Monday, October 8, 2018


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Trevor Burrowes And guess where the tip of Africa overlaps Jamaica. Ah yes, the glorious parish of St. Ann! Oops, my chauvinism showing again. But now I wonder where in Jamaica Mrs. Garvey was born.
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Valerie Parkin But her funeral was at the St.Andrew ParishChurch, Halfway Tree, Kingston, not in St.Ann.
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Trevor Burrowes I was just joking about St. Ann having any significance in the matter. This looks to be an issue of graphic design. You shrink the map of Africa so that it's similar in width to, and centered over and overlapping, the map of Jamaica. It is then unavoidSee More
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Dore Tate Amy Euphemia Jacques Garvey was born on 31 December 1895 in Kingston, Jamaica.[5] As the eldest child of George Samuel and Charlotte Henrietta (née South) Jacques,[2] Garvey was raised in a middle-class home.[5] Yvette Taylor, in her account of the lifSee More
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Trevor Burrowes Very complex heritage. That complexity as to culture and class spills over to her husband too, I think. Great lady.
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Dore Tate Trevor Burrowes The "out of many one," cannot be denied - it is in the fabric--
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Trevor Burrowes Which is a great strength. But this particular image symbolizes more than that: Women in the leadership; South Africa (SA) with ITS complexities--it has a far larger proportion of whites than JA ; the complexity of a white, first world economic elite and a black third world majority; the introduction of an African-national element into Jamaica in the place where modern Jamaica began--St. Ann. Every big movement begins with an idea. St. Ann can be where an INFORMAL African nation begins, with SA and Jamaica combining to define it as a mixed, "out of many one" entity that turns the pages of history.

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