I'm posting only the paragraphs relevant to the focus of this thread. The first several paragraphs have been deleted. The entire article can be read here:
http://www.jamaica-gleaner.com/glean...cleisure2.html
When our heroes return home
published: Saturday | September 13, 2008
Hartley Neita
We began to officially celebrate our victories at the Beijing Olympics when Usain Bolt returned home this week.
The tarmac at the airport, which is a high-security zone, was packed with everybody who knew some-body. What should have been an orderly welcome and motorcade bordered on chaos. Prime Minister Golding seemed pleased with the response.
"What it does say to you," he told Bolt, "is that you have captured the heart of the Jamaican people. You have captured their love and attention. The last time I saw people come out like that along that route was when Nelson Mandela was here."
That occasion should best be forgotten. It was almost similar to the chaos on the arrival of Haile Selassie in the 1960s.
I am sure many readers saw on television the welcome given to the Trinidadian medal winners when they arrived at the Piarco Airport this week. It was enthusiastic and exuberant. But orderly.
I also found on the Internet the welcome given to the Panamanian medallist when he returned home last week. Like Trinidad's, there was nuff respect for the occasion.
Now, please do not tell me that I do not understand the Jamaican culture. I am going to hear:
"That's how we are."
"That's how we show love!"
I hope our girls will be better protected when they arrive.
High standards?
Finally, I do not know who was responsible for the presentation to Bolt of a painting of himself at the welcome held at The Jamaica Pegasus.
Usain Bolt is a gold-medal winner, not once, but thrice. To present him with a painting based on a photograph by an artist whose only claim to fame was that he was a bronze medal winner in the Jamaica Cultural Development Commission's Festival competition in 2007, and who could only receive a certificate of participation this year, is an insult to our artistic community.
I thought we had high standards. Are we going to present paintings of themselves to our female athletes?
I will not use Rex Nettleford's favourite phrase to describe this present.
http://www.jamaica-gleaner.com/glean...cleisure2.html
When our heroes return home
published: Saturday | September 13, 2008
Hartley Neita
We began to officially celebrate our victories at the Beijing Olympics when Usain Bolt returned home this week.
The tarmac at the airport, which is a high-security zone, was packed with everybody who knew some-body. What should have been an orderly welcome and motorcade bordered on chaos. Prime Minister Golding seemed pleased with the response.
"What it does say to you," he told Bolt, "is that you have captured the heart of the Jamaican people. You have captured their love and attention. The last time I saw people come out like that along that route was when Nelson Mandela was here."
That occasion should best be forgotten. It was almost similar to the chaos on the arrival of Haile Selassie in the 1960s.
I am sure many readers saw on television the welcome given to the Trinidadian medal winners when they arrived at the Piarco Airport this week. It was enthusiastic and exuberant. But orderly.
I also found on the Internet the welcome given to the Panamanian medallist when he returned home last week. Like Trinidad's, there was nuff respect for the occasion.
Now, please do not tell me that I do not understand the Jamaican culture. I am going to hear:
"That's how we are."
"That's how we show love!"
I hope our girls will be better protected when they arrive.
High standards?
Finally, I do not know who was responsible for the presentation to Bolt of a painting of himself at the welcome held at The Jamaica Pegasus.
Usain Bolt is a gold-medal winner, not once, but thrice. To present him with a painting based on a photograph by an artist whose only claim to fame was that he was a bronze medal winner in the Jamaica Cultural Development Commission's Festival competition in 2007, and who could only receive a certificate of participation this year, is an insult to our artistic community.
I thought we had high standards. Are we going to present paintings of themselves to our female athletes?
I will not use Rex Nettleford's favourite phrase to describe this present.
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