From: IGC News Desk
Subject: CARIBBEAN: Indigenous Peoples Welcome New Government Concessions
Date: 2000/07/13
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*** 12-Jul-0* ***
Title: CARIBBEAN: Indigenous Peoples Welcome New Government Concessions
By Peter Richards PORT OF SPAIN, Jul 12
When the indigenous peoples of the region
gather in Trinidad and Tobago for their "International Gathering"
in August there will be some cause for celebration.
The Caribs from Dominica will be informing their counterparts of
the establishment of the long awaited "Carib Model Village" while
the Santa Rosa Carib community in Trinidad and Tobago will welcome
delegates with the news that that government is moving to have
Oct. 14 designated "A Day of Recognition" of the country's
indigenous peoples.
"We see this gathering as not just another celebration or reunion,
but as a vehicle that will seek to put in place an organised
structure to address the concerns of indigenous peoples of this
hemisphere," says Ricardo Hernandez-Bharath, president of the
local Carib community.
The Carib Model Village in Dominica is intended to promote and
improve the socio-economic conditions in the Carib Territory in Salybia, east of the capital, Roseau.
The village, located on a five-acre site near Crayfish River
Falls, will serve as a special tourist attraction with traditional
Carib buildings, craft production and sales outlets, and a
cultural art-drama centre.
The project, to be constructed in two phases, will adhere to Carib
traditions, with materials such as thatch roof covering, rough
sawn timber, round wood timber shutters and floors finished with
packed earth.
The project will cost 600,000 US dollars with funding from the
Caribbean Development Bank and the Dominica Government.
"This project is to foster a significant increase in the number of
visitors to the Carib territory, who will need food, guides,
accommodation, transportation and other services," Tourism
Minister Charles Savarin said.
Savarin has urged the Carib community there to "position
yourselves either individually or in small groups" to take
advantage of the opportunities as a result of the village.
For Trinidad and Tobago's Caribs, the model village project
recalls their continued fight to regain lands lost when Europeans
came and the centuries of colonialism that followed.
"The history of the Amerindians of Trinidad in the wake of
European colonialism has been one of continuous displacement and
loss of lands," a document from the Santa Rosa Community said.
In 1976, on the advice of the then Archbishop of Port of Spain,
Anthony Pantin, the community formed a limited liability company
"in an attempt to regain lands for the community."
"We have had very limited success. We realised that it is
impossible to reclaim most of our ancestral lands, which have been
lost to us. However, if our community is to survive, we must have
land," the community said.
Hernandez-Bharath says they are requesting 25 acres of land from
the government "to re-establish a village site" and a further 375
acres of "forested land to be kept in its natural state."
"If our community is to survive and we are to pass on our
traditions and leave a heritage for future generations, we must
have land. Therefore we ask for restitution. Land in lieu of what
we have lost," he said.
Hernandez-Bharath says further, the village would be used to
"create industries for our economic development."
These projects include the production of cassava bread, farine and
cassareep according to traditional Amerindian methods, fans,
baskets, mats and carry cases.
However, the Basdeo Panday administration has not committed itself
to providing all the lands being requested by the Carib community,
but has given hope that "some state lands" would be made
available.
Prime Minister Panday, speaking at the ceremony to launch the
third International Gathering of Indigenous Peoples late last
month said the country had to recognise that Trinidad had been the
home of the Caribs long before Indians, Africans and Europeans had
arrived in this country.
Panday told the ceremony he was instructing his Culture Minister
Dr. Daphne Phillips to bring a note to cabinet to make Oct. 14 a
"Day of Recognition" to celebrate the Carib community, that has
already indicated that the day be known as "Amerindian Heritage
Day."
"Let me stress that the Carib Community has not petitioned for a
public holiday. The members of the community have simply asked
this country to give recognition and respect on a special day to
its indigenous people," Panday added.
On the Carib calendar, Oct. 14 is significant. On that day in
1637, the Carib Chieftain Hyarima attacked and destroyed the
Spanish colony and former capital of the country St. Joseph
located along the east-west corridor.
Fernandez-Bharath says that while Trinidad and Tobago has been
home to "a multitude of peoples" who were all victims of history
"all the major cultures that have come to this country have
flourished more than the original culture of this land".
He says the decision by the United Nations in 1994 to launch the
International Decade of the world's Indigenous Peoples was a
recognition of the need to strengthen international co-operation
to help solve problems faced by indigenous peoples in areas such
as human rights, the environment, development, health, culture and
education.
The International Gathering scheduled for Aug. 25-30, will provide
an "opportunity to take up the challenge of alleviating the
situation of indigenous populations and to intensify efforts to
respond to their legitimate demands and needs", he added.
The Carib community is also hoping that the International
Gathering will lead to the establishment of a permanent
secretariat for the Caribbean Organisation of Indigenous Peoples,
to be located in Trinidad and Tobago.
"An establishment of this nature is one way of ensuring that
indigenous peoples and their cultures survive in the new
millennium," Fernandez-Bharath says.