|


YouTube™ Channel
RSS Feeds twitter™

News

'Give us the real Bogle'

BY VERNON DAVIDSON Executive Editor -- Publications davidsonv@jamaicaobserver.com

Monday, March 15, 2010



INTENSE public resistance in Morant Bay, St Thomas, has forced the Jamaica National Heritage Trust (JNHT) to call off remounting what many Jamaicans have always known as the Paul Bogle statue in that eastern Jamaica town.

The objection to the work of art is rooted in the residents' claim, which has been corroborated by the JNHT, that the statue is not a true replica of the National Hero.

"When it was put up in 1965 no one said it was not a true image of Paul Bogle," Dorette Abrahams, president of the African Heritage Development Association and public relations officer of the Parish Development Committee, told the Observer last Saturday. "In fact, the sign placed at the base of the statue said Paul Bogle. That really is a gross deception."

Abrahams was among a large number of Morant Bay residents who, at a meeting with JNHT officials last November, voiced strong objection to the statue being remounted in the town.

The statue was damaged last year by a mentally ill man and was removed by the JNHT for restoration by sculptor Fitz Harrack, who said that he would replace the corroded steel at the base with brass. According to Harrack, salt air from the sea had contributed to the deterioration of the steel. He also said that the restoration should have been completed in time for National Heritage Week in October last year.

According to Abrahams, the residents want the Government to commission a statue of Bogle that would show his true facial features and illustrate what he stood for.

"The history of Paul Bogle tells us that he had an air of authority about him. He was over six feet tall and owned 500 acres of land. He was a man of means, who was one of the few Jamaicans who were eligible to vote," said Abrahams.

She also said the fact that the statue's back was turned to the courthouse suggested surrender and voiced opposition to the placement of the sword on the artwork.

"The top of the sword is up in his throat, symbolic of the cutting off of the power of speech," said Abrahams. "The tip of the sword points to the scrotum, cutting off all of the regenerative capabilities, and in martial arts that means surrender. Bogle never surrendered. The statue must face the courthouse, showing Bogle defending the rights of the common people."

The controversial statue, which for years stood in front of the Morant Bay courthouse, was designed by the late sculptor Edna Manley, wife of National Hero Norman Manley. Erected in October 1965 and declared a national monument by the JNHT on April 3, 2003, the statue has always been regarded by many Jamaicans as a true image of Bogle who, in October 1865, led black Jamaicans in a march on the Morant Bay courthouse that triggered the now famous Morant Bay Rebellion.

However, on Saturday, Abrahams said she learnt that it was a man living in St Thomas, known only as 'Mr Bagan', who Edna Manley actually used as a model for the statue.

Abrahams' point was supported by JNHT Chairman Patrick Staniger, who said he, too, found out that Manley used a model to build the piece.

However, Staniger saw the statue more as a symbolic representation of the ideals for which Bogle fought.

"It is a very effective monument representing his [Bogle's] fight for freedom," Staniger told the Observer. "It is a monument to the Morant Bay Rebellion."

Historians say the rebellion grew out of the conviction of a black Jamaican for trespassing on a long abandoned plantation. The man was freed by the local population who had protested his conviction. However, on returning to their village of Stony Gut, the residents and Bogle learnt that warrants had been issued for the arrest of 27 men there for a number of offences, including rioting and assaulting the police.

Bogle, a Baptist deacon, led nearly 300 locals on the march to the courthouse where they were confronted by the militia which opened fire on them, killing seven of the protestors.

Bogle was later arrested and executed. He was eventually named a National Hero and his image appeared on the $2 note from 1969 until it was phased out, and has been on the 10-cent coin since 1991.

It is that image that the people of Morant Bay want to see on a statue of Bogle in their town.

"The Government has a picture of him at the Institute of Jamaica," said Abrahams. "He's on the money. We're saying we're willing to start another rebellion. We're very, very passionate about it."

Staniger agreed that the people of Morant Bay had a right to determine what the monument should look like. "We feel the community does have a right to speak; it is their town," he told the Observer. "So we had a town meeting near the end of last year. It went pretty badly, as the people insisted that they want a statue that truly represents Paul Bogle."

In response, the JNHT organised a small group and had two subsequent meetings with a few of the town's leaders.

"We offered to work with them to get the Bogle statue built and placed in Stony Gut," he said. "We felt it was an appropriate place to put Bogle the person as opposed to Bogle the monument, but the residents said no."

Staniger said the JNHT is now thinking of placing the current statue in the National Gallery. However, that decision is the Cabinet's to make.

In the meantime, a resolution supporting the residents' position was passed by the St Thomas Parish Council on November 12 last year and supported by the Kingston and St Andrew Corporation last Tuesday.

The resolution urged Prime Minister Bruce Golding, Youth, Sports and Culture Minister Olivia 'Babsy' Grange, and the JNHT to commission a new statue with Bogle's "true facial" features.

The resolution also called for a bust of Bogle to be commissioned and placed at his birthplace at Stony Gut.

The preamble to the resolution pointed out that former prime minister Edward Seaga, who was the minister of culture at the time the statue was erected, received complaints that the facial features on the statue were in fact that of "Mr Bagan".

The resolution said that Seaga led a team to Stony Gut, where he was handed a photograph of the National Hero by one of his cousins.

The parish council said that "the country continues to confuse the minds of both our young people and adults with different facial representational expressions of the St Thomas-born National Hero".

— Additional reporting by Claudienne Edwards


POST A COMMENT


You must first register and then login to be able to post a comment.

HOUSE RULES

 

1. We welcome reader comments on the top stories of the day. Some comments may be republished on the website or in the newspaper – email addresses will not be published.

2. Please understand that comments are moderated and it is not always possible to publish all that have been submitted. We will, however, try to publish comments that are representative of all received.

3. We ask that comments are civil and free of libellous or hateful material. Also please stick to the topic under discussion.

4. Please do not write in block capitals since this makes your comment hard to read.

5. Please don't use the comments to advertise. However, our advertising department can be more than accommodating if emailed: advertising@jamaicaobserver.com.

6. If readers wish to report offensive comments, suggest a correction or share a story then please email: community@jamaicaobserver.com.

7. Lastly, read our Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy, and before commenting you need to register, conveniently, by clicking the link above.



Comment (required):

You have characters left.
captcha cd9212e4f1f3400fb43d81f9676dd5d6
Enter text seen above:

For information about privacy please read our Privacy Policy.

I have read and accepted the Terms and Conditions


COMMENTS (1)

Elli Deedo
3/15/2010
This Man Paul Bogle, struggled for Black Reckognition, freedom for a Nation which was held Captive under the British Colonial rule..I' would Wonder how Many of us Jamaicans truly reckognize the Rebellion and what it symbolizes.
The symbol of a Struggle for freedom, and Courage. Bogle and his fellowmen had only laid the foundation in which we should have continued to build on, we have laid it aside believing the struggle was over, but it's not, it continue's. Here we are confronted by a Imperialis nation who is determine to use us, as modern day Slaves..our sovereignty in which we have struggled to obtain from the British have been sold out to the Americans, by a group of Ignorant descendants of Slave. They have quickly forgotten
the purpose of the Struggle.. Our Laws & Constitutional rights are of no Value..it has being disregarded, we do not stand for any principles, or dignity. We only value a VISA. take it or leave it..Why have we not made ourselves qualified for a Visa while the Constitutional rights of our People & the Laws of our land is respected?) How long are you going to continue flushing out your History, Culture and dignity into the WC and continue to be used by a disrespectful plutocratic administration, because of economic priorities. It's time we begin to set a Standard.
Our people must stop being extradited to Slave Camps in the United states of America. We have a justice system. We are a sovereing Nation, and our Laws are just as good as any other..In-carceration is the same every where.
We the people of Jamaica is now making it clear that we've never voted for a extradition treaty, it was imposed upon us.. We are now asking the Government to take it's responsibility by using our justice system, and abolish the extradition treaty..People who are extradited to these American Slave Camps, are not privillage to at lease a Visit from their Children, or any family members. It's In- humain. It must stop. We need to start a Rebellion, if Government refuse's to do so. I am awaiting the views of other Jamaicans:

Daren Powell: KD Knight inspired me

  0 comments

 

Portland PC still pondering Pellew Island project

  0 comments

 

Costly dump fire - But tab lower than expected, says ODPEM

  0 comments

 

Help us find her - Family of missing nurse asks gov't to intervene

  0 comments

 

Guard your integrity!

  0 comments

 

Another scientific achievement for Dr Lowe

  0 comments

 

Smoke clears, schools reopen

  0 comments

 

Taxi driver with 54 traffic breaches stripped of licence

  0 comments

 

Cops put on high alert

  0 comments

 

Farewell Dudley Thompson — champion of the Race

  0 comments

 

CLARIFICATION

  0 comments

 

Girl detained for allegedly poisoning family

  0 comments

 

This Day in History - February 13

  0 comments

 

Buildings set ablaze in Greece before debt vote

  0 comments

 

Arab League wants UN peacekeepers in Syria

  0 comments

 

Dark day for Shining Path rebels

  0 comments

 

Stephen Marley wins Grammy

  0 comments

 

A different kind of love story

  4 comments

 

Riverton fires out – ODPEM

  0 comments

 

Mother, daughter killed

  0 comments

 

Today's Cartoon


Poll

Did you watch American football's Super Bowl on Sunday? 
Yes, but just for the advertisements
Yes, just for the game itself
Yes, for both the game and advertisements
No, I did not watch the Super Bowl.

View Results

Results published weekly in Sunday Finance


Username:
Password: