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~ Guyana – Brazil – USA

Three Worlds One Vision

Monthly Archives: February 2024

The Writer’s Life: Looking at “the outsider” with an open mind

25 Sunday Feb 2024

Posted by Rosaliene Bacchus in The Writer's Life

≈ 58 Comments

Tags

British Guiana (Guyana)/South America, Cheddi Jagan (1918-1997), First Female Executive President of Guyana, Georgetown/Guyana, Guyana People’s Progressive Party (PPP), Guyana Women’s Progressive Organization (WPO), Janet Jagan nee Rosenberg (1920-2009), Women in politics

Janet Jagan nee Rosenberg – President of Guyana (1997-1999)

Since I’ve already posted Chapter Eight of my work in progress, featuring “Winifred Gaskin: A Political Woman,” I’m moving on to Chapter Nine that portrays another political woman and the first female president of Guyana (1997-1999): Janet Jagan nee Rosenberg. The white American-born wife of Cheddi Jagan—co-founder of the left-leaning People’s Progressive Party (PPP), Guyana’s first political party to garner massive support—was regarded as an “outsider” among the ruling British and local elite at the time.

When I started this book project, I did not plan on including Janet Jagan among the influential women in the formation of my social and political consciousness. As a young devout Christian, I viewed her not only as an outsider but also as a threat to religious education in our parochial schools. Though I did not share her communist ideology, I would be remiss in not acknowledging her influence in empowering Guyanese women to speak out against oppression and injustice by those holding power or authority within the home, workplace, and public spaces. In retrospect, she may well be the driving force for my rebellious attitude towards those in authority: A criticism I received from my religious superiors as a young Catholic nun.

As Cheddi’s wife and political partner, Janet’s remarkable journey is also an interesting case of what can be achieved when the male and female work together as equal partners. Here in the United States, we are still plagued by the patriarchal dominator model of organizing our society. As the world’s greatest democratic nation, we lag behind other countries, advanced and developing, in electing a woman for the top position as president. Since the 1872 elections, several American women have tried and failed. Isn’t it ironic that the first American woman to hold the position did so in a foreign country? Hillary Clinton came close in the 2016 elections. Does Nikki Haley stand a chance in 2024? We have no shortage of remarkable American-born women capable of leading our nation.

We left Guyana for Brazil in 1987 before the PPP returned to power in 1992, after spending 28 years in Parliament as the major opposition party. With her husband as Executive President, the 72-year-old Janet became First Lady of the Republic of Guyana. She was 77 years old when she was elected as Executive President, following Cheddi’s death.

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“Archipelagos” – Poem by Jamaican American Poet Geoffrey Philp

18 Sunday Feb 2024

Posted by Rosaliene Bacchus in Anthropogenic Climate Disruption, Poetry

≈ 45 Comments

Tags

Anthropocene, Capitalism, Climate Crisis in the Caribbean Region, Colonialism, Jamaica/Caribbean, Jamaican American Poet Geoffrey Philp, Poem “Archipelagos” by Geoffrey Philp, Poetry Collection Archipelagos by Geoffrey Philp (UK 2023)

Jamaican American Poet Geoffrey Philp
Photo Credit: Vanessa Diaz / National Library of Jamaica

My Poetry Corner February 2024 features the title poem “Archipelagos” from the poetry collection Archipelagos by poet and novelist Geoffrey Philp, published by Peepal Tree Press (UK, 2023). Born in 1958 in Kingston, Jamaica, Philp left the Caribbean Island nation in 1979 to attend the Miami Dade College in the United States. After graduation, he studied Caribbean, African, and African American literature. As a James Michener Fellow at the University of Miami, he studied poetry with Kamau Brathwaite and fiction with George Lamming.

Philp is the author of seven books of poetry, two books of short stories, a novel, and two children’s books. In 2022, he was awarded the Silver Musgrave Medal by the Institute of Jamaica for outstanding merit in literature. That same year, he also received the Marcus Garvey Award for Excellence in Education. A retired Miami Dade College professor, he lives in Miami, Florida.

The publisher Peepal Tree Press describes Philp’s poetry collection Archipelagos as “a call to arms that opens out the struggle for human survival in the epoch of the Anthropocene to remind us that this began not just in the factories of Europe but in the holds of the slave ships and plantations of the Caribbean…. Philp’s powerful and elegant poems span past and present and make it very clear that there cannot be a moral response to the climate crisis that is not also embedded in the struggle for social justice, for overcoming the malignancies of empire and colonialism and the power of global capitalism—the missions of the West that always had and still have at their heart the ideology of white supremacy and a capitalism endlessly voracious for the world’s human and natural resources.”

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We Can No Longer Have It All

11 Sunday Feb 2024

Posted by Rosaliene Bacchus in Anthropogenic Climate Disruption

≈ 86 Comments

Tags

Atmospheric CO² Jan 1959 – Jan 2024, City of Los Angeles/California, Climate Change, Climate Crisis, EU Copernicus Global Climate Highlights 2023, Fossil Fuel Emissions, NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies (GISS), National Centers for Environmental Information (NCEI), NCEI/NOAA Annual 2023 Global Climate Report, NOAA Mauna Loa Observatory, NOAA/NASA 2023 Global Climate Media Briefing, Pineapple Express Atmospheric River, US 2023 Billion-Dollar Weather and Climate Disasters Map

Storm Damage from mudslide – Studio City – City of Los Angeles – Southern California – February 5, 2024
Photo Credit: David Crane / Associated Press

The sun is out again. Alleluia! Beginning last Sunday and throughout Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday, the Pineapple Express atmospheric river unloaded its burden across California. Don’t get me wrong: We need the rain to replenish our state’s depleted reservoirs after years of drought. Is it asking too much not to have the rain all at once? Consider downtown Los Angeles. Within just four days, the area was drenched with more than 8 inches (20 cm) of rain. That’s more than half of the area’s normal annual rainfall of 14.25 inches (36 cm).

We were well warned ahead of the onslaught. To ensure our city had the required resources to respond to the storm’s impacts, on Monday, February 5th, our Mayor Karen Bass signed a Declaration of Local Emergency throughout the City of Los Angeles. Flooding, fallen trees, and hundreds of mudslides were merciless to everything and everyone in their path. I give thanks that our neighborhood was spared from such devastating blows. At our apartment complex, the lawn and garden plots are fully saturated. Some plants thrive in such weather. Others, like some of my succulents, not so much.

Extreme climate change events have become more frequent and severe. How the gods must laugh at human ineptitude in connecting the dots between our behavior and our environment! We can no longer have it all. Yet, we persist in our self-destructive ways of being and doing. Drill, Baby, Drill!

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Thought for Today: The Friction of Being Visible

04 Sunday Feb 2024

Posted by Rosaliene Bacchus in Relationships

≈ 62 Comments

Tags

Being visible, Inner & External Conflict, The Book of Awakening by Mark Nepo

Front Cover: The Book of Awakening by Mark Nepo

Living through enough, we all come to this understanding, though it is difficult to accept: No matter what path we choose to honor, there will always be conflict to negotiate. If we choose to avoid all conflicts with others, we will eventually breed a poisonous conflict within ourselves. Likewise, if we manage to attend our inner lives, who we are will—sooner or later—create some discord with those who would rather have us be something else.

In effect, the cost of being who you are is that you can’t possibly meet everyone’s expectations, and so, there will, inevitably, be external conflict to deal with—the friction of being visible….

Mark Nepo, The Book of Awakening, Red Wheel Publishers, USA, 2020 Edition, Excerpt pp. 19-20.

MARK NEPO is a poet, teacher, storyteller, and “an eloquent spiritual teacher.” His #1 New York Times bestseller, The Book of Awakening, has inspired readers and seekers worldwide. He has published twenty-two books and recorded fifteen audio projects. In 2015, he received a Life-Achievement Award from AgeNation. In 2016, Watkins: Mind Body Spirit named him one of the 100 Most Spiritually Influential Living People. That same year, OWN also selected him as one of their SuperSoul 100—inspired leaders using their gifts and voices to elevate humanity. In 2017, he became a regular columnist for Spirituality & Health Magazine.

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