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Descendants of slave masters apologise for family’s role in slavery in Grenada
Grenada's Prime Minister Dickon Mitchell (right) accepts the apology letter from members of the Trevelyan family.
Latest News
February 28, 2023

Descendants of slave masters apologise for family’s role in slavery in Grenada

ST GEORGE’S, Grenada, (CMC) – Surviving relatives of a family in the United Kingdom, who in the 18th and 19th centuries jointly owned approximately 1,200 slaves on six plantations in three different parishes in Grenada, on Monday apologised for the actions of their forefathers.

“To the people of Grenada, we the undersigned write to apologise for the actions of our ancestors in holding your ancestors in slavery,” said the opening paragraph of a letter presented to Prime Minister, Dickon Mitchell, during a ceremony at the Grenada Trade Centre.

Signed by seven members of the Trevelyan family, including well-known BBC correspondent Laura Trevelyan, the letter describes slavery as a crime that was and continues to be a crime against humanity.

“Its damaging effects continue to this present day. We repudiate our ancestor’s involvement in it, we apologise to the surviving descendants of the enslaved on those estates for the continuing impact on their daily lives, their health, and their well-being,” the correspondence stated.

The complete letter, which was then handed over to Mitchell, was in turn presented to members of the local Reparations Committee. It is expected to be handed over to the regional committee.

Monday’s ceremony, which was attended by Chairman of the Caricom Reparations Committee, Professor Hilary Beckles, Vice Chair of the Grenada National Reparations Committee, Dr Nicole Dowe, Cabinet ministers, heads of regional reparations committees and students, was to launch a fund in which Laura Trevelyan has personally committed to giving £100 000 (US$ 120,596) to the local reparations committee.

“I came up with that figure because at this moment in time that is what I can afford to give. I am 54 years old and when I turn 55 in August that is the moment when I can actually give this money because I will come into a pension from the BBC, and so I am taking a portion of the pension as a cash payment to give to the people of Grenada,” she said when a student asked her how she had arrived at the donation figure.

“But I hope in years to come…I will be in a position to give more money and I hope that it works and achieves what all of us here want it to achieve,” added Trevelyan, who learnt that her family had owned slaves on the island in 2013 and battled with the guilt of that reality.

Trevelyan also pointed out that the 2020 George Floyd situation in the US, where she resides, played a role in her accepting that her family contributed to the enslavement of Africans and the devastating effects it has had on African descendants.

Arley Gill, chairman of the local reparative committee, described the day’s event as a day of remembrance.

“It’s a day to remember our ancestors and their descendants and it is finally a day of recognition of the harms of slavery and a moment of global reckoning that is long overdue,” he said in his welcome remarks.

“This apology and financial commitment from Laura and the Trevelyan family should serve as a clarion call to other families, institutions, and other governments in Europe to acknowledge wrongs, apologise and commit to repairing the harms done by their ancestors.”

On Tue, Feb 28, 2023, 7:20 AM Athena Clarke wrote:

Descendants of plantation owners apologise for family’s role in slavery in Grenada

ST GEORGE’S, Grenada, (CMC) – Surviving relatives of a family in the United Kingdom, who in the 18th and 19th centuries jointly owned approximately 1 200 slaves on six plantations in three different parishes in Grenada, on Monday apologised for the actions of their forefathers.

“To the people of Grenada, we the undersigned write to apologise for the actions of our ancestors in holding your ancestors in slavery,” said the opening paragraph of a letter presented to Prime Minister, Dickon Mitchell, during a ceremony at the Grenada Trade Centre.

Signed by seven members of the Trevelyan family, including well-known BBC correspondent Laura Trevelyan, the letter describes slavery as a crime that was and continues to be a crime against humanity.

“Its damaging effects continue to this present day. We repudiate our ancestor’s involvement in it, we apologise to the surviving descendants of the enslaved on those estates for the continuing impact on their daily lives, their health, and their well-being,” the correspondence stated.

The complete letter, which was then handed over to Mitchell, was in turn presented to members of the local Reparations Committee. It is expected to be handed over to the regional committee.

Monday’s ceremony, which was attended by Chairman of the Caricom Reparations Committee, Professor Hilary Beckles, Vice Chair of the Grenada National Reparations Committee, Dr Nicole Dowe, Cabinet ministers, heads of regional reparations committees and students, was to launch a fund in which Laura Trevelyan has personally committed to giving £100 000 (US$ 120,596) to the local reparations committee.

“I came up with that figure because at this moment in time that is what I can afford to give. I am 54 years old and when I turn 55 in August that is the moment when I can actually give this money because I will come into a pension from the BBC, and so I am taking a portion of the pension as a cash payment to give to the people of Grenada,” she said when a student asked her how she had arrived at the donation figure.

“But I hope in years to come…I will be in a position to give more money and I hope that it works and achieves what all of us here want it to achieve,” added Trevelyan, who learnt that her family had owned slaves on the island in 2013 and battled with the guilt of that reality.

Trevelyan also pointed out that the 2020 George Floyd situation in the US, where she resides, played a role in her accepting that her family contributed to the enslavement of Africans and the devastating effects it has had on African descendants.

Arley Gill, chairman of the local reparative committee, described the day’s event as a day of remembrance.

“It’s a day to remember our ancestors and their descendants and it is finally a day of recognition of the harms of slavery and a moment of global reckoning that is long overdue,” he said in his welcome remarks.

“This apology and financial commitment from Laura and the Trevelyan family should serve as a clarion call to other families, institutions, and other governments in Europe to acknowledge wrongs, apologise and commit to repairing the harms done by their ancestors.”

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