Former Jamaican Prime Minister PJ Patterson speaks on efforts to merge the independence holiday with that of Emancipation Day.
Former Jamaican Prime Minister PJ Patterson speaks on efforts to merge the independence holiday with that of Emancipation Day.

KINGSTON, Jamaica, October 4, 2024 - The Private Sector Organization of Jamaica has again decided to make a proposal to the government to merge the country’s  August 6 independence holiday, with that of the first of August emancipation day holiday in celebration of the emancipation of Black People from the horrors of chattel Slavery in 1834/38.

Speaking Friday on TVJ's Smile Jamaica, PSOJ President Metry Seaga said the results of an internal poll has cemented its position on the proposed consolidation of the two national holidays.

"So we polled our members and we asked them to take internal polls within their organisation, which they did, and that result came back at more than 85 percent of them saying, yes, this would work for us better. So it's a productivity issue," he stressed, adding that the PSOJ considers Emancipation Day and Independence Day as "two of the most important holidays that we have in Jamaica."

However, former prime minister P. J. Patterson (1992-2006) in December of 2020, in response to the discussion on the matter at that time, decided to lend his voice on the matter.

The following is Mr. Patterson’s position on the proposal to merge the two holidays:

I have read with great consternation and utter dismay that the Government is giving serious consideration to the abolition of August 1st as Emancipation Day and August 6th as our Independence Day. 

It would be a retrograde step and a severe violation of our ancestry.   One marks a commemoration and the other a celebration.  It would be a betrayal of all our efforts to promote our own identity as a people.

Let me at the outset make it clear that mine is not a partisan political position nor an expression of doubt on the accuracy of The Anderson Poll which was commissioned by the Ministry of Culture.

To determine where we are going, we must know from whence we came.   Slavery is the most heinous crime against humanity.  It is not Queen Victoria who set us free.   It is the rebellion of our foreparents and their resolute struggle which, when combined with the drop in economic terms of forced labour, served to hasten the abolition of slavery. 

The Abolition Act earned £20 million Pounds for the Slave Owners and compelled the slaves to repay them an additional sum, calculated at £27 million,  by their “forced apprenticeship” for four more years.  Our inheritance was poverty, disease, ignorance and homelessness.

So for their Emancipation freedom on August 1, 1838, our Ancestors paid for their Freedom with blood and Taxpayers of succeeding generations paid for a Debt which was so huge, that payment of the Loan,  amounting to £Billions in today’s current value, was only completed in 2015.

The decision to restore Emancipation Day on August 1 and Independence on August 6 was not taken lightly.   It emanated from a Committee chaired by Rex Nettleford to examine “how our national symbols and observances could contribute to sustaining cultural unity and foster national values to renew the soul and uplift the spirit of our people and arrest social alienation.”

The  Committee  recommended  the reinstatement of  Emancipation Day  on        1 August after consultations held in four parishes, in written and oral submissions and press contributions.  This forms an essential part of our psychic inheritance, which could avert cultural chaos and release our people’s creative potential. 

The Nettleford Report revealed that  in the minds of many of our young people there was confusion as to the actual date of our Independence.  With the passage of time, the observance of Independence Day had weakened considerably.  Designing 6 August, rather than the first Monday of the Month, as the holiday, was intended to sharpen the focus and reawaken a consciousness of independence as an important national event.

Our Parliament accepted, without a dissenting voice,  the recommendation that Independence Day ought to be given its proper date – 6 August – so as to remove any doubt in the minds of our  people about the timing and significance of that historic date.

The idea that the present separation from Independence Day is inconvenient to some and causes discomfort must be firmly rejected.   Comfort and convenience cannot be our response to the deaths and atrocities of the Middle Passage.   That equation is untenable, but if ever there was a disaster in enforcing such an inequitable balance, that time is now.  Why is this so?  

Just in case it may have escaped our notice, we need to remind ourselves that the entire world is now beset with two pandemics – COVID -19 and RACISM.

An effective and accessible Vaccine will undoubtedly assist in the alleviation of the Coronvirus, but there is no such medicinal remedy to counter Racism.   That antidote depends entirely on how we as human beings react to the virus of Systemic Racism.

Our Motto – “Out of Many, One People” rightly reflects our ethnic diversity, but that should never obscure the peculiar discrimination which people of colour face in the world today and what black people expect from the land of Marcus Garvey.

Especially in the days of globalisation, we must all reject and denounce the institutional exclusion of people of African descent from the economic, cultural and social rights which others of white colour enjoy as normal.   The origins of that systemic racism are in slavery and in the systems of exclusion and discrimination that have marked the lives of others.

At this time in human history, we are beginning to witness an admission by enlightened institutions in the academic, financial and NGOs community of the compelling urgency to redress the inequities of slavery and its disastrous impact on persons of colour worldwide.   This is no time to retreat.

The Nettleford Committee did not overlook the consequences of separate days.   We do not change Xmas Day when it falls on a Tuesday with Boxing Day following on a Wednesday.   Ash Wednesday falls in the middle of the week, but the actual date varies according to the Lunar Calendar.  We cannot obscure or surrender the historic significance of our freedom from slavery and freedom from colonial rule.

The Poll results are not surprising.   Succeeding generations have not been taught in our educational Institutions enough, or at all, about our heritage in its entirety.  Our focus cannot be to enjoy a holiday weekend of fun and frolic which obscures the significance of these two memorable milestones in the life of our nation;  our freedom from enforced labour and subsequently the right we secured in charting our destiny as an Independent Nation on August 6, 1962.

There are still persons in the Media and speakers who continue to  equate the “black” in our flag to mean “hardships”.  We changed that in Parliament to have “Black” signifying resilience and strength, which was another important step on the road to self-discovery and “smadification”.

Our Minister of Culture, Hon. “Babsy” Grange, has made some commendable strides to reflect our rich history of struggle and survival. Let me now implore my beloved sister not to be the driver, who takes our country in the wrong direction on a one way street.

Regardless of religious creed, class or political persuasion, we must all work together and make sure these significant milestones are indelibly etched in the annals of our National evolution.  There is too much at stake to abandon our purpose.

Please fill the required field.
Image