Barbados then, and Barbados now
by Keith SANDIFORD
Now that Barbados is celebrating its 350th anniversary of
continuous parliamentary government, I cannot resist the temptation to look at
my native land from two different perspectives. The first is that of an angry
emigrant who left over 30 years ago, determined never to return as a settled
inhabitant there. The second perspective is that of an older, and I dare say,
wiser, individual.
I was quite disillusioned with Bardados when I first left it, in
1956, to attend the University College of the West Indies at Mona. Since then, I
have frequently returned for brief periods and have grown increasingly more
respectful of that small island. I left angrily at the age of 20 because, in my
judgement, Barbados had made too little social progress for 100 years. Slavery,
it is true, had been abolished in 1834 and the apprenticeship system had been
discarded in 1838. Blacks had won a certain degree of personal freedom, but they
were still shackled by a host of petty conventions.
To understand this aspect of Bardados in the 1950s, one must
remember that the country was the product of a sad colonial past. A small
percentage of the population owned most of the colonys wealth, while more
than 90 % of the people laboured for very little in return. Economic deprivation
was accompanied by social stigma and political oppression. Blacks as a rule had
no social standing, no economic power, and no political rights. This was the
situation as late as 1950.
I very deeply resented that situation. It was compounded even
further by a certain Victorian kind of class consciousness which bred snobbery
of the worst sort, and a distinctive brand of racism which left Blacks at the
base of the racial pyramid and placed browns and mulattoes somewhere in the
middle, but far below the whites and the nearly whites. Social climbers often
tried to distance themselves from their own roots and a wide range of barriers
were set up between individuals, families and groups. You had to know your place
in that complicated class structure and often could depend only on school
certificates to inch forward slowly up the social ladder.
The social structure was so rigid in those days, that
connections were more important than brains, and shades of colour could
transcend academic worth. My elder brother (Basil) and I had no illusion about
our prospects. We were both at Combermere School in the early 1950s, but we knew
that, because of our colour and our background, our only hope of economic
salvation was a job in the civil service, or as a teacher, beginning at $40 a
month.
The situation was so comical that my younger brother (Harry),
who was a curious kind of tumbric colour had a better chance. He, in
fact, commenced his career as a messenger with Robert Thom at the age of
fourteen and almost immediately began to make a name for himself in the
Bridgetown business world without any certificates whatever. It is true that he
subsequently upgraded his qualifications and his skills, while demonstrating an
acumen that belied his tender age, but his running start in the field of
business was based, to a large extent, on the shade of his complexion. By 1967,
still only 30 years old, Harry had already rescued Gulstone and Perkins from the
inefficiency of their previous managers. Basil, at 33, had moved in the meantime
at a snails pace up the lower rungs of the civil service.
This was Barbados then: a poor colony, too British for its own
good, and dominated by Victorian values which even the British had already
abandoned. Our school system, for instance was still patterned on
nineteenth-century Eton and Winchester and the emphasis was still then very much
on the four Cs: Cricket, Christianity, Classics and the Cane. So we learnt an
enormous amount of unnecessary Latin and Greek, and no natural sciences at all.
We learnt a good deal of British and European history and no West Indian
sociology at all. We knew some European geography, and could recite all the
major European capitals, but we knew very little about Barbados and less about
the Caribbean.
Everyone recognised a sharp distinction between the first grade
secondary schools and the others, and most families who considered themselves
important sent their children to Harrison College, the Lodge School, or
Queens College as a matter of course. No one instilled in us any pride in
our own past or heritage. We were brainwashed into detaching ourselves from our
African roots and all things African were regarded in a negative light. Africa
was a continent despised, like the vast majority of her millions of children.
This was Barbados then. And I ran away from it as soon as I
could. But I left while the island was beginning to change. The real revolution
even though I could not appreciate it at the time - had already begun, with the
rise (during the late 1930s) of the Barbados Labour Party and the Barbados
Workers Union. These had become two very powerful instruments by 1950.
They forced the minority of whites to revise the constitution and establish a
system of universal adult suffrage.
The immediate result was a black majority in the House of
Assembly by 1955. A legislature which for more than 300 years had catered to the
whims of a small white elite was finally representative of the real Barbadians.
Two Labour parties shortly emerged, both led by black individuals preaching
similar gospels, and the old Progresive Conservative Party, the last political
bastion of Barbadian whites, was stifled almost at once. The followers of
Grantley Adams and Errol Barrow completely dominated Barbadian politics from the
mid-fifties onwards.
Within less than a decade after the democratisation of the
franchise in 1953, all the whites had been swept from political power. The
repercussions were enormous. Not only did the complexion of Barbadian politics
change, but laws against racial discrimination were introduced at long last, and
private clubs that had once been exclusively white were now compelled to accept
non-white members.
Amazingly, in a society with about five or six percent white,
all the secondary school headmasters, with the exception of Hayford Skeete at
the Boys Foundation School, had been non-black up to my own time at
Combermere.
The two Labour Party governments quickly put that matter right.
Stanton Gittens became the first black headmaster of Combermere School in 1961,
and Albert Williams became the first non-white headmaster of Harrison College in
1965. By 1970, without exception, all the headmasters at every level in Barbados
were black, and so too were the vast majority of headmistresses. Few white
teachers were left in any Barbadian school by 1975. Similarly, Barbadians had
adopted the habit of appointing black cricket and soccer captains.
This revolution was not confined to sports and education.
Consider the clergy, for intance. Up to 1950, the majority of Barbadian priests
had been white or nearly-white. By 1970, that was no longer the case. Black
Anglican leaders, like Dean Harold Crichlow and Canon Seon Goodridge had
emerged. Up to 1950, the only non-white head of a civil service department in
Barbados (so far as I could ascertain) was Robert Clarke, the Post Master
General. By 1970, it was difficult to find any whites at all occupying such
positions of authority.
This, then, was Barbados in transition. Within two short
decades, the old vanilla guard had been supplanted by the chocolates, and even
the strawberries found themselves in trouble. Political, administrative,
clerical, educational, and social power had come to the Barbadian majority at
long last.
The question of colour gradually ceased to be important, and
even the commercial houses had to recognise that they were likely to be better
served by educated blacks than by untrained whites. Hence the frantic search for
local expertise which began during the 1960s. The political leaders encouraged
this trend by insisting that white foreigners should not be brought in to
undertake professional or administrative tasks that could be performed by
qualified natives. Parent firms in Britain and elsewhere thus had to engage
Barbadian managers, directors, accountants and technicians to run their
Barbadian branches.
When I went back home to Barbados for Christmas 1962, I found
that it was not only the schools which were coming under the control of blacks,
but the hospital staff had already begun to change its complexion. The old UCWI
was producing new black doctors almost at the rate of a factory, and the
Barbadian natives were beginning to return from Mona literally in droves. So
medicine, too, was gradually Barbadianised at long last. By Christmas 1971, when
I made yet another pilgrimage to the island, young black doctors, like Dennis
Bailey, Belfield Brathwaite, Michael Clarke, Charlie Harris, MacMilla Hodge,
Edson Inniss, Noriss Procope, Alfred Ralston, and Robert Thomas had come
steadily to the forefront of medicine in Barbados.
My point about all this is not only to demonstrate what
political power can accomplish, but to emphasise that such changes cannot take
place in an economic vacuum. I stress this because even on my last return to
Barbados during the winter of 1988, some of the new men were still complaining
about economic inequality. They were still arguing that the Barbadian economy
was dominated by the old planter class and that this could be proven by any
study of the modern directorates in Bridgetown. It was this conviction which
persuaded a number of blacks to make their celebrated (but unsuccessful) bid for
membership of the Board of Directors of the Barbados Mutual Life Assurance
Society in December 1988.
I do not deny that a good deal of Barbadian money is still
white, but I am happy to report that the complaints about white economic
monopoly are exaggerated. In fact, after the restructuring of Barbadian
politics, several white families preferred to emigrate rather than live in a
true Barbadian democracy. Some of them sold their estates and took their money
with them to Australia, New Zealand and elsewhere. The business world of
Bridgetown is thus no longer dominated by the planter class. Indeed, the old
plantations have almost completely been broken up; and new business concerns
have emerged. Most of these new business are largely run by the new men
themselves, and even the old ones have been compelled by recent governments to
employ local experts instead of foreigners.
Local lawyers and accountants have found many opportunities
where none had existed in the 1940s. The young radical intellectuals at Cave
Hill, who have struck so many telling and timely blows against the outrageous
Anglo-Saxon mythology on which my own generation was weaned, are absolutely
right when they advocate greater economic power for black Barbadians; but I do
think they are quite wrong when they cavalierly dismiss the bulk of new black
directors and administrators quite simply as lackeys.
The emergence of a powerful black elite is everywhere manifest,
and most obviously so in the field of housing. Spacious mansions have been
constructed all over the island and the vast majority of them are being occupied
by blacks. When I first left Barbados 33 years ago, the bulk of the homes in
such areas as Belleville and Fontabelle belonged to whites and mulattoes. The
newer residential areas around Cave Hill, Clermont, Oxnards, and Stanmore are
now occupied by the new black bourgeoisie.
I am not suggesting that the wealth of Barbados has now been
evenly divided. There are still some rich white families, and there are still
many poor black homes. Radicals and social democrats, like my good friend Dr.
Hilary Beckles, must still continue their important quest for economic and
social justice. But the situation is incalculably healthier in the 1980s than it
had been during my childhood.
The root of our economic problem lies partly in our geography.
Barbados is not blessed with abundant mineral and metal resources. Our soil is
sufficiently fertile to allow us to cultivate a wide variety of fruits and
vegetables, but our domestic market is too small and we are unable to compete on
the international stage with the large North American producers.
It is also unfortunately the case that Barbados happens to be in
an American monetary orbit and must therefore manifest all the symptoms of a
severe cold whenever the New York market sneezes. That, as is well-known
however, is by no means peculiar to Barbados. Some so-called developing
countries are at the mercy of the IMF and are even more unhappy victims of
economic imperialism. Even so-called developed-countries are experiencing
economic stress. No less unfortunate is the fact that Barbados produces more
trained professionals than can be gainfully employed at home. Thousands of
graduates leave secondary schools every year and cannot all of them be properly
placed in a very limited job market. That is, of couse, a real pity - especially
since so many modern countries have cultivated the annoying habit of restricting
immigration.
What worries me more, however, than the racial or the economic
situation now is the strictly social one. The gap between rich and poor blacks
in Barbados has widened. There is a powerful upper-middle class black clique
which seems to be running everything in the island. So the traditional habit of
using (and sometimes abusing) the old-boy network has come into play. The Mona
Men, as I have called them, dominate everything from the banks and businesses to
the churches and the schools. They have the capacity, therefore, to do
considerable harm. I am, of course, one of these Mona Men myself, and cannot
escape an uneasy feeling when I consider how privileged a person I suddenly
become from the time I enter the Grantley Adams airport, where I am often
recognised even by the younger immigration and customs officers..
My hope is that such power will be wielded humanely. I know that
it once was. During the 1950s and 1960s, most of the emerging civil servants and
teachers in Barbados had come from modest origins. They could therefore identify
most easily with the poor and the destitute. This made the bureaucracy in
Barbados at that time much friendlier and less impersonal than the bureaucracy
with which I myself have had to deal in countries like Jamaica, Canada, and
England. In those days, you see, the Bajan bourgeoisie, was mainly
first-generation bourgeois and could not, as they say, play great.
Amazingly enough, when I got to Mona in 1956, I discovered that
almost all the Bajans there were very much in the same boat as myself. There
were a few exceptions, but most of us were desperately poor. We had no money and
no influential parents, and often no working parents either. We had all arisen
through the scholarship system and this had been our only salvation. We could
relate to poverty in ways in which our Trinidadian and Jamaican colleagues at
Mona could never have done. Now, the problem is: how will our own children
relate to their less fortunate countrymen? I am much bothered by that.
My concern, however, is tempered by the knowledge that,
generally speaking, Barbadians have always responded intelligently to practical
difficulties. We are not, relatively speaking, a wealthy community; and yet we
have consistently handled our budgets much more skilfully than others in the
Caribbean.
It is by researching these kinds of questions recently that I am
finally becoming less alienated from my native land. I feel a lot more proud
today of being Barbadian than I felt 30 years ago. Barbados now is so much
better than Barbados then. Successive cabinets, since the introduction of
ministerial government in 1954, have pursued a wide range of social and economic
policies which have left the country with fairly efficient schools and
hospitals, good roads and new highways, an excellent water supply, light and
power systems which are the most reliable in the Caribbean, and a communications
network which is the envy of the Western hemisphere.
This improvement no doubt springs from the creative uses to
which political independence has just been put. And it is especially in its
treatment of the important question of education that Barbados has set a
sterling example to the rest of the world.
We place more emphasis on education than anyone else. We have
been devoting consistently more than 22% of our gross national revenues to the
upkeep of schools, colleges, and libraries. This is a miracle. The Americans,
for example, often spend less than 5% on education. The result is that we have
more schools per square mile, and more teachers per capita, than any other
society of which I am personally aware. At the most conservative of estimates,
at least some 5 000 private and public teachers operate in a community of just
over 250 000. We have also updated our curricula and have come to pay more
attention to such disciplines as agriculture, biology, chemistry, physics, and
engineering.
This magnificent obsession with education has paid off
handsomely in the quality of our House of Assembly and our Senate. It has been
reflected, too, in the astuteness of our electorate. The result is that there
has been much less corruption and misgovernment in our recent history than
almost anywhere else. Our elections are conducted with less violence than
elsewhere and our electorate is one of the best informed in the world. The
common people take a keen interest in public meetings and political decisions
and have a much sounder grasp of Barbadian political realities than is the norm
for modern proletariats.
It is the basic commonsense of the electorate which saves
Barbados from the kind of political ruin which has befallen most independent
countries. The Barbadian voters will simply not permit a ruling party, for
example, to become too smug and arrogant. Hence comfortable majorities have
suddenly disappeared during general elections, especially after the incumbents
have already enjoyed two consecutive terms. Ever since the Barrow administration
was allowed a third innings in 1971, the popular wisdom has been
that governments do their best work in about 10 years before becoming stale and
complacent. There is no place in Barbadian politics for any monopoly.
Making miraculous use of sugar, molasses, rum, cigarettes, beer,
tourism and minimal manufacturing, Barbados has increased its annual revenues
from about $44 million to more than $700 million in just over 20 years of
political independence. It has spent these monies so frugally, that the interest
on its debt charges has never risen to the point where the repayment of loans
has interfered with the proper management of the governments budget.
And yet, since 1966, we have built modern hospitals, schools,
government offices, roads, a cultural centre, and even a National Bank. None of
the other West Indian nations, so far as I know, can boast this kind of
performance in public works. A succesion of Labour governments from both sides
of the fence have encouraged poultry and dairy farming and the gradual
broadening of the agricultural and industrial sectors of the economy. Our record
is so good that Barbados can seldom qualify for some of the external aid offered
occasionally by the developed countries.
If this account appears too rosy at a time when my namesake, the
prime minister, is under all kinds of fire for his monetary and economic
policies, those partisans who complain about governmental failure and
mismanagement should pay a visit, or a series of brief visits, to other
developing nations. It is not even necessary to travel as far afield as
Africa and Asia. In almost every neighbouring Caribbean and Latin American
country, where public buildings are in disrepair, roads are impassable, water is
scarce, telephones seldom work, electricity and gas outages are frequent, the
currency has been devalued repeatedly, and all kinds of important commodities
are in short supply. Well-to-do persons from other West Indian islands have thus
adopted the policy of flying frequently to Barbados to purchase even food and
clothing.
Such conditions have done serious violence to the tourist
industry in neighbouring countries. Barbados, on the other hand, has been able
to retain its appeal as a tourist attraction. In fact, by developing a vibrant
Crop Over festival during the past 10 years or so, the island has been able to
draw thousands of visitors in July and August. A community so staid as to have
been the laughing-stock of its neighbours, as late as 1966, has gradually
cultivated part of the Trinidadian calypso and carnival tradition. In the mid-
1950s I myself would have regarded such a development as totally impossible. But
young cultural leaders, like Elton Mottley and Trevor Marshall, have performed a
minor miracle here. Bajan Yankees and Bajan Canucks have begun to plan their
summer itineraries around Crop Over, and the tradition has already become so
firmly established that it would now be extremely difficult to destroy it.
Crop Over has helped to make Barbadians more culturally alert.
We are now more consciously aiming at composing our own lyrics, writing our own
ballads, forming our own bands, and producing our own records. We have become
far more interested in drama and theatre than we were during the 1950s.
There are more Barbadian artists, musicians, and writers than
there were in my youth. Such gifted teachers as Karl Broodhagen and James
Millington, who first emerged in the 1940s, have already left an indelible
imprint on Barbadian art and music. And journals such as the New Bajan and Banja
are doing much to encourage the growth of Barbadian literature. The
establishment recently of a National Cultural Foundation was also a most
fortunate stroke.
There is another positive feature of recent Barbadian social
history with which, as a firm supporter of the female liberation movement, I am
extremely delighted. It is the gradual, albeit grudging, abandonment of male
chauvinism which so completely dominated the islands ethos up to the time
of my departure.
In 1956, Barbados still maintained a very sharp distinction
between the sexes. Salary scales were different in most sectors of the public
service and women were not expected to hold any positions of importance. Middle
class wives were actually discouraged from working, and maternity leave was
beyond our contemplation. Even the public schools were divided according to
gender. After the publication of the Jacobs Commission Report in 1961, however,
the government made a concerted effort to destroy the gender barriers in the
teaching profession. Female salaries were brought into line with those of the
men and co-education replaced the older Victorian norm. As it was impossible to
treat female teachers preferentially, women steadily emerged to play a more
prominent role in most areas of Barbadian life. Some of them have entered
politics, medicine, law, and business. They have not yet won full equality, but
they have certainly made huge strides in the past three decades.
What then can I say in conclusion? I may still not go back to
live permanently in Barbados, having settled comfortably in Canada for almost 30
years. I have dug very deep roots here and my children are native Canadians. But
I would certainly not be as unhappy in 1989 as I would have been in 1959 had I
been deported and ordered back home.
I recognise, however, that we still have difficulties in
Barbados. The unemployment rate, for example, is much too high. Our welfare
system is not as sophisticated as the North American, some of our young adults
are becoming too addicted to illegal drugs, and our health care system is still
hamstrung by lack of funds. but these are not peculiarly Barbadian problems;
most modern societies are currently grappling with similar difficulties. The
Barbadian record is such, however, that we can rest assured that if any country
can solve such problems, that country will be Barbados.
K.S.