… courageous and consistent… that package of muscle and guts was real!

Jumbey Vilage Art and Craft Centre Jumbey Vilage replica of old Bahamian houseThey said Ed Moxey was ambitious, but after not seeing the deliverance for his people promised before the victory in 1967, he sought the help of his Coconut Grove community. The results were there for all to see.. the Jumbey Festival, the Coconut Grove Community Centre and, eventually, the Jumbey Village!…The only real true, true representation of a Bahamian village that was ever built, and one that was unceremoniously, ungratefully, and disgracefully swept from the Bahamian landscape 27 years ago. But they said he was ambitious, out only to for himself. And all of our leaders were honourable men. It is said, “Where there is no vision the people perish!” and, some would agree that there was always a vision for the Bahamas and indeed, that we did reap many benefits. There is another saying though: “Sow the wind, reap the whirlwind.”

The blueprint for social, economic and cultural reconstruction, envisioned by Edmund Mosey and Carlton Francis in 1977, with an assist from Oscar Johnson (they eventually gave it to the BDP but J. Henry Bostwick did not get a chance to use it).. This plan, along with Jumbey Village, was all part of another vision that was ignored to our peril. We are now reaping the whirlwind! Emancipating Day is a few says away… that is what Ed Moxey was trying to do!

Ed Moey_Bhamian IconInstead of focusing on building upon, exposing and exposing our culture, through the Jumbey Village concept envisioned by Ed Moxey or leaders chose to e spiteful, to be cruel!! I found out long after the fact, that my convention manager at the Cable Beach Hotel in 1984, where I was privileged to serve s the Regional Director of sales for the Wyndham Hotels, was threatened by some cretinous operatives with all sorts of unspeakable things if he hired Ed Moxey to play for one of our functions. Thank God he told me long after it happened!!

Prime Minister, Dr. Minnis, this kind of vermin has infected the body politic for far too long. You must do what you can to stamp it out. I call both of you because it comes from both sides!

Prime Minister, on every occasion you have, you continue to decry the dearth of Bahamian stories, stories that tell and retell the history of our people and hence our country! Back in August 2010, four years ago this month, I was tickled pink to have the great Ed Moxey call and invite me to help tell his story. What a special privilege!! Here I would normally tell a joke about black men turning pink but I will forego that this morning.

Jumbey Village FestivalBut he called and invited me to write and help to tell the story of his life… some of it anyway… with a particular focus on Jumbey Village. I t took me nearly two years to write a 19 page single space script that he was comfortable with, because I’d write it and take it to him and he world look t me and ask who I was writing about; but I got an unexpected and invaluable gift from the exercise. I gained his trust! Finally he said: “Now ya talkin!” There is no price for that! Kevin Turnquest, Vaudio Production, did yeoman’s work as the technical producer and editor which, incidentally, won the Ft. Lauderdale International Film Festival’s 2012 documentary award.  We finally got it into a theatre at the College of The Bahamas, and then there arose another of Ed’s big disappointments! No member of the House of Assembly saw fit to attend. Ed probably expected it, but I could see the disappointment in his eyes. I was ticked… is the word I’m going to use today! The working press was no better! They did not show up either, thereby guaranteeing that they would be ignorant just a little bit longer about things cultural, unless you were shaking up yourself on Bay Street at Christmas!

Edmund Mosey Funeral_FoulkesBut we are still hopeful… A particularly brave young lady at the ministry of Education, who shall remain nameless… I know how we go in this country… attempted to buy 200 copies for distribution to the schools! Well! I’m sure when they found out they must have asked her outright: “Have you lost your mind?” There was no sale to the Ministry of Education, and so there will be more persons like the 41 year old man who camped out in the lobby of the Nassau Guardian waiting for me to get off the air, in order to get a copy because in all of his life, he had never heard of Edmund Moxey before the Tuesday morning after he died!

I told the story Mr. Christie! But the people who work for you and all Prime Ministers before you have kept away from the children!

I don’t believe you want that Mr. Christie… not what I know about you! I don’t believe you ever heard about this! “The Price of Being a Man” is the name of the documentary: The story of Ed Moxey and the undoing of Jumbey Village and the Cultural Revolution. I was asked by a colleague why such a heavy and negative title…I asked her what was not negative about what happened to Ed Moxey and his family?

I pay tribute today, to Ed Moxey and his dream, which was to highlight what I is good about The Bahamas, and one of the reasons I liked Ed, was that he was not afraid to tug on superman’s cape, if as he said, he believed in the rightness of the cause.

Our last project together which I was supposed to discuss with him on the Saturday before he laid down is sword and shield for the last time, was supposed to be one more tug on the cape. Ed planned to address the House of Assembly from the bar, while I would have the given the Speaker a heads up before it happened. Ed was going to test Rule 93—11. It may very well have gotten us both arrested! But he believed, and he made me a believer, in the rightness of the cause. I also told him that, as far as I know, the Speaker is an honourable man and would have treated him accordingly.

So Friends, Bahamians, Countrymen … This has been my tribute to Edmund Moxey.

I believe that this country will never be able to repay him or is family, for the wrongs done to them! I believe the trials of Ed Moxey and his family should lay on the collective conscience of the Bahamian people for all eternity. Does he deserve a street? A Building?

Edmund Moxey Funeral_ChurchIf we had a cultural Mount Rushmore, say, in Cat Island, at Mt. Alvernia, Ed Moxey would have pride of place. He would have the George Washington position!

Unfortunately for Ed Moxey, he was imbued with an unending well spring of genius for all things cultural that would be misunderstood and unappreciated for most of his life. Fortunately, he was also blessed with an invaluable gift for music that so often tempered his disappointment.

As some of you know, Ed had a wicked sense of humour and in spite of all of the pain and disappointment, he could still find joy and so that is how I choose to remember him. This man who had a big enough heart to offer an olive branch to those who tormented him!

He told me one day about a meeting with a senior politician (not you Prime Minister) he was promised that never happened and he didn’t understand that he was being played until Sylvia pointed out to him the day was April Fool’s day! Disappointed, but he had a big laugh about that!

Ed Moxey Funeral _Pall berersSomeone threw out a challenge on Facebook the other day… tell me, he said, what is a Bahamian? Ed Moxey was a Bahamian!!

He had some properly seasoned boiled fish running through his veins, the dirt from Ragged Island anchoring his feet and the sweet sounds of the goat skin drum, the saw and the accordion running through his head, as he saluted the Bahamian flag, paying allegiance to no other country on this earth, as he fought for it until the day he died… Ed Moxey personified the true true Bahamian, and so I salute him this day! And you too Sylvia… for 57 years of love and support!

Because we are in church, most would say that Ed is now in Heaven. I have absolutely no idea where he is, but I believe by now he must have had a serious conversation with whomever arranged this trip, to point out that he certainly earned his stripes on this one. Hold off for a while I believe he said: “I ga rake and scrape right here!”

Here was Ed Moxey… when comes such another? Wherever he is, may Ed Moxey rest in more peace than he had on this earth.

Anthony A. Newbold

Watch and listen on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tMg5ebB72p0

Lee Callender – Pianist, Arranger, Piano, Vocal and Speech Coach

I, Lee B. Callender am a pianist, arranger, piano, vocal and speech coach from Nassau, Bahamas and was born in 1958.I had my first piano lessons at the age of six. My grandfather, the late Timothy Gibson, composer of the National Anthem of the Bahamas was the giver of these lessons. As his last and youngest grandchild I guess I was a natural candidate and his last hope for “training’ as the other six did not take to the piano at all, so I got the brunt of his passion for teaching. Progress came quickly enough, but I remember still wanting to go outside and play rather than sit at the piano.

My mother Fay Gibson married a Barbadian man called Victor Callender. I was their second child, and with my older sister Laura we all eventually moved to Barbados. Living in Barbados was an amazing experience for me in many ways. An island, 21 by 14 miles, filled with talented brilliant people and lots of cultural activities to inspire a young musician. The literacy rate was % 98 in 1966, so there was great intelligence all around; I just wish I had absorbed more of it. Over the years I collaborated with some wonderful and interesting artists and played a wide variety of music. Growing up Anglican/Episcopalian, I began playing the organ in church when I was fifteen and also conducted the choir; very intense work for a kid I thought. The Christian Science Church also provided another playing outlet while filling my pockets with some “pocket money” which came in handy to pay for piano lessons.

I met this girl who played bongos, so we started to do piano and bongo combinations. Very cool. She had “bongo/congo” friends, so together we had a blast exploring the rhythms of our soul. Sweet youth. During this season of my life I also developed one of my favorite musical pastimes, improvising at the piano which I still enjoy thirty plus years later.

Barbados had at that time quite a number of string and wind instrumentalists who were willing to play with a young pianist hungry for music. We played pieces like Brahms sonatas for Clarinet and Piano, Beethoven sonatas for Violin and Piano, which fostered my love for chamber music. In my teen years in Barbados I did quite a few television and radio appearances playing contemporary and classical music.

My first piano teacher in Barbados, Diane Provencal of Canada, had a daughter Doris, a soprano who introduced me to the wonders of lieder and chanson. With her as soloist I had many a “song fest” with the songs of Schubert, Duparc, Faure et al. This prepared me for the great experience my ears were about to receive when I would return home. This experience would take the form of a beautiful woman with a magnificent voice, JoAnn DeVeaux, later to be Joann DeVeaux-Callender. JoAnn and I have made beautiful music together for about thirty years. We have done tons of wonderful repertoire, from Bach to Barber with some Schubert, Schumann, Faure and especially Handel. And there is the jazz. We have travelled the world together performing in England, Germany, France, Wales and various venues in the U.S. Presently I play solo piano at a variety of occasions and I have a thriving vocal coaching studio with a few piano students thrown in.

I’ve not recorded much but I am hoping to correct that. I am featured on the special fifth anniversary release of the Bahamas National Youth Choir, playing 3 Preludes, and Variations on a Theme by E. Clement Bethel, both original compositions by Cleophas Adderley – Bahamian composer conductor, arranger, singer and pianist.  I truly love the human voice, spoken and sung, and to that end I am writing a manual for singers designed to give a more efficient, simple approach to the use of the voice. Among the many local Bahamian “stars” I have coached, the most notable to date are Angelique Sabrina, Bahamen of the now famous “Who let the dogs out”, and popular gospel group Shabak. Besides improvising arranging is one of my favorite pastimes. I have arranged pianos solos for my own personal performances as well as choral pieces and most recently I have done a crossover jazz classical arrangement of Ave Maria by Bach-Gounod.

Well you know me a little better now, and as you visit my sites I hope I will get to know you better also. I am passionate about life, music and people. Here are my two favorite quotes. You can borrow them if you like.

“You’ll never have significant success with anything until it becomes an obsession with you”. – Mike Murdock.

“At the moment of commitment, the universe conspires to assist us”. – Goethe

Be well always.

© Lee B. Callender 2015

Contacts:

Studio 1-242-324-8117 Cell 1-242-436-4032

Email:  leecallender@hotmail.com

Contacts: Studio 1-242-324-8117

Cell 1-242-436-4032

About Me: https://about.me/leecallender

My Faceok page: https://www.facebook.com/leecallender

My Facebook Piano Page: https://www.facebook.com/leebcallenderbahamianpianist

My You Tube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCCr3jT-ej0kC4eKKERZOJdg/videos

The Bahamas – then and Now TV Interview: http://www.rosemarychanna.com/the-bahamas-then-and-now-lee-callender-musician-vocal-coach/

Lee Callender featured in United Pianos video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WgBFa-7OBW8

 

 

Impending National Chaos

© 2015 Patricia Glinton-Meicholas

PATRICIAGLINTONMEICHOLASATTABLE_IMG_6340_ver002Chaos is threatening to engulf our country in the 42nd year of what we call our independence and democracy.

Reflecting intensely lately on governance and politics in The Bahamas and the dangerous conflation of the two in the minds of the majority of our leaders and the many who blindly place their trust in them, I have come to the following conclusion. Corrupt political power is addictive. The more it is ingested the more the cravings for it arise. It is a sweet that rots the moral fibre of its addicts and ruins the teeth, guts and general health of those who are dominated by the addicts. I’m not being unnecessarily pessimistic. Consider the amount of misplaced outrage that has been expressed in places high, low and questionable about respect for high office, much more in service of self-vindication than for the benefit of our homeland.

Among those who claim leadership, I see little or no compassion for the people of this country who are living in fear of crime, in fear of losing jobs and homes, in fear of losing dignity in the fight to survive the growing drought of opportunity and certainly in fear of political victimization. Instead the greatest effort is towards self-aggrandisement and not national development. I cry the beloved country when I see a photograph of Bahamians, faces in ecstasy and hands reaching out to their new god, whose notion of salvation is the “Big Bang Summer”. The veil that once separated the people from this heavily monetized savior was rent by politicians bent on holding on to power at any cost.

My purpose in writing today is to help to direct a tsunami of outrage towards those areas where such impassioned attention is so desperately needed. If there are others in this country who desire a cause for outrage, I offer the following:

Why is there no outrage that murder is fast becoming the preferred method of resolving conflict, administering justice or earning a living? Crime, in general, is gutting this country, draining it of its lifeblood, yet all we get from our leadership is inertia at best or directing blame at the Police or at the former government or anywhere other than at its ineffective leadership. It is clear that the situation has become critical. So, what is the response from the top?

A member of government without a parliamentary seat but with a heavy portfolio as an apologist for government missteps recently took to the airwaves to do more deflecting regarding several thorny issues. This time some not so subtle blame was launched at a colleague who does occupy a seat in Parliament and Cabinet. My question is—if something slips from the hand and shatters, can we, in good conscience, blame a single finger for the calamity? Doesn’t the fault lie in the failure of all the fingers to communicate and work together and all should therefore be held equally culpable? That must certainly be the case with governments.

The failure of public education in this country must surely generate outrage even in the most passive among us. In return for a lion’s share of the national budget, achievement in our schools is an omen for imminent disaster in this country, rather than a herald of future progress. The national average in English and Math achievement hovers determinedly over grades D+ and E like flies over rotting flesh. Despite this, the only outrage we hear from the Bahamas Teachers Union relates to working conditions and more pay for themselves, while the collective voice remains silent regarding the needs, frustrations and failures of their charges. Why no outrage at the obvious inadequacy of some of their members and of deficient parenting and home conditions? Despite pitiable academic performance, we spend more time on Junior Junkanoo than on structured remediation and on turning rivers of self-examination and truth on the Augean Stables that education administration and practice have become in our beloved homeland.

Honestly, though, what more can I expect when doing a junkanoo shuffle is held as prime criterion for fitness to lead a nation, no matter that the people are drowning in their own blood as their leader gets ‘dizzy feet’. Even more cause for despair is evidence that a fond brother confuses strength of governance with winning an election and ‘looking good’ after the attainment of the promised three score and ten. Could this confusion be the source of increasing government failure—not appreciating that once its election is declared, politics and party cheerleading must give way to running the country for the benefit of all Bahamians, not just party pundits, Cabinet members and sycophants. Is this possibly the reason that Parliament seems to have become a marketplace and grabfest, where members come to trade personal favours and national opportunities, feathering their own nests while leaving the people’s cupboards bare?

And the problem is not just with Parliament, selfishness is invading the very marrow of the nation. Despite the black eye that Bahamas tourism and hospitality is getting internationally, a union leader in that quadrant could recently muster no greater contribution to the debate than “I told you so”, while keeping the collection plate front and centre.

Shouldn’t there be massive outrage that members of the governing party should howl in feigned indignation that a ‘foreigner’ answered the Prime Minister man to man in a diatribe initiated by the former, yet remain silent when one of their number threatens to misuse ministerial powers relating to immigration to even scores? Why is there not national fright at the purported correspondence between one of the parties in the Baha Mar dispute and a prominent government negotiator, an exchange which appears to suggest an unseemly and dangerous collusion and a government that has cast objectivity to the wind?

Why is there no outrage at government-designated inequality among foreigners? Why favour the voices of external consultants who sing harmony with government while turning a deaf ear to local expertise? I am appalled that a National Health Insurance consultant can pontificate and laugh to scorn the just concerns of the Bahamas insurance industry, when government has yet to give their proposal a fair hearing. I am appalled that the Bahamas Electricity situation grows murkier by the minute. Wasn’t the recently signed contract to bring modern management to BEC? Shouldn’t we be outraged to learn that the day of salvation from the play of light and darkness is still distant and what we have paid for is a business plan? A member of the National Cabinet has proposed psychological examinations for investors and Members of Parliament. I believe if we begin with members of Cabinet, all the other interventions will become unnecessary.

Why is there not terror that our public health care system is in obvious disarray and yet government is well on the way to forcing us all to subject health and life entirely to this chaos? Why are there so few journalists who do their research and ask the hard questions—such as, what are the countries where an all-pervasive health insurance scheme is working well and what systems do they have in place that underpin the good functioning of said systems? Why are we willing to commit more hard-earned money to the same ramshackle provisions for health care management and accountability?

How many of us are outraged that, all of a sudden, the men who appear to be alternate prime ministers have begun to use such words as ‘probity’ and ‘transparency’, which they had previously banned from their vocabulary? Shouldn’t the greatest outrage be reserved for the fast-footing of a member of the “justice league” who has decided to further deplete the nation’s purse by engaging legal action to remove two members of the opposition from Parliament, adding to the folly of his government’s spending on the winding up of Baha Mar? Dear Sir, where is your outrage at case files that flit away in the night and delay court actions. Where is your outrage at the backlog of criminal cases, where the indicted languish so long in prison before trial that some have served their sentences by the time a justice of the Supreme Court actually pronounces them. I would respect you more if you had taken your leave of the ruling party, instead of using the excuse that your leader would not accept your resignation. May I suggest that you devote more time to solving some of the inefficiencies and corruptions in the area of your own portfolio? As the Book of Proverbs advises: “Speak up for those who cannot speak for themselves, for the rights of all who are destitute.”

I could speak of rodentia and sinking ships here but refrain. Could a looming party convention and elections be the source of all this new-minted righteousness? How can these good gentlemen fix their mouths to utter such terms when they have been front and centre in breaking, one after the other, the promises they made to the Bahamian people leading up to election day and conveniently forgot the moment victory was declared? Gentlemen and Ladies of Government, what happened to the solutions promised for the “first hundred days”—now being stretched with bold-face effrontery into “give us another term to get it done; we didn’t know how deep the problems were”? You have surely forgotten the promise to “believe in Bahamians” when you voided the results of the referendum on gaming to allow for the seemingly unrestrained flourishing of gaming houses deep into the nation’s heartland and the bread and circuses of “Big Bang Summers”. I assure you, democracy begins to die when you ignore the vote of the people, especially when it does not contravene the Constitution or the laws of the land or of nature.

You promised support for the Police, who daily risk their lives to keep our society from falling into anarchy. Yet, you have a junior minister talking gleefully to the press about finding a way to defeat the court ruling that you must pay the Police for overtime already worked. For shame!

What happened to the promised push for diversification of the national economy? What is the parliamentary response to the IDB-sponsored book “The Orange Economy” by Filipe Buitrago Restrepo that promotes the development of the creative industries? (Download it for free from the internet.)

I challenge women members of the National Cabinet and the men no less: Why no outrage at the rise in domestic violence, especially against women and children? When you at last raised the wind to speak about the referendum on the ability to confer citizenship on one’s children, you said that you favoured a delay, so that you could educate Bahamians on the subject. So, where is the education programme or are you hoping that your promise will die quietly, smothered by our fears of increased taxation and other economic weights?

Where is the outrage at government’s making up for its failure to contain its own profligate spending in first class jaunts abroad by adding another tax weight to the already breaking back of the citizenry? Where is the outrage at the one-plus-one-equals-fifty million accounting system used to assess the success of Junkanoo Carnival. Is the enjoyment of however many thousands of a booze and dance fest enough to justify the spending of $12 million in a persistently sluggish economy?

Is The Bahamas heading towards becoming a failed banana republic (without a viable banana industry) where people can be imprisoned or worse without trial for daring to question their leaders’ fitness to govern? Why does a high churchman spend more time stomping politically for his son than plying the gospel of Christ in the pulpit? How urgently we need statesmen to act out of love of country at this time when Bahamian society is fast devolving amidst an exponential rise in antisocial behaviour, a lag in the achievement of ungendered equality in basic human rights and the failure to thrive in so many aspects of society and family life!

Bahamians, I challenge us to take a good, long look at ourselves to see the extent to which we, the people, share in the responsibility for the failing of democracy in our land and twisted values and morals in high places. A government is a reflection of the people—our greed, our willingness to sell our birthright for a mess of pottage, our delight in cupboard love; that is, our love for those who come promising handouts and our accepting without questioning the legality of the sources and without decrying the misuse of public funds. How can we expect to have an equitable and a peaceful society when many of us happily use religion to relegate some of our fellow citizens to the dung heap of Bahamian life because our over-inflated sense of righteousness or corruption declares them to be on the wrong side of politics, gender, sexual orientation and ethnicity. It is strange how a person’s god is often a reflection of that person’s own character or lack thereof.

For those who are sufficiently outraged and wish to do something of benefit to our country, I propose the following:

For the improvement of Bahamian education, all of us must take responsibility for raising it from the grave of failure. I beg the powers that be to lead the way by respecting teaching as a profession like any other and raising the level of training and remuneration of educators accordingly. Make teacher education consist of four years of mastering the subject area and a year for methodology, ethics and the practice of teaching. Teachers should recertify every three years. Let there be a private and public ethics committee to oversee education policy and the behavior of educators and administrators. Make teacher assessment real not the cursory passage and lip-service I know exists in many quarters. Develop a true meritocracy in this and other areas of professional practice. Start adult classes to allow parents and guardians to upgrade their education to enable them to assist their children in a meaningful way.

Let’s acknowledge in practical ways that our children have different gifts and the education system must begin to institutionalize this fact in the National Curriculum and classroom practice. To lump everyone in the BGCSE stream is a folly that produces failure. Some students are more gifted creatively and practically. Let’s celebrate them and create model schools for the visual and musical arts, crafts, mechanics and entrepreneurship. Every child, whatever may be his or her gifts, should leave school with good literacy, numeracy and at least one employable skill. Overall, take politics out of the Ministry of Education and the classroom and out of every other public service endeavour for that matter. Remove the sacred cows who milk the system rather than giving nourishment to our people.

For probity in the conduct of the people’s business, heads of agreement documents should be made public in their entirety and before, not after the fact. For the improvement of parliamentary conduct, give teeth to the Disclosure Act and any other regulations that compel openness about subjects that are relevant to national matters. I want to know who the beneficial owners are of all buildings rented by government agencies. I want to know what morganatic marriages for profit have been formed between MPs and consorts who would not be sanctioned by law or common decency. We have a parliamentary channel on television, but it is not a pretty sight. I propose that those who hoot and clatter when another member is speaking at the behest of the Speaker to be escorted from the House. There should be a penalty for parliamentarians who do not attend a reasonable number of sessions of Parliament and offer comments of merit rather than schoolyard rants. Chairmen of political parties should be banished from speaking for government. When election time comes around, they are welcome to use all the deviance they can muster. It is the buyers/voters who should educate themselves and beware.

I propose that leaders who crave the respect of their people and the world at large should practice respecting others and human rights. When high office confers the right to run roughshod over others, we are dealing with autocracy, dictatorship, tyranny—call it what you like, but it is certainly not democracy and service at the will of the people. As the old saying counsels, even the cat may look at the sovereign. From the ragamuffin to heads of state, the gendered and ungendered, those lacking politically correct connections, the imprisoned, the citizen and the foreigner must enjoy basic human rights in our land, if we are to continue to claim Christ and democracy.

I propose a limit on the spending of government ministers and functionaries, especially on travel that yields high living for the travelers and pictures of their merriment but nothing for the advancement of country and people. I propose published reports on the trips abroad, justifying the role of each member of each contingent and every penny of public funds spent.  I would also like an account of how and to whom and why government assets, especially vehicles, are apportioned and how used. And by the way, does the mileage accord with the officially designated use of these vehicles?

Health care reform: I propose massive reform in health care administration, spending and maintenance before government hands more money from overburdened taxpayers into the hands of incompetents and malefactors, who have no better decision-making ability or “probity” than their choice of political party affiliation. Repair the clinics, especially in the Family Islands, get Accident & Emergency at the Princess Margaret Hospital functioning efficiently to reduce the unconscionable waits of people who are sick, in pain and perhaps dying for lack of timely intervention. Let’s give government scholarships to medical students who will specialize in e-medicine and contract to work in Family Island communities. In tandem, establish a web-based consultation system for the assistance of physicians and nurses in communities that do not have the population mass to sustain mini-hospitals. Finish, equip, staff and activate the mini-hospitals that exist. Digitize patient files, make public the names and qualification of suppliers to the health care system. Show us an exact plan of how the proposed National Health Tax money will be better apportioned, managed and audited than what now obtains under the Public Hospitals Authority. Why has government tried so hard to besmirch the reputation of the Auditor General and several reputable accounting firms, who have found incompetence at best and malfeasance at worst? Show us the money!

Economic Diversification: I propose that we talk less of “jobs and more jobs” and the kind of employment that teeters dangerously on a tightrope over the abyss of despair and want, when investors and government fall out. Let’s stop institutionalizing a new slavery and colonialism by increasing dependence on handouts and the Big-Daddy-will-take-care-of-you, plantation mentality and preach more self-reliance and a faultless work ethic when there are jobs. Bahamians have long proven to be highly creative. Let government get out of the business of handouts, which is only a platform for assuring a biddable electorate. It is time to empower people to self-reliance and a truer independence. Promote more creative cottage industries and adopt the true role of governments—that of facilitation of opportunity through timely and just legislation and fair and “transparent” management of public assets.

For those who are in love with the notions of revoking citizenship, let me just say that, despite my name, I was born in a settlement deep in the heart of one of the almost forgotten islands of The Bahamas to parents, grandparents, great grandparents and fore-parents even further back who were also born in these blessed islands I love so dearly. Or has it become treasonous to love one’s country and refuse to remain silent in the face of its rapid unravelling owing to uncaring and corrupt politics?

 

Cathedral & Nassau City Week Celebrations – 1st – 7th November 2015

12191755_10153184915101444_278180319947995125_nWhat is the connection between Christ Church Cathedral and the City of Nassau, New Providence, The Bahamas?

The first Anglican Church, the Parish of Christ Church was established in The Bahamas in 1670. The present Cathedral is the fifth structure and it was completed and dedicated in 1845. The Very Reverend Patrick Adderley (pictured at left) is the Dean and Rector.  The congregation presently numbers 1,150 members.

11010970_10153184914271444_1023913827241421101_nLed by Chairman H.E. Lowell Mortimer (2nd from left in photo at right) and members of The Endowment Trust of Christ Church Cathedral they observed the Cathedral & Nassau City Week of Celebrations. from 1st – 7th November 2015.  The purpose of the event was to create a greater awareness of the historical significance of the tie between the City of Nassau and the Parish of Christ Church Cathedral. This connection was based upon a Royal Order made by her Majesty Queen Victoria of Great Britain on 4th November 1861. The Queen was also then head of the Church of England which extended throughout the colonies including the Islands of The Bahamas & The Turks and Caicos Islands. The Royal order mandated that the edifice of Christ Church Parish become henceforth a Cathedral and, as a consequence, Nassau then became a City. CCC by Ron_2

Christ Church Cathedral is the mother church of the Anglican Diocese of The Bahamas & The Turks and Caicos Islands. It is the venue for many diocesan, national and civic services, and other religious and cultural events. The Cathedral is renowned for its beautiful stained glass windows, German organs, choral music and wonderful acoustics.

12195823_10153184913746444_1384770437072223750_n 12189075_10153184914686444_3399521413173470052_nThe week of activities commenced with an Official Service at 4:00 p.m. on Sunday, 1st November 2015. The centre and high mark of the week’s event was held at 6:00 p.m. on Wednesday, 4th November 2015, when old merchants and business houses, as well as the straw vendors who worked throughout the years and engaged in business and commence with the City precinct were recognized. They were given  the first “Key to the City”. Other churches and Christian-based faith institutions within the City of precincts were also honoured. The individuals and businesses honoured were:

  • Mr. Sean Albert – Scotiabank
  • Ms.Virginia Baker – A. Baker & Sons
  • Nathaniel Beneby – Royal Bank of Canada
  • Ms. Suzanna Black – Black’s Candy Kitchen
  • The Hon. J. Henry Bostwick & the Hon. Janet Bostwick – Bostwick & Bostwick law Chambers
  • Mrs. Eunice Albertha Brown – Straw Market
  • Mr. Rui Domingues – British Colonial Hilton Nassau
  • Dr. Andrew Esfakis– Medicine
  • Dr. Michael Gerassimos – Medicine
  • Mr. Roosevelt Godet – Godet’s jewellery
  • Mr.Fred Hazelwood – John Bull Group
  • Mr. Trevor Kelly – Kelly’s Group
  • Mrs. Irene Klonaris Govan – Poppies
  • Mr. Charles Klonaris – Mike’s Shoe Store
  • Mr. Henry Lee – New oriental Laundry
  • Mr. Texas Lunn– Lunn’s Watch Repair
  • Mrs. Andrea Major – The Bahamas Historical Society
  • Mr. Philip Mortimer – The Family for Candy Manufacturing
  • Mr. Hans Neven – Burns House Group
  • Mr. Artie Nottage – Barry’s
  • Mrs. Isabella Overend – Towne Hotel
  • Mrs. Cally Papageorge – Prince George Plaza
  • Mrs. Nadia Raspa-Silvani – British Airways
  • Mr. Everette Sands – Butler & Sands
  • W. Bro. Darnley Sealey – Royal Victoria Lodge No. 443
  • Mr. George Skandaliaris – Cafe Skans
  • Mrs. Marsha Stewart – Coin of The Realms
  • Mr. Theo Tsavousis – The Young Miss Bridal Shop
  • Ms. Patrice Wells – Cole Thompson Pharmacy
  • Mrs. Heather White – The Linen Shop
  • Mrs. Della Wilson – Straw Market
  • Mrs. Betty Wong – Sue Nan Shoppe

12183977_1155140791181599_5916373214019851459_o 11707743_1155141364514875_3623490819691776882_o 12227809_1155141201181558_1330580612044489594_n 12185152_1155140964514915_8398335312960485315_oNASSAU CATHEDRAL WEEK CELEBRATIONS}149932The week culminated with a  Street Festival on George Street on Saturday, 7th November 2015 which included food, drinks, home cookery, games, entertainment, face painting for children, a raffle, bingo, fruit and vegetables, cakes, pastries, hamburgers and hot dogs, steak out, tea garden, straw work,  line dancing and other activities. The event is earmarked to be an anual fundraiser for Cathedral House, other Cathedral Endowment Trust projects and parish ministries and services.

Source: The Very Reverend Patrick Adderley

Photographs © Ron Clarke

Link to Photo Gallery: http://www.rosemarychanna.com/photo-gallery/