Lest we forget Emancipation’s historical importance
Dear Editor,
The people of the English-speaking Caribbean have traditionally commemorated Emancipation and celebrated the basic freedoms we enjoy today at their annual Emancipation festivals or observances that take place between late July and early August.
However, because we are so far removed from slavery, many of us may not truly appreciate Emancipation’s historical importance.
During slavery our foreparents had no rights as human beings under British law. They were forced to work their entire lives in inhumane conditions by British slave masters with no compensation.
They were not allowed to go to school or to learn to read and write. They were not allowed to marry, have a family, keep their own children, and girls and women were the sexual pleasure of the slave master. They were not allowed to own property and were themselves legally owned by British slave owners in the UK and British colonies.
These violations of our foreparents’ basic human rights were crimes against humanity. They revolted many times against their British oppressors in an effort to gain their freedom.
Emancipation was the first milestone in the process of the formerly enslaved men, women, and children becoming Caribbean people since their enslaved African ancestors, who were systematically separated from any family members, began arriving on the islands and sent to plantations where over time they and their offspring were stripped of their languages, cultures, and traditions, and subjected to the traditions, institutions, religion, and language — that became part of their identity — of their British oppressors.
Raising awareness about our foreparents’ struggle for freedom and eventual release from bondage should not be limited to the annual Emancipation activities. Emancipation must be properly taught in the schools based on a curriculum that adequately covers the Caribbean’s slavery and post-slavery historical periods.
No student in the region should complete secondary school without having gained comprehensive knowledge of slavery in the Caribbean, which legally ended in the British West Indies on August 1, 1834 with the Emancipation Proclamation but lingered on for several years under an apprenticeship system.
Students should also learn about the hardship endured by the newly freed men, women, and children who received nothing from Britain to build new lives after their enslavement, versus the payouts made to their former slave owners by the UK Treasury as compensation for no longer having slaves to provide them with free labour.
Individuals should also try to educate themselves and their communities about these historical facts.
A greater awareness of the Caribbean’s slavery and post-slavery periods would help us as a people to better appreciate Emancipation and the need for continued public engagement and involvement in its commemoration and celebration.
Let us never take for granted the fundamental freedoms we enjoy today that our foreparents struggled to receive for over two centuries.
Benito Wheatley
British Virgin Islands
benitowheatley@gmail.com