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11 September 2001, “Guyanese Roll Call” by Peter Jailall, Guyanese-Canadian Poet Peter Jailall, Terrorist attack on World Trade Center in New York
Caribbean immigrants remember loved ones at the 9/11 memorial on September 11, 2018
Photo Credit: News Americas
On September 11, we will remember all those we have lost on that ill-fated day when a terrorist attack on the World Trade Center in New York City turned the world-famous landmark into rubble.
I was living in Brazil when the tragedy occurred, sending a tsunami across the world. More than ninety other nations also lost loved ones that day, including three Brazilian-Americans and twenty-six Guyanese-Americans.
In his poem, “Guyanese Roll Call,” Guyanese-Canadian poet Peter Jailall remembers his twenty-six countrymen and women who died on that day. Their American Dream had been suddenly cut short.
Listen to our roll call
Of those who died
On that dreadful September day,
Following their American Dream:
Patrick Adams
Leslie Arnold Austin
Rudy Bacchus
Kris Romeo Bishundauth
Pamela Boyce
Annette Datarom
Babita Guman
Nizam Hafiz
Ricknauth Jhagganauth
Charles Gregory Jolin
Bowanie Devi Kemraj
Sarab Khan
Amerdauth Luchman
Shevonne Meutis
Narendra Nath
Marcus Neblett
Hardai Parbhu
Ameena Rasool
Shiv Sankar
Sita Sewnarine
Karini Singh
Rosham Singh
Astrid Sohan
Joyce Stanton
Patricia Staton
Vanava Thompson
These are our dedicated,
Hard-working country people,
Who travelled from South to North
To savour just a small bite
Of the Big Apple.
We will always remember them.
Source: Poetry Collection, People of Guyana by Ian McDonald and Peter Jailall, MiddleRoad Publishers, Canada, 2018.
While violent anti-immigrant activism spread across America, let us remember that Guyanese and other Caribbean immigrant families also share our nation’s grief for loved ones lost on September 11, 2001.
Keep them in your hearts. Best from Florida
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I am, Frank, together with all those innocent souls in the Middle East targeted by America’s never-ending wars of retribution.
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I exactly remember that day, I was in Iran back then and I was at my cousins house. She turned the news on and we were all in silence. May their soul rest in peace.
Beautifully written and thanks for remembering and sharing their names. I read all the names 🙂
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Thanks for reading, Sara. In listing their names, the poet Peter Jailall brings each person to our awareness and humanizes our shared loss on 9/11.
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How easy it is to think of the tragedy as if only one nation “owns” it. Thank you for reminding us of our widely shared humanity, Rosaliene.
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Dr. Stein, I’m happy that you can appreciate the message that Jailall’s poem brings to us all as we remember that tragic day on 9/11.
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Reblogged this on Guyanese Online.
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Thanks for sharing, Cyril. Have a great week 🙂
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I actually read the names to myself, and it really brings home the number of people who were killed in this appalling act, All of them totally unconnected with whatever issue the madmen were publicising
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The ‘madmen’ of 9/11 were much closer to home than Americans in particular, believe, were told, or simply don’t want to know anything else. It is possible the truth of 9/11 will finally come out and the world will be shocked, that is, if it can still be shocked, at this level of lies, deception and corruption by the US government and associated power. The long and bloody history of graft and greed out of all proportion that led to 9/11, the genocidal war on Iraq, the 2008 bail outs and the “election” of Donald Trump may yet see its truth come out. Check out https://onenessofhumanity.wordpress.com/2019/09/08/the-9-11-deception-is-dead-2001-2019/
It doesn’t change anything as to those sacrificed in this first of the 21st C horror, but it does change the focus of who was, and remains, behind it all and that could help on changing the direction America is pushing the world re: ecocide, resource (trade) wars and so so-called war on terrorism as it exposes who the real terrorists were and are.
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And, John, I’m sure that many British-Americans are also among the list of those lost. We go about our lives not knowing if we would be among those targeted by the madmen of our times.
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So important
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I was thinking of you, Rosaliene, when I saw that Trump had deployed 600 US troops to Guyana. Just wondering if there is much popular support in Guyana for that move? They wouldn’t dare do it here in New Zealand – there would be too much popular resistance.
http://m.digitaljournal.com/news/politics/us-deploys-600-troops-to-guyana-which-borders-venezuela/article/557323
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Dr. Bramhall, this is news for me. I haven’t seen any mention of this in my daily Guyana news feed.
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Thank you for sharing!.. it is sad that after centuries of leaving the cave, all “civilized” man has done is update the “club”… 🙂
“What difference does it make to the dead, the orphans and the homeless, whether the mad destruction is wrought under the name of totalitarianism or in the holy name of liberty or democracy?” Mahatma Gandhi
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What difference, indeed, Dutch? Thanks for dropping by 🙂
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Never forget that day. The sadness will never not be there, so many lives lost and affected.
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Kavitha, the sadness will also never end as more and more people die in our “never forget” wars.
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Forever …
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Will we ever find ourselves and understand each other?
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I live in hope, Tom.
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I’m sorry to be getting here late, and thankful to be able to read these names. It is very important to remember that more than ninety other nations also lost loved ones that day. I didn’t realize this and needed to.
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Thanks for reading, JoAnna. I believe that Americans were so shocked by the horror that they were unable to grasp its impact on the global community of nations.
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We sure need to broaden our perspective.
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Very sad day for everyone!
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