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  • Matalon need to clarify imself

    Jamaican Jews see intermarriage, conversion as their future

    Assimilation and emigration present the greatest challenges to one of the western hemisphere’s oldest communities

    By DEBRA RUBIN December 24, 2012, 4:22 pm 0






    RELATED TOPICS


    [FONT='Helvetica Neue', Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif]KINGSTON, Jamaica (JTA) — A Caribbean mineral bath was Marie Reynolds’ mikvah.
    Reynolds used the living waters of Kingston’s Rockford Mineral Baths for the ritual immersion required to complete her conversion to Judaism, formally becoming a member of one of the oldest Jewish communities in the Western Hemisphere: Jamaican Jewry.
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    The tiny, racially mixed community — “200 souls,” as Jewish community leader Ainsley Henriques puts it — may well depend on Jews by choice like Reynolds.
    Even prior to her conversion, Reynolds, who had studied Judaism on and off for more than a decade, was a choir member and soloist at Congregation Kahal Kadosh Shaare Shalom, Jamaica’s only synagogue.
    Once a regular churchgoer, Reynolds, 52, said she was drawn to Judaism initially by her desire in the late 1990s to have a day of rest. A visit in 1998 to the Museum of Jewish Heritage-A Living Memorial to the Holocaust in New York gave Reynolds, a child psychotherapist, a deep sense of connection to Judaism.
    “I felt like I was coming home,” she said.
    A year or two after the museum visit, she discovered that her mother-in-law’s family was Jewish; her husband had no idea.
    Given the Jewish community’s centuries-long history in Jamaica, it’s not shocking that Reynolds’ husband has Jewish roots. The 73-year-old Henriques, who wears the multiple hats of community leader, historian and Israel’s honorary consul, believes that as many as 10 percent of Jamaicans have Jewish ancestry.

    “We’ve sown our seeds wide and far,” said Joseph Matalon, 67, whose family is among Jamaica’s newer arrivals, having come to the island from Damascus, Syria, in the 20th century.
    By 1849, enough Jews were serving in Jamaica’s House of Assembly that it didn’t meet on Yom Kippur
    Matalon also cautions that there may be some racial bias in many Jamaican claims to Jewish ancestry.
    “It is important to be white” or have light skin, he said of the residents of a country that is 90 percent black. “When they tell you that their great-great-grandfather was Jewish, they’re saying they’re white.”
    Reynolds says she does not know if she has any Jewish ancestry.
    “People like success and like to be connected to success; I have a feeling they see the Jews as successful,” said Marilyn Delevante, 76, a retired physician and author of “The Island of One People: An Account of the History of the Jews of Jamaica,” which she wrote with her brother, Anthony Alberga.
    Jewish roots in Jamaica run deep. Some conversos — Jews who were forced to convert during the Inquisition, but continued to practice Judaism in secret — may have arrived on the island with Christopher Columbus in 1494 and during his later trips, according to Delevante’s book.
    In 1577, Jews were free to live and work on the island, but it wasn’t until the British conquered Jamaica in 1655 that Jews were permitted to practice their religion openly and establish a Jewish community, including synagogues and cemeteries.
    Efforts are under way to catalog, clean up and restore 13 remaining cemeteries, only one of which is actively used.
    Since the 17th century, Jamaica’s Jews have been an integral part of the country as merchants, doctors, lawyers, accountants, artists, entrepreneurs and government officials. The first synagogue was built in Port Royal in the mid-1600s, then destroyed in a 1692 earthquake that leveled much of the area.
    For much of the nation’s history, Jews have been well-integrated in the community at large, and intermarriage has been common — despite some anti-Jewish sentiment in the early years of British rule.
    Like many of Jamaica’s roughly 200 Jews, Ainsley Henriques, pictured at the Jewish Heritage Center in Kingston, traces his background to Sephardic immigrants. (Debra Rubin/JTA)

    “We’re very much part of the community,” Delevante said. “We’re not separate, and we don’t separate from anyone.”
    By 1849, enough Jews were serving in the House of Assembly that it didn’t meet on Yom Kippur. When Jamaica achieved independence from Britain in 1962, its first ambassador to the United States was a Jewish businessman and lawyer, Neville Ashenheim.
    A downside to the Jewish community’s acceptance and integration in Jamaica is its dwindling numbers, exacerbated in some years by political uncertainty, but primarily blamed on the emigration of young Jews who study abroad and don’t return. At the community’s peak in 1881, Jews comprised 4.5 percent of Jamaica’s population of 580,000 (17.5 percent of the white population), according to Delevante’s book. Today, Jews represent a micro-fraction of 2.6 million Jamaicans.
    The community has no mohel, no mikvah and no place to buy kosher meat. The last bar mitzvah ceremony for a Jewish child living in Jamaica was more than a year ago; most b’nai mitzvah are children of former residents returning for the celebration or those who have chosen a “destination” bar/bat mitzvah ceremony. The same is true for wedding ceremonies.
    Hillel Academy, a prep school with 20 or so Jews in a student population of 650 to 700, was founded and is run by the Jewish community, but aside from closing for Jewish holidays, it doesn’t have much Jewish character. It’s more of a symbol of the Jewish community’s focus on education nationwide.
    “We have felt obliged to do as much as we can for this country because this country has been very good to us,” Delevante said.
    Last year, Shaare Shalom hired its first full-time rabbi in more than three decades, Dana Evan Kaplan.

    “The need for a rabbi was really to pull the congregation together and increase the knowledge and awareness of Judaism in the community after being without this level of leadership for so many years,” said Stephen Henriques, 51, a synagogue vice president who was responsible for much of the religious leadership before the rabbi’s arrival.
    ‘We’re very much part of the community. We’re not separate, and we don’t separate from anyone’
    (Stephen Henriques, Ainsley Henriques and Delevante, whose mother was an Henriques, are cousins, although Stephen Henriques says that while many in the synagogue can trace their roots to a small group of early Sephardic families, not everyone is related.)
    Among the cousins, Delevante, who says she is probably the only Jew in Jamaica to keep kosher, appears most worried about the future of Jamaican Jewry.
    Despite the high intermarriage rate, however, most children of intermarriage are raised as Jews, and there continue to be conversions. That, community members say, is what will keep Jamaican Jewry going.
    “We are doing well and plan on growing,” said Kaplan, who oversaw the completion of 18 conversions in his first year as rabbi. He credits conversion as “one factor in our vitality, but not the only one.”
    Reynolds, too, is optimistic. She says the community’s future will depend on Jews who feel obligated to help maintain the community’s heritage, Jamaicans who grew up as Christians but return to their family’s Jewish roots and converts like herself.
    “All these will contribute to the maintenance of a Jewish community,” she said. “We will be part of keeping the community alive.”
    [/font]
    Last edited by Sir X; July 5, 2013, 10:05 PM.
    THERE IS ONLY ONE ONANDI LOWE!

    "Good things come out of the garrisons" after his daughter won the 100m Gold For Jamaica.


    "It therefore is useless and pointless, unless it is for share malice and victimisation to arrest and charge a 92-year-old man for such a simple offence. There is nothing morally wrong with this man smoking a spliff; the only thing wrong is that it is still on the law books," said Chevannes.

  • #2
    'Who will be the last Jew?'

    Jamaica's Jewish community dates back 350 years and though it played a significant role in shaping the island's culture, its days may now be numbered

    By Gil Shefler Jun.03, 2010 | 9:44 PM



    Community leader Ainsley Henriques. 'Jamaica was good for Jews.' Photo by Alon Gildoni







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    THIS STORY IS BY
    Gil Shefler






    KINGSTON, Jamaica - In many respects, Ainsley Henriques is the kind of person you might expect to have been born and bred in Jamaica. He speaks English with the islanders' unique melodious accent, which Jamaica's musicians have made famous; he projects a seemingly unshakable calmness; and he knows the local tropical landscape like the back of his hand. Only his white skin reveals the fact that he is slightly different.
    Indeed, the 71-year-old Henriques is not your common Jamaican. He leads a Jewish community that is at least 350 years old and that has had a profound role in the history of the island. Since being appointed to head the community 30 years ago, he has been grappling with a difficult task: preventing it from dwindling, or at least slowing down that process.
    "I restructured the congregation, established an office, employed staff and persuaded the community to open a museum," Henriques says. "We have hundreds of school children coming in to the synagogue every week to learn about the community."
    More than 100 years of migration and assimilation have taken their toll and the Jamaican Jewish community has diminished from its all-time peak of 2,500 in 1882 to less than 200 today. But Henriques has not given up hope - yet. In January he organized a conference on the history of the Jews in the Caribbean, and particularly in Jamaica, which was held in the island's capital of Kingston. It was the first event of its kind and attracted academics from all over the world.
    Portuguese Jews were among the first Europeans to settle the island. Under Spanish rule, they had to keep their religion a secret. Only in the 17th century, when England conquered Jamaica, were the Jews there allowed to observe their religion openly.
    Says historian Mordechai Arbel, who has served as Israel's ambassador to several nations in the Caribbean and Latin America: "The Caribbean was a friendly place for Jews. The Protestant powers in that area at that time - Holland, England and Denmark - were liberal and tolerant toward religious minorities. The Jews were particularly welcome because they spoke Spanish and were in a position to trade with both Latin America and Europe. Moreover, the Jews were pioneers in agriculture and navigation, as well as other areas."
    The local Jewish community flourished under British rule. Its members were primarily involved in commercial ventures, but some apparently participated in organized piracy, launching attacks against the Spanish fleet with the British authorities' consent. Ainsley Henriques says a distant relative of his, Moshe Cohen Henriques, took part in one of the biggest pirate attacks in history, and adds that some say this relative was the brains behind it. In that 1628 raid, a Dutch fleet captured the Spanish Treasury's ships heading back home from the New World. When the well-known British pirate Henry Morgan brought loot to Jamaica, the Jewish merchants bought it from him and sometimes sold it back to the Spaniards - from whom it had been stolen.
    Gradually the Jews became involved in local politics and filled key positions. Their influence was so great that in 1849 the Jamaican parliament recessed on Yom Kippur because many of its members were Jewish.
    Despite the Jewish community's successful integration, and perhaps because of it, at the end of the 19th century it began to disappear. Jamaica did not become a main commercial center, and many of its Jews moved their businesses elsewhere. There was assimilation, too. Henriques insists that if it weren't for the education he received at home, he too might have lost his Jewish identity.
    "My mother, who came from one of the veteran Jewish families on the island, remarried and my stepfather was an observant Jew from Syria and kept kosher at home," he explains. "That is why I got a slightly more Jewish education than other community members."
    After he completed high school, Henriques studied at the Redding University in Britain where he was president of the Jewish student union. Unlike most of Jamaica's Jews, he returned to the island after completing his studies. He married a non-Jewish Jamaican woman, who converted under the tutelage of a local rabbi.
    In addition to his job as a senior government official, Henriques is an entrepreneur and a philanthropist. He was active in Jewish organizations, such as the Anti-Defamation League, until becoming the community's leader.
    Grains of sandOn Friday night, you can hear the sounds of prayer at the Shaare Shalom synagogue in Kingston's old and dilapidated town center. Prayers are recited in English, Hebrew and Spanish, as the first Jews who came to the island were from Spain. The impressive two-story synagogue was built in 1908, on the ruins of a synagogue that had been destroyed in an earthquake. It is the last synagogue on the island, and one of only eight synagogues in the world with a sand-covered floor.
    "There are four reasons for having a sandy floor," says Henriques. "One is that we should be as numerous as grains of sand. The second is [to preserve] the memory of our ancestors who walked silently and prayed secretly fearing persecution. The third is to remind us that we are a nation that came from the desert, and the fourth reason, perhaps the most important one, is that the children love it."
    Most of the congregants are white, but there are quite a few black children, too, from mixed marriages. Jamaica's phonebook contains several thousand people with Jewish names such as Cohen, Levy and Gabbai. Henriques estimates that some 20,000 residents have Jewish blood, but most have long ceased to identify themselves as Jews.
    Partique Mudhay, a black Jew with a graying beard, attends synagogue regularly. He was born 72 years ago to a devout Catholic family with Jewish roots: His grandmother was Jewish, but converted to Christianity upon her marriage. Once he was an adult, Mudhay decided to return to Judaism, a tradition that makes him proud. "Although I don't speak or read Hebrew," he says, he never misses a service. "I have to have people who know Hebrew read the Torah," the skullcap-wearing Mudhay explains. "I will not let others tamper with my religion."
    Sara Clunis also reembraced her Jewish roots as an adult. Her mother's parents were from the Matalon family, one of the Jewish families that came over from Syria in the 19th century. She fondly describes how they kept kosher at home and went to the synagogue on Shabbat. But her own mother married a non-Jew, and so Clunis was raised in a secular home. When she was 16, she went to study in the United States and stayed there.
    Three years ago she married an American Jew, and together they became more religious. Now they live in a Chabad community in New York, where they're raising their children, but she does not forget her Spanish-Jamaican roots.
    On a recent visit to Jamaica, nostalgia for the island overcomes her and she talks of her love for its calm pace of life and enchanting beaches. She dreams of returning one day.
    "I am so proud of my tradition, I very much want my children to have what I had," she says. "My husband and I are planning to return here in five years and open a kosher butcher shop, or perhaps a kosher vegetarian restaurant that will appeal to the Rastafari community, which does not eat meat."
    Mudhay and Clunis are exceptions: As a whole, the Jamaican Jewish community is fading. For 30 years it had no rabbi, and many young people who leave to study in foreign universities do not return. Several Israeli families relocated to the island because of work, but they do not plan to stay, and their relations with local Jews are cordial but somewhat distant.
    Even Henriques, who has devoted his life to preserving the community's tradition, believes it might disappear completely within 30 years.
    "Jamaica was good for Jews," he declares. "While they were persecuted elsewhere in the world, here they were greeted with open arms. Who will be the last Jew? I do not know. But I hope that at least some physical testimony will remain here commemorating the splendid community that once existed here."


    THERE IS ONLY ONE ONANDI LOWE!

    "Good things come out of the garrisons" after his daughter won the 100m Gold For Jamaica.


    "It therefore is useless and pointless, unless it is for share malice and victimisation to arrest and charge a 92-year-old man for such a simple offence. There is nothing morally wrong with this man smoking a spliff; the only thing wrong is that it is still on the law books," said Chevannes.

    Comment


    • #3
      Jews And Plantation Slavery In The Caribbean

      Published: Sunday | July 8, 201244 Comments




      Carolyn Cooper




      Carolyn Cooper, Contributor

      Two Sundays ago, when I visited the Shaare Shalom synagogue for the Kingston on the Edge (KOTE) ]concert
      , 'Music Is Sacred', I got a grand tour of the Museum of Jamaican Jewish history that is located next door. My distinguished guide was Mr Ainsley Henriques, leader of the Jewish community in Jamaica
      The exhibits tell a captivating story of triumphant survival in exile. The display of sacred objects and cultural artefacts was supplemented by Ainsley's informative commentary. He's a historian and genealogist with a passion for heritage preservation. In fact, he's the current chairman of the board of trustees of the Jamaica National Heritage Trust.
      I was somewhat surprised to see that the museum didn't tell the whole story of Jewish history in Jamaica. The role of Jews in plantation slavery is not documented at all. This silence is troubling, especially since so many students visit the museum each year. They end up getting a rather distorted ]account[/color] of Jamaican, not just Jewish, history.[/color]
      In his prophetic song, Columbus, reggae philosopher Burning Spear warns that:

      A whole heap a mix up, mix up
      A whole heap a bend up, bend up
      Go ha fi straighten out.

      Burning Spear was, primarily, contesting the falsehood that Christopher Columbus 'discovered' Jamaica:

      I an I all I know
      I an I all I say
      I an I reconsider
      I an I an see upfully that
      Christopher Columbus is a damn blasted
      liar.

      The reconsidering and 'upfull' revisioning that Burning Spear advocates can be applied as well to the many other partial histories we've inherited. Especially this year, as we celebrate 50 years of Independence, we must acknowledge Burning Spear's challenge to set the record straight.
      Songs of lamentation
      As it turns out, Jewish people played an undeniable role in plantation slavery in Jamaica. Ironically, Jewish exiles in the strange lands of the so-called 'New' World were complicit in the process of enslaving Africans. Forced to sing King Alpha's song, Africans in the diaspora found consolation in the sacred book of the Jews. They created their own dub version of Jewish songs of lamentation.
      On that score, I got a rather stern response to last week's column, 'Rastafari reclaim Jewish roots', from Barbara Blake Hannah on Facebook: "'Reclaim' or 'share' Carolyn? 'Reclaim' would mean Rastafari originated from Judaism, not Christianity as I&I proclaim. And where were the Rastafari participating in the 'Nyabinghi'? Seems more like a Red Bones concert in the Synagogue with reggae Rasta artists! You mean to tell me that 'Selassie is God' was being chanted by those gathered? If so, sorry I missed the 'binghi'."
      Of course, 'reclaim' does not imply a singular origin. The roots of Rastafari are rhizomatic, like ginger. And I was using binghi metaphorically. But, as I've learnt after almost three years of writing this column, some readers are quite suspicious of metaphors, preferring to take everything literally. Barbara insists on a 'correction'. So, to make her happy, I hereby renounce my use of the metaphor of the binghi. It was, literally, only a concert. And the roots of Rastafari really have nothing in common with ginger.
      Movement of Jah people
      How Jewish people came to be engaged in plantation slavery in the Caribbean[/color] is a rather long and complicated story. The Tribunal of the Holy Office of the Inquisition, more popularly known as the Spanish Inquisition, launched a holy war against non-Catholics in 1480. Jews and Muslims were the targets of attack. The tribunal was not abolished until 1834, the very same year that slavery was outlawed in the British Caribbean.[/color]
      Muslims from North Africa, who were called Moors, had invaded the Iberian Peninsula in 711 and occupied it for almost 600 years. The Spanish Inquisition was a belated attempt to purify the land of 'foreign' religions. Many Jews supposedly converted to Christianity but practised Judaism in secret. The Alhambra decree, issued in January 1492, put an end to the pretence. It demanded the expulsion of Jews.
      Columbus' 'discovery' opened doors of opportunity for Jews expelled from Spain and Portugal. Many Sephardic Jews went to Brazil where they made fortunes in plantation slavery. According to Ralph Bennett in an essay, 'History of Jews in Brazil', "It is believed that the first sugar cane was brought by a Jewish farmer from Madeira to Brazil in 1532. Sugar cane became the foundation of the Caribbean economy for several centuries."
      At the end of the 15th century, the Pope had imperiously divided the 'New' World between the Spanish and the Portuguese. The grasp of the Inquisition reached Jews in Brazil. Many were again forced to convert to Catholicism. But in 1630, the Dutch West India Company captured the city of Recife in the north of Brazil and the religious freedoms enjoyed in Holland were extended to the colony. Jews could now openly practise their religion.
      But freedom was short-lived. In 1645, the Portuguese launched war against the Dutch and reclaimed Recife in 1654, round about the same time that Jamaica became a British colony. Jews expelled from Brazil made their way to the Caribbean, first to Barbados and then Jamaica, taking with them the capital and technology of sugar production.
      Historian Karl Watson notes that: "Barbados presented opportunities for trade. By the mid-17th century, it was quite apparent that the English experiment in creating colonies in the West Indies for the export of tropical crops was working exceptionally well in Barbados. These newcomers were well placed to exploit this burgeoning sugar economy as part of their extensive Sephardic trading network extending from the Atlantic to the Indian Ocean."
      The Jewish exile in the Caribbean enabled the transatlantic trade in enslaved Africans and the migration of waves of indentured labourers from Europe and Asia. This is the other half of the Jamaican Jewish story that must be told. 'Jack Mandora, mi no choose none.'
      Carolyn Cooper is a professor of literary and cultural studies at the University of the West Indies, Mona. Visit her bilingual blog at http://carolynjoycooper.wordpress.com/. Email feedback to columns@gleanerjm.com and karokupa@gmail.com.


      [/color]
      THERE IS ONLY ONE ONANDI LOWE!

      "Good things come out of the garrisons" after his daughter won the 100m Gold For Jamaica.


      "It therefore is useless and pointless, unless it is for share malice and victimisation to arrest and charge a 92-year-old man for such a simple offence. There is nothing morally wrong with this man smoking a spliff; the only thing wrong is that it is still on the law books," said Chevannes.

      Comment


      • #4
        Has Carolyn Cooper written anything on how other groups "enabled" the slave trade, in particular black tribes of West Africa? Just curious.
        Peter R

        Comment


        • #5
          If she has written such an article, I have not seen it, but what she has said is factually correct in 2 material particulars. One the absence of any such reference of the involment in the business of the slave trade in any of the other articles and 2 is the fact of their involvement.

          To be honest the involvement of Africans in capturing other Africans for enslavement is more of a known fact whether Cooper has written a out it or not and my take on her article is the unmistakeable ABSENCE of this part of Jewish history in Jamaica in a Jewish museum of the history of the Jews in Jamaica and I would add the question of why is that so?

          Infidelity does not consist in believing, or in disbelieving; it consists in professing to believe what he does not believe. Thomas Paine

          Comment


          • #6
            I posted an article awhile back about life in Jamaica in the middle 1800s and it would take issue with Jews being soley white , in fact it mentioned jews of all colours taking part in prayer .

            The Jews who occupied Jamaica were identified as Moors , fleeing the inquisition, no doubt you had muslim moorish descendants in that group, and as history has documented they played a critical part in trade , not just slavery.In fact it was they that brought knowledge to europeans of the slave route.Columbus documented that.

            The fact that, they ended up as the ruling class , says alot in the 1800s.
            Last edited by Sir X; July 6, 2013, 05:57 AM.
            THERE IS ONLY ONE ONANDI LOWE!

            "Good things come out of the garrisons" after his daughter won the 100m Gold For Jamaica.


            "It therefore is useless and pointless, unless it is for share malice and victimisation to arrest and charge a 92-year-old man for such a simple offence. There is nothing morally wrong with this man smoking a spliff; the only thing wrong is that it is still on the law books," said Chevannes.

            Comment


            • #7
              Jews The Victims Of Slavery, Too

              Published: Friday | August 3, 201218 Comments




              Ainsley Henriques, Contributor




              Ainsley Henriques, Contributor

              Your columnist Professor Carolyn Cooper reminds me of the lines often given to recalcitrant schoolboys: 'Persistent perversity provokes patient pedagogue, producing particularly painful punishment.'
              She has tried in her columns of July 8 and July 22, 2012 to get me to comment on what she claims is an incomplete history
              of the Jews of Jamaica. This history is a brief description to be found in the poster room in the Jewish museum at the Jewish Heritage Centre on John's Lane, which is open to the public. We are all aware, however, that no history is ever complete, so from that perspective she is correct.[/color]
              Professor Cooper's grouse is that no mention is made of the role of the Jews in Jamaica in the horror of enslavement. In this, too, she is correct, but this is because their history with enslavement is much more than just that - too much for a poster board.
              Let me remind her that Jews themselves were enslaved. The Jews who came to Jamaica were run out of countries where they had lived for generations. In Spain, had they not run for their lives, they would have been put to death; or if they had converted, they could have been brought before the Auto da Fe. If found guilty at these trials they, as many were, sentenced to death and burnt at the stake or garrotted.[/color]
              Macabre massacres
              Let me remind Professor Cooper that, having fled to Northern Europe, they were subsequently murdered by the millions for being Jews as recently as in her lifetime. Those who remained in the Middle East after the destruction of the Second Temple in AD 70, and those who returned to these lands after the expulsion from the Iberian Peninsula in 1492, were turfed out in 1948 after the establishment of the State of Israel for being Jews. That number being estimated at about one million men women and children for just their belief, some even settling here for a time.
              For further information on the Jews in Jamaica, Professor Cooper should read our eminent historians at places like the University of the West Indies . She would learn that Jews in Jamaica were second-class citizens and, like the free people of colour, had limited civil rights. Yes, despite this, there were some Jews, as well as some free people of colour, who owned enslaved people during this period.[/color]
              She will also learn that both these groups got civil rights only in 1831-32, just prior to Emancipation. Further, it is interesting to note that it was the free people of colour and the emancipated people of colour who, when having earned the right to vote, were the main political supporters of those Jews who sought to be elected to the legislature.
              Time for reflection
              The commemoration of Emancipation is a time for reflection with our penchant for celebrations. Reflection on the suffering and the hardship, the horror and the terror of being enslaved. Celebration should be to express the joy by those of us who are here as the descendants of those who survived. This is true whether we are of African ethnicity or Jewish heritage.
              The Jewish festival for the reflection and celebration of Emancipation from being enslaved is the Passover. It lasts a week that begins with the feast that Jesus participated in. This is the Seder, otherwise known to Christians as the Last Supper.
              It is time that we all in Jamaica learn to reflect in our own homes, churches, villages and towns on what was enslavement and what Emancipation means to all of us, so that we can truly celebrate.
              We must not wring our hands in despair nor hang our heads in shame, but hold them high and rejoice in the chance that we have been given in this life to redeem ourselves in the present and create a future for the generations to come.
              Ainsley Henriques is honorary secretary of the United Congregation of Israelites. Email feedback to columns@gleanerjm.com.


              [/color]
              THERE IS ONLY ONE ONANDI LOWE!

              "Good things come out of the garrisons" after his daughter won the 100m Gold For Jamaica.


              "It therefore is useless and pointless, unless it is for share malice and victimisation to arrest and charge a 92-year-old man for such a simple offence. There is nothing morally wrong with this man smoking a spliff; the only thing wrong is that it is still on the law books," said Chevannes.

              Comment


              • #8
                Bredda confused African ancestry or Jewish ancestry , African ancestry is as much Jewish as it is African and vice versa ,because the Jewish landscape is dominated by Europeans , that gives him no right to generalize,some Moors were African Jews and yes they had wealth.

                Present day Ethiopian Jews are what ? People like to write pieces of history in a defensive mode , it is what it is.
                THERE IS ONLY ONE ONANDI LOWE!

                "Good things come out of the garrisons" after his daughter won the 100m Gold For Jamaica.


                "It therefore is useless and pointless, unless it is for share malice and victimisation to arrest and charge a 92-year-old man for such a simple offence. There is nothing morally wrong with this man smoking a spliff; the only thing wrong is that it is still on the law books," said Chevannes.

                Comment


                • #9
                  He could be a JC graduate ?!
                  Peter R

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Real question is has she written about modern day slavery of the Black Man in Jamaica circa 1994 onwards..

                    Ronnie Thwaites spoke of it.. there is some research done but we cannot seem to get it printed..

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      She might have written it but it remains to be translated... okay, bad joke, my apologies Ms Cooper.

                      The reason I made the above comment is that i was reading her blog and she has articles written in two versions of patois?! and I guess because I grew up reading English I found both versions difficult to read. MyYout patwa waaay easier than her versions.

                      I always believed that patois should remain in the realm of the oral tradition and in art forms but as a language of instruction or of academic theses well... that's a whole different ball game IMO. Patois just doesn't have the vocabulary, but Ms Cooper would defend it by saying (which I read on her blog) that English borrowed (not sure if that's her word or mine) from the Greek, Latin etc. so why can't Patois do the same?...
                      Peter R

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        "patois should remain in the realm of the oral tradition" I agree.

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          The big man did not say the Prof is lying.

                          The Prof needs to back up here argument with historical though.

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            No need to apologize!

                            Not a “bad joke” at all, and no need to apologize, as you are absolutely correct!

                            Want to know snow something else? The woman is a damn clown who couldn’t incorporate objectivity even if her life depended on it!!

                            I will always fondly remember when Ninja Man made her look so irresponsible at one of her reggae forums at the UWI. To this day I still laugh.

                            Originally posted by Peter R View Post
                            She might have written it but it remains to be translated... okay, bad joke, my apologies Ms Cooper.

                            The reason I made the above comment is that i was reading her blog and she has articles written in two versions of patois?! and I guess because I grew up reading English I found both versions difficult to read. MyYout patwa waaay easier than her versions.

                            I always believed that patois should remain in the realm of the oral tradition and in art forms but as a language of instruction or of academic theses well... that's a whole different ball game IMO. Patois just doesn't have the vocabulary, but Ms Cooper would defend it by saying (which I read on her blog) that English borrowed (not sure if that's her word or mine) from the Greek, Latin etc. so why can't Patois do the same?...

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Your opinion on Cooper is noted.


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