Wakanda News Details

Mixed reactions to PM's Roots social media post - Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

THERE were mixed reactions to a Facebook post by the Prime Minister which included a video clip from the 1977 television mini-series Roots.

The clip shows Kunta Kinte, played by US actor Levar Burton, being flogged until he was forced to give up his African name "Kunta" and accept his slave name, "Toby."

Commenting on the post, Dr Rowley said, "Susheila, that's how we got the name!"

At a PNM meeting in Arima on May 24, party's lady vice chairman Camille Robinson-Regis used Persad-Bissessar's full name, Kamla Susheila Persad-Bissessar, several times during her speech. At a UNC meeting on June 2, Persad-Bissessar countered, telling Robinson-Regis she had the name of a slave master. Persad-Bissessar declared she at least had "a name from my ancestors.”

The PNM and its supporters condemned the comment as racist, while the UNC defended it, saying it was a bitter truth, and questioned why there was no uproar when Robinson-Regis mocked Persad-Bissessar’s name.

Emancipation Support Committee executive chairman Zakiya Uzoma-Wadada had no idea why Rowley decided to post the video clip, saying different people would respond differently to the post, depending on their position in society.

Uzoma-Wadada opined that most times, people respond to situations "from a place of emotion."

But she said, "Perhaps if I had to venture an opinion, I think maybe he was trying to show that our (Africans') names were not...we did not choose to have European names."

But unfortunately European names were ascribed to African slaves despite their efforts to resist it.

"That to me is what that particular image of Kunta Kinte demonstrates, his fight for his name. But in spite of that, we were given European names."

"All of what is happening around us is just manifestations of that colonial experience and our different responses to it."

She recalled that African people were enslaved for 400-500 years.

"Just imagine being in that particular state, of being under a particular kind of oppression for that length of period. That almost becomes your norm."

Uzoma-Wadada said this underscores the importance of emancipation 184 years ago.

"When these situations arise and we have these emotive responses to situations and how people respond to each other, we have to take them as teaching moments."

She reiterated, "African people did not give up our names voluntarily. We fought hard and were punished to keep their names.

"Indentureship had its own realities. Enslavement has its own realities." Society needed to be able to respect people for their history, she said.

National Council of Indian Culture president Dr Deokinanan Sharma did not view the post as helpful to resolving the argument between Persad-Bissessar and Robinson-Regis.

"It should be resolved between them."

Both women are adults, he said, and said this was matter of pouring oil over troubled waters rather than adding fuel to a fire.

Political analyst Shane Mohammed said, "Two wrongs don't make a right." Reiterating that Persad-Bissessar committed the first wr

You may also like

More from Home - Trinidad and Tobago Newsday