THE EDITOR, Sir:
On June 5, 2018, a group of us from the UK toured the Appleton Estate in St Elizabeth. The tour was professionally conducted. That is until the narrative about the plantation's history began to unfold. It started with a cute little donkey diligently walking in a circle and gently crushing cane. I immediately felt a knot in my stomach as a friend queried the absence of enslaved labour.
To add further insult to injury, we were subjected to a Disney-like video about the sugar plantation. Not even one mention of enslaved Africans, estate owners, plantation life or colonialism. The video completely whitewashed the brutal conditions our ancestors endured on this industrial sugar plantation.
http://jamaica-gleaner.com/article/l...washes-history
On June 5, 2018, a group of us from the UK toured the Appleton Estate in St Elizabeth. The tour was professionally conducted. That is until the narrative about the plantation's history began to unfold. It started with a cute little donkey diligently walking in a circle and gently crushing cane. I immediately felt a knot in my stomach as a friend queried the absence of enslaved labour.
To add further insult to injury, we were subjected to a Disney-like video about the sugar plantation. Not even one mention of enslaved Africans, estate owners, plantation life or colonialism. The video completely whitewashed the brutal conditions our ancestors endured on this industrial sugar plantation.
http://jamaica-gleaner.com/article/l...washes-history
Comment