UNREST IN CARRIBEAN HAS ROOTS IN SLAVERY PAST (904 hits)
POINTE-A-PITRE, Guadeloupe (AP) - Protests that have nearly shut down the French Caribbean islands of Guadeloupe and Martinique are not just about demands for lower prices and higher wages: For demonstrators they are no less than a battle against the vestiges of slavery.
Afro-Caribbean islanders - most of whose forbears toiled in the sugarcane fields under the yoke of slavery more than 160 years ago - not only resent France's handling of the global economic crisis, they have long resented that slaveholders' descendants control the economy on both islands.
They also suspect that businesses earn too high a profit on goods, most of which are imported.
This resentment against the primarily white, elite slaveholder descendants, known as bekes (bay-KAY), has lent an especially sharp edge to weeks of demonstrations that at times have erupted in gunfire, arson, looting, and the death of one activist in Guadeloupe.
Hmmm interesting, thanks for sharing global news of our people in the Diaspora. I certainly appreciate how you push the boundaries of just "being Black at home."
Tuesday, February 24th 2009 at 9:43AM
Marta Fernandez
Thanks for allowing me to share Sister Marta, as always.
Meanwhile, check out the site www.blackwomenunite.ning.com, which is the official site of the Women Of The African Diaspora. May you find it interesting.