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FM
Former Member

Ok Folks!

 

* In the Rev's opinion racism is not rampant in Guyana.

 

* Sure you have a small percentage who hate others because of their ethnicity.

 

* But racism in Guyana is not widespread.

 

* PAY ATTENTION!

 

* 15% of East Indians who voted for the AFC and another 6% who voted for the PNC in 2011---that's 21%----many of those folks would have you believe that the other 79% of East Indians are racists.

 

* POPPYCOCK!

 

* The truth is the 79% of East Indians who voted for the PPP in 2011 are not racist. Many are simply mistrustful of the PNC/AFC. And those folks have valid reasons to harbor fear, suspicion, apprehension and mistrust of the PNC.

 

* LOOK! THE PNC NEVER WON A FREE AND FAIR ELECTION IN GUYANA.

 

* But yet the PNC ruled Guyana for 28 years.

 

* ILLEGALLY!

 

* And in those 28 years they ruined, impoverished and bankrupted Guyana.

 

CONCLUSION:

 

* Despite what the PPP haters would have you believe, particularly the Indians who voted for the PNC/AFC, there is no widespread racism in Guyana. The 2 major races, Indians and blacks, get along very well. What you have in Guyana is a strong mistrust of the PNC. And that explains why 79% of East Indians voted for the PPP in 2011.

 

Rev

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TRUST USUALLY DIES BUT MISTRUST HAS A WAY OF BLOSSOMING

 

 

* And that's what we are seeing in Guyana.

 

* TRUST IN THE PNC HAS DIED.

 

* But the mistrust of the PNC continues to blossom.

 

* And that explains the apprehension, the fear, the foreboding, and the misgiving the good people of Guyana have for the PNC.

 

* 40.8% of Guyanese voted for the PNC in 2011.

 

 

FM
Last edited by Former Member
Originally Posted by Gilbakka:
Originally Posted by Rev:

 

 

* If you choose to post on this thread, I would expect you to demonstrate a modicum of respect and intelligence.

 

Rev

 

HAUL YUH PERVERTED RASS.

 

YOU ARE A CUFFY-HATING RACIST. PERIOD.

It is not even worthy of comment. Just a waste of time from one trying to rationalize what every one knows has been a persisting disease.

FM

 

* Just like you cannot love someone you mistrust.

 

* You cannot support a political party you mistrust.

 

* The 79% East Indians who did not vote for the PNC/AFC in the 2011 election---they simply mistrusted the PNC---there was no racism.

 

* The 79% East Indians voted for a party(the PPP) they had faith and confidence in---how on God's earth could that be racism ?

 

Rev

FM
Originally Posted by Rev:
 

* THE TRUTH IS RACISM IS NOT BLATANT OR WIDESPREAD IN GUYANA.

 

* But MISTRUST of the PNC IS.

 

Rev

You're living on a la-la cloud, Rev.

 

You say mistrust of the PNC is blatant and widespread in Guyana. This is a half-truth and, according to the late Cheddi Jagan, a half-truth is more dangerous than a lie.

 

What is the other half of the truth?

In 2011, 51 percent of voters not only mistrusted your corrupt PPP but rejected it outright.

 

Speak the whole truth, not your half of the truth.

 

 

 

 

FM

We need to have an open, frank and honest discussion here. Suriname is faced with the same issue of mistrust. Is that Racism ?

 

It is a known fact that there is mistrust between Indo and Afro Guyanese. 

 

This mistrust is based on historical experiences. We must have an honest, frank and open discussion to really understand what both sides feel before we start hollering racism.

 

Mistrust will not go away until we have a serious discussion on this matter. South Africa was able to deal with this issue and the nation gained by doing so. 

 

 

FM
Last edited by Former Member

Many Indo Guyanese kept their culture, religion (Hinduism and Islam) and family values intact while still integrating with mainstream society.

 

Afro Guyanese abandoned their religion and adopted Christianity. 

 

Is is racist to maintain your religion and culture ?

 

Indo Guyanese kept their names Ram and Rahim intact. Afro Guyanese chose to adopt Christian names. Is that racism ?

 

Indo Guyanese resisted attempts to strip them of their cultural identity and religion since they could not obtain jobs during colonial times because they had to be Christians to get civil servants jobs.

 

Is it racism to keep your religion Hinduism and Islam in tact ?

 

Get my point ?

 

Unless we are willing to have an open and frank discussion we will never in one hundred years resolve this problem of mistrust and the envy towards those who remained Ram and Rahim and kept Hinduism and Islam in tact.

 

PNC did their best to strip, rape and demoralized Indo Guyanese in their 28 years of illegal rule. Indo Guyanese are still reminded of those horrible acts hence the mistrust of the PNC. 

 

Is that racism ?

 

Let us start the discussion now.

 

 

FM

PPPC hate speech in Guyana Chronicle Editorial should be rejected by all citizens – commentary by Brutal Facts

The Guyana Chronicle editorial on July 3rd  (see below), allowed us a peek into the mindset of the ruling PPPC party. As evidence of corruption continues to be revealed, citizens of Guyana are slowly realizing how they have been disenfranchised by this cabal for the past 19 years. Every dollar stolen from the Guyana treasury is a dollar taken away from better roads, improved education, running water, crime, healthcare, more jobs and government’s ability to carry out their mandate of improving the lives of Guyanese citizens through development.

The corruption is so pervasive and the leaders so entitled that they display an unapologetic boldness in revealing the spoils of their nefarious activities. From the ever growing concrete mansions to the multiple North American vacations, to the luxury cars, multiple foreign and local investments to the ongoing acquisition of prime properties in Guyana, the corruption continues unabated; So much so that the latest defector from the PPPC party, Mr Ralph Ramkarran exhausted himself fighting against this tide. He simply gave up and walked away. 

In the wake of these harsh realities, the PPPC government was left with no choice but to change the conversation. So today, Guyanese awakened to the reality of one of the most racist, uninformed and revealing editorials to grace the pages of the Guyana Chronicle; an editorial accusing the opposition of “going on a rampage â€Ķto make the country ungovernable,” an editorial mischievously predicting that innocent people will “get hurt” and that “people who sacrificed much and worked hard all their lives to build and sustain businesses will lose everything in minutes.”

Apart from the very obvious fear mongering and race baiting in this editorial, it is clear that the editor is either uninformed about world history or clearly intent on instigating racial divisions and cultural angst in order to cover up PPPC’s corruption, mismanagement and clear failure to efficiently provide even the most basic of services to the Guyanese people and this in an ever boasted growing local economy and an international environment where agencies continue to lend financial assistance for development.

With wicked intent, the Guyana Chronicle editor pressed every racially sensitive area, every negative stereotype about Africans in Guyana and directly stimulated every racial fear deliberately developed and carefully stimulated by this regime in order to ensure no deviation from the racial status quo. From Ronald Waddell, to nebulous theories about Blacks youths being socialized to hate Indians, painting the picture of the vicious and rabid African youth simply waiting to rob Indians and destroy assets. Today, Guyana Chronicle sunk to a new low with this destructive, evil and just false piece of “yellow journalism” and is a clear sign of desperation to which all civil society should be paying close attention. This government is desperate and it does not bode well for the future of peace and development in Guyana.

The truth is that PPPC’s pervasive policy to disenfranchise certain racial groups in Guyana as evidenced by the recent Freddie Kissoon v Jagdeo case in the Guyana, coupled with lack of employment opportunity and a severely degraded education system which boast of a near 50% Grade 6 failure rate, a near 30% school dropout rate, a near 50% youth unemployment rate, rampant poverty, overcrowded homes, garbage ridden communities and a domination of policy by the ruling elite goes a longer way towards explaining growing crime in Guyana than uninformed theories about the brainwashing of youth by the Opposition. Guyana’s opposition should be so lucky!

Considering the unabated suffering, disenfranchisement and consequences of inefficient management of government services, racial and gender disenfranchisement and rampant corruption by the PPPC government, it is amazing that instead of revolution or rebellion or protest, Guyanese citizens have simply subjected themselves to the abuse and brutality with scarcely a reaction.

All around the world and since time immemorial, disenfranchised people have stood up en masse to fight for change. Whether the American colonists fighting against British taxes and an increasing demanding and overbearing government, or the 1947 conflicts in India resulting in the two states of India and Pakistan or the Koffy’s rebellion against the slave masters or Toussaint over the French or the more recent forcing out of leaders in Egypt, Tunusia, Lebanon, Yemen, civil upraising in Syria and Bahrain, major protests in Algeria, Iraq, Jordon and Kuwait and minor protests in many other countries in the world today. As we pen this piece, more than 10,000 people have been protesting the relocation of a chemical plant in Dalian, China over the past two day, many police and citizens have been injured, some have died and businesses have been severely affected.

And so it is clear that the PPPC regime’s declaration of any protest in Guyana; whether sugar workers, UG Staff, UG students, YCT youth group or the Linden community as “ rampage”, indicates that they clearly they have no knowledge of History, no understanding of what is going on in the world today, no fear of the potential of their efforts to amp up a racial division in Guyana and no consideration for the lives of many hundreds of thousands of Guyanese who gather together to call attention peacefully to their pain, their plight, their suffering and their disenfranchisement.

Guyanese citizens must not lose sight of the basic right of the people to protest and to demand change when they are aggrieved. Brutalfacts calls on all right minded Guyanese of all races to come together to reject the PPPC government’s blatant racial divisiveness. The PPPC is going down a very destructive path, the consequences of which they will live to regret. Considering what is going on in the world today, the Guyanese people have been docile and accepting. The government of Guyana has been very lucky. They must not however push the Guyanese people beyond the breaking point.

Reference: Guyana Chronicle Editorial, July 3, 2012

 

 

http://guyaneseonline.wordpres...-should-be-rejected/

 

Mitwah

Mits,

 

Why are you so silent regarding Nigel ?

 

Originally Posted by Conscience:
Chairman of the AFC and Attorney - at - Law, Nigel Hughes

Chairman of the AFC and Attorney – at – Law, Nigel Hughes

[www.inewsguyana.com] â€“ The governing People’s Progressive Party (PPP) is calling for the resignation of Chairman of the minority opposition party _ the Alliance For Change (AFC) – Nigel Hughes, following the recent disclosure relating to the land being occupied by Mae’s Secondary School.

In a statement issued to the press on Sunday, February 9, the PPP said,“These allegations must not be taken lightly, and are to say the least, troubling and worrying to the public at large. The PPP is also appalled by the deafening silence of the Executive of the Alliance for Change on the continuous reports that its Chairman is involved in various forms of fraudulent activities, misconduct and improprieties.”

According to the PPP, â€œIt is shameful, but telling that the AFC which preaches about good governance and accountability is failing miserably to reign in Hughes despite the scandals in which he is finding himself. The fact that these allegations continue to be made is cause for concern about the integrity of the Attorney at Law and his ethical standards, not only in the political realm, but when doing business.

“Apart from the allegations that he sold a property to a popular city school despite taking out a mortgage which he failed to pay, and the ongoing litigation on the matter, Hughes was involved in several other scandals.”

The Party recalled theallegations of conflict of interest when it was revealed that Hughes and his wife Cathy were in the employ of Sithe Global, the company which developed the Amaila Falls Hydro Project which the AFC rejected.

 

General Secretary of the PPP, Clement Rohee. [iNews' Photo]

General Secretary of the PPP, Clement Rohee. [iNews' Photo]

“Hughes was also embroiled in another controversy surrounding his deliberate failure to disclose his relationship with the jury foreman in the Lusignan massacre trial whilst representing one of the accused.”

 

The PPP noted that they are aware of Hughes links to criminal elements and the underground.

“The party is aware of his links to prominent drug lords and criminals of this ilk and his bare faced representation of their interests in the courts when litigation is brought against them. The party recalls his involvement in the removal of footage from the gas station where a citizen was gunned down at Buxton.”

Hughes is currently engaged in a court battle in which the owner of Mae’s School, Mayfield French is alleging that he sold her a property despite taking out a mortgage which he failed to repay. Some 300 students are at risk as a result of the court battle

 

It is baffling that a party that preaches accountability, honesty and transparency still has Nigel as Chairman. Looks like the Executive committee of the AFC is afraid to bell the cat.

FM
Originally Posted by yuji22:

Afro Guyanese abandoned their religion and adopted Christianity. 

 

 

 

Indo Guyanese kept their names Ram and Rahim intact. Afro Guyanese chose to adopt Christian names.

 

Let us start the discussion now.

 

 

Either you have a poor understanding of slavery in Guyana or you are deliberately falsifying history.

 

Indian indentured workers were paid workers, they were not slaves working for free. In many respects, they had freedom of worship.

 

African slaves were legally the property of their white masters.

The white slave owners wrote off the original names of their slaves and gave them Christian names, imposing their own names on the slaves. For example, Gordon Amsterdam was owned by planter Amsterdam.

 

Simultaneously, the Dutch Lutheran Church and later the Anglican Church forced slaves to become Christians on orders from slave owners.

The slaves had no choice, no freedom of worship.

 

You are right to point out that East Indians generally clung to their original religions and cultures. You are wrong to misrepresent Africans.

FM

On Racism

July 8, 2012 at 11:59am

Factors both personal and professional have kept me from being as active as I once was when it comes to public commentary on what has been going on in Guyana over the past months.  The recent Guyana Chronicle editorial I could not, however, let pass without commentary.

 

Racism in itself is simply idiocy - racism armed with power is the greatest evil possible.  What exists in Guyana is racism armed with power and what makes it more insidious than institutionalised forms such as apartheid and segregation is the very fact that this absence of codification allows for a facade of normalcy and subsequent moral equivocation.

 

People have a clear obstacle to remove when the law of the land clearly says that person of colour y doesn't have the same rights as colour x.  However, when the system allows for persons of colour y to be part of the machinery of suppression, even as they operate within a hierarchy of privileges which restricts them completely from some areas and demands a high (or low) price for their entry into others, opposition to such a system becomes dificult to define and therefore execute.  This becomes doubly so when, at the times the system shows its true nature most explicitly, persons of colour y are put forward to allay fears or to legitimise the manifestation of the racism of the system.

 

So, when the state paper wholly owned and controlled by an Indo-Guyanese dominated government in sum paints a significant portion, if not the outright the majority of 'black youth' as mindless minions ready to voraciously feed on the hard-earned wealth of meek, defenceless, pious, law-abiding, tax-paying Indians, the spokesman for the system giving credence to the "facts" in the editorial is Juan Edghill, and not Hydar Ally or Nanda Gopaul.

 

Edghill, asked for a response by Demerara Waves, found nothing wrong with the editorial.  Moreover, he buttressed - and in essence legitimised - his opinion on the editorial by citing his experience as Chairman of the Ethnic Relations Commission.

 

“Out of my experience at the Ethnic Relations Commission," Demera Waves reports Edghill as saying, "and the tools that we would have used to analyse statements in the past, the fact that it’s being reported in a manner in which it was reported, I don’t see the editorial as seeming to want to incite or excite."

 

First of all, editorials are the highest form of journalism and basic journalism calls for the citation of sources of information - generalisations in editorials therefore usually point to verifiable data, something which the Chronicle editorial does not.  Considering that not only has the editorial been widely condemned, but, additionally, an apology has been issued by the Chairman of the Board of Chronicle, Keith Burrowes, one has to wonder about the efficacy of the ERC - the mechanism designed to be sensitive to issues of racial discrimination - under Edghill's tenure.

 

This is why I find people like Juan Edghill particularly repulsive: it is not that Edghill is an Uncle Tom or even a caricature of such - in the Uncle Tom persona there is a sincerity, however misguided, in the elevated perception of the oppressor, a perception conditioned through generations of abuse and cruelty; with Edghill, the critical support of a racist system is purely transactional.  Every single report undertaken by the ERC to provide a critical overview of the state of race, power and discrimination in Guyana has been ducked or shelved by Edghill, the man not fully resigned from the Commission when he proceeded, in the midst of a national elections campaign, to host a partisan appreciation ceremony for the outgoing President, after which he shamelessly mounts a political platform as a candidate.

 

We have to come to realise that financial corruption, as pervasive as it is, is in itself symptomatic of a greater moral and spiritual corruption.  There are punitive measures - from restitution to imprisonment -than can be attached to the theft of a million dollars.  What penalty exists in law however for contributing, by incompetence or intent (or both in Edghill's case), to the undermining of the cohesiveness of the state, when it is your express job and Constitutionally-mandated duty to enhance and safeguard that very cohesiveness?

 

Edghill as Chairman of the ERC may not have collected a single cent that wasn't legally due to him - but his systematic undermining of the core function of the Commission, ensuring a more equitable society as mandated by the Constitution of Guyana, has cost this country an incalculcable sum, a sum borne primarily by the disenfranchised among us.  If it were up to me, Edghill would not be least among the ranks of those in government who deserve imprisonment for corruption.

 

Finally, the fact that there has been no comment other than Edghill's coming out of the People's Progressive Party on this matter has to be indicative of the Party's endorsement of the editorial's claims.  This means that after twenty years of the privilege of governing a multicultural society, no one in the PPP has the courage to confront and denounce the anachronistic, backwater, apaan jhaat behaviour that beats in the very heart of the political party that controls the reins of state.

 

https://www.facebook.com/notes...sm/10151083042181265

Mitwah
Originally Posted by yuji22:

We need to have an open, frank and honest discussion here. Suriname is faced with the same issue of mistrust. Is that Racism ?

 

It is a known fact that there is mistrust between Indo and Afro Guyanese. 

 

This mistrust is based on historical experiences. We must have an honest, frank and open discussion to really understand what both sides feel before we start hollering racism.

 

Mistrust will not go away until we have a serious discussion on this matter. South Africa was able to deal with this issue and the nation gained by doing so. 

 

 

 

 

My question to you is do you want to address concerns that Afro Guyanese have in terms of how they perceive that they have been treated by Indian elites.

 

There has been sufficient analysis of the root causes of Indian mistrust and this has been acknowledged by many blacks.  David Hinds, Eusi Kwyana, Walter Rodney, Andaiye, and even Raphael Trotman, who left the PNC when certain elements in there refuses to accept responsibility for their role in Guyana's ethnic quagmire.

 

Aside from marginal people like Freddie Kissoon, and a few others I don't see the same degree of acknowledgement from Indians.  I am eager to hear more of this, and what they propose should be done about it.  In 2014 AfroGuyanese have become toothless.  The GDF and the police force are now poodles of the PPP, so the concerns that Indians have has been addressed. 

 

There is the problem of crime, which impacts ALL Guyanese, not just Indians.  The PPP refuses to deal with this issue, preferring to rely on extra judicial mercenaries, instead of an efficient, effective, and competent police force and judiciary.

FM
Originally Posted by caribny:
Originally Posted by yuji22:

Many Indo Guyanese kept their culture, religion (Hinduism and Islam) and family values intact while still integrating with mainstream society.

 

Afro Guyanese abandoned their religion and adopted Christianity. 

 

Is is racist to maintain your religion and culture ?

 

Indo Guyanese kept their names Ram and Rahim intact. Afro Guyanese chose to adopt Christian names. Is that racism ?

 

Indo Guyanese resisted attempts to strip them of their cultural identity and religion since they could not obtain jobs during colonial times because they had to be Christians to get civil servants jobs.

 

Is it racism to keep your religion Hinduism and Islam in tact ?

 

Get my point ?

 

Unless we are willing to have an open and frank discussion we will never in one hundred years resolve this problem of mistrust and the envy towards those who remained Ram and Rahim and kept Hinduism and Islam in tact.

 

PNC did their best to strip, rape and demoralized Indo Guyanese in their 28 years of illegal rule. Indo Guyanese are still reminded of those horrible acts hence the mistrust of the PNC. 

 

Is that racism ?

 

Let us start the discussion now.

 

 

This is a pile of manure.

 

1.  It doesn't address the issue of ethnic paranoia.

 

2.  Indo Guyanese have also undergone considerable cultural transformation and would be lost in the villages of UP and Bihar.

 

3.  It was the PNC who installed the system of each religion getting two public holidays.  I cant speak for Suriname, but in Trinidad the Hindus and Muslims get way fewer holidays than do the Christians.  Yet its easy to prove that ethnic paranoia is much stronger in Guyana than it is in Trinidad.

 

4.  There has never been furnished any proof that rapes by PNC officials of Indian females exceeded that of Indian business men who recruited rural Indian girls under false pretenses and then sexual harassed them once they got to G/twn. 

 

What we hear is the bleating of certain insecure Indian men who felt emasculated when certain Indian females selected powerful men (who in this case were blacks) as women often do when they want to move ahead.

 

Stop trying to distract from the issue.

 

FM
Last edited by Former Member
Originally Posted by Gilbakka:
Originally Posted by yuji22:

Afro Guyanese abandoned their religion and adopted Christianity. 

 

 

 

Indo Guyanese kept their names Ram and Rahim intact. Afro Guyanese chose to adopt Christian names.

 

Let us start the discussion now.

 

 

Either you have a poor understanding of slavery in Guyana or you are deliberately falsifying history.

 

Indian indentured workers were paid workers, they were not slaves working for free. In many respects, they had freedom of worship.

 

African slaves were legally the property of their white masters.

The white slave owners wrote off the original names of their slaves and gave them Christian names, imposing their own names on the slaves. For example, Gordon Amsterdam was owned by planter Amsterdam.

 

Simultaneously, the Dutch Lutheran Church and later the Anglican Church forced slaves to become Christians on orders from slave owners.

The slaves had no choice, no freedom of worship.

 

You are right to point out that East Indians generally clung to their original religions and cultures. You are wrong to misrepresent Africans.

 

Point taken.

 

What prevented Afro Guyanese from restarting their own and original methods of worship from their forefathers in Africa after the abolition of slavery ?

 

What prevented them from changing their names to their original names after the abolition of slavery ?

 

Let us keep the discussion civil.

FM
Originally Posted by yuji22:

We need to have an open, frank and honest discussion here. Suriname is faced with the same issue of mistrust. Is that Racism ?

 


yuji:

 

* Excellent post from you as usual above.

 

* You and the Rev are on the same wavelength.

 

* By the way, you can forget about having any discussion on this forum.

 

* Listen! The only people who bawl and scream about racism in Guyana are the East Indians who support the PNC/AFC----many of the the 21% Indians who voted for the PNC/AFC love to label the 79% who voted for the PPP as racists.

 

* The TRUTH is there is no widespread racism in Guyana. What you have is MISTRUST of the PNC.

 

Rev

 

FM
Originally Posted by Mitwah:

PPPC hate speech in Guyana Chronicle Editorial should be rejected by all citizens – commentary by Brutal Facts

The Guyana Chronicle editorial on July 3rd  (see below), allowed us a peek into the mindset of the ruling PPPC party. As evidence of corruption continues to be revealed, citizens of Guyana are slowly realizing how they have been disenfranchised by this cabal for the past 19 years. Every dollar stolen from the Guyana treasury is a dollar taken away from better roads, improved education, running water, crime, healthcare, more jobs and government’s ability to carry out their mandate of improving the lives of Guyanese citizens through development.

The corruption is so pervasive and the leaders so entitled that they display an unapologetic boldness in revealing the spoils of their nefarious activities. From the ever growing concrete mansions to the multiple North American vacations, to the luxury cars, multiple foreign and local investments to the ongoing acquisition of prime properties in Guyana, the corruption continues unabated; So much so that the latest defector from the PPPC party, Mr Ralph Ramkarran exhausted himself fighting against this tide. He simply gave up and walked away. 

In the wake of these harsh realities, the PPPC government was left with no choice but to change the conversation. So today, Guyanese awakened to the reality of one of the most racist, uninformed and revealing editorials to grace the pages of the Guyana Chronicle; an editorial accusing the opposition of “going on a rampage â€Ķto make the country ungovernable,” an editorial mischievously predicting that innocent people will “get hurt” and that “people who sacrificed much and worked hard all their lives to build and sustain businesses will lose everything in minutes.”

Apart from the very obvious fear mongering and race baiting in this editorial, it is clear that the editor is either uninformed about world history or clearly intent on instigating racial divisions and cultural angst in order to cover up PPPC’s corruption, mismanagement and clear failure to efficiently provide even the most basic of services to the Guyanese people and this in an ever boasted growing local economy and an international environment where agencies continue to lend financial assistance for development.

With wicked intent, the Guyana Chronicle editor pressed every racially sensitive area, every negative stereotype about Africans in Guyana and directly stimulated every racial fear deliberately developed and carefully stimulated by this regime in order to ensure no deviation from the racial status quo. From Ronald Waddell, to nebulous theories about Blacks youths being socialized to hate Indians, painting the picture of the vicious and rabid African youth simply waiting to rob Indians and destroy assets. Today, Guyana Chronicle sunk to a new low with this destructive, evil and just false piece of “yellow journalism” and is a clear sign of desperation to which all civil society should be paying close attention. This government is desperate and it does not bode well for the future of peace and development in Guyana.

The truth is that PPPC’s pervasive policy to disenfranchise certain racial groups in Guyana as evidenced by the recent Freddie Kissoon v Jagdeo case in the Guyana, coupled with lack of employment opportunity and a severely degraded education system which boast of a near 50% Grade 6 failure rate, a near 30% school dropout rate, a near 50% youth unemployment rate, rampant poverty, overcrowded homes, garbage ridden communities and a domination of policy by the ruling elite goes a longer way towards explaining growing crime in Guyana than uninformed theories about the brainwashing of youth by the Opposition. Guyana’s opposition should be so lucky!

Considering the unabated suffering, disenfranchisement and consequences of inefficient management of government services, racial and gender disenfranchisement and rampant corruption by the PPPC government, it is amazing that instead of revolution or rebellion or protest, Guyanese citizens have simply subjected themselves to the abuse and brutality with scarcely a reaction.

All around the world and since time immemorial, disenfranchised people have stood up en masse to fight for change. Whether the American colonists fighting against British taxes and an increasing demanding and overbearing government, or the 1947 conflicts in India resulting in the two states of India and Pakistan or the Koffy’s rebellion against the slave masters or Toussaint over the French or the more recent forcing out of leaders in Egypt, Tunusia, Lebanon, Yemen, civil upraising in Syria and Bahrain, major protests in Algeria, Iraq, Jordon and Kuwait and minor protests in many other countries in the world today. As we pen this piece, more than 10,000 people have been protesting the relocation of a chemical plant in Dalian, China over the past two day, many police and citizens have been injured, some have died and businesses have been severely affected.

And so it is clear that the PPPC regime’s declaration of any protest in Guyana; whether sugar workers, UG Staff, UG students, YCT youth group or the Linden community as “ rampage”, indicates that they clearly they have no knowledge of History, no understanding of what is going on in the world today, no fear of the potential of their efforts to amp up a racial division in Guyana and no consideration for the lives of many hundreds of thousands of Guyanese who gather together to call attention peacefully to their pain, their plight, their suffering and their disenfranchisement.

Guyanese citizens must not lose sight of the basic right of the people to protest and to demand change when they are aggrieved. Brutalfacts calls on all right minded Guyanese of all races to come together to reject the PPPC government’s blatant racial divisiveness. The PPPC is going down a very destructive path, the consequences of which they will live to regret. Considering what is going on in the world today, the Guyanese people have been docile and accepting. The government of Guyana has been very lucky. They must not however push the Guyanese people beyond the breaking point.

Reference: Guyana Chronicle Editorial, July 3, 2012

 

 

http://guyaneseonline.wordpres...-should-be-rejected/

 

I see the Rev and Yugi avoiding this article.

Mitwah
Originally Posted by Rev:
Originally Posted by yuji22:

We need to have an open, frank and honest discussion here. Suriname is faced with the same issue of mistrust. Is that Racism ?

 


yuji:

 

* Excellent post from you as usual above.

 

* You and the Rev are on the same wavelength.

 

* By the way, you can forget about having any discussion on this forum.

 

* Listen! The only people who bawl and scream about racism in Guyana are the East Indians who support the PNC/AFC----many of the the 21% Indians who voted for the PNC/AFC love to label the 79% who voted for the PPP as racists.

 

* The TRUTH is there is no widespread racism in Guyana. What you have is MISTRUST of the PNC.

 

Rev

 

Rev: Some of my best friends are Afro Guyanese. I am not a racist; I hate everyone regardless of race(even Indo Guyanese). I call a spade a spade.

FM
Originally Posted by skeldon_man:
 

Rev: Some of my best friends are Afro Guyanese. I am not a racist; I hate everyone regardless of race(even Indo Guyanese). I call a spade a spade.


Skelly:

 

* The relationship between blacks and East Indians in Guyana today is very good.

 

* MISTRUST DEVELOPED AFTER THE DISTURBANCE IN THE 60s.

 

* But the 2 major races get along very well today.

 

* It's only around election time you have some tension.

 

REGARDING RACISM

 

* It's only the East Indians supporting the PNC/AFC who label East Indians supporting the PPP racists.

 

* In the past the Rev had a name for those East Indians----but I have decided to tone things down.

 

BOTTOM LINE:

 

THERE IS NO WIDESPREAD RACISM IN GUYANA. BUT MISTRUST FOR THE PNC CONTINUES TO BLOSSOM.

 

Rev

FM
Originally Posted by Rev:
Originally Posted by skeldon_man:
 

Rev: Some of my best friends are Afro Guyanese. I am not a racist; I hate everyone regardless of race(even Indo Guyanese). I call a spade a spade.


Skelly:

 

* The relationship between blacks and East Indians in Guyana today is very good.

 

* MISTRUST DEVELOPED AFTER THE DISTURBANCE IN THE 60s.

 

* But the 2 major races get along very well today.

 

* It's only around election time you have some tension.

 

REGARDING RACISM

 

* It's only the East Indians supporting the PNC/AFC who label East Indians supporting the PPP racists.

 

* In the past the Rev had a name for those East Indians----but I have decided to tone things down.

 

BOTTOM LINE:

 

THERE IS NO WIDESPREAD RACISM IN GUYANA. BUT MISTRUST FOR THE PNC CONTINUES TO BLOSSOM.

 

Rev

Rev, you can see that uneasy calm when the negroes and Indians are together. You are right. Election time brings out the worst of the 2 races. I lived through the elections of the 60s and have seen the violence. I have seen busted skulls and broken limbs.

FM

Author’s second book targets racism in Guyana

June 2, 2013 | By | Filed Under News 

“The peoples of Guyana sit on top of a known, restless, threatening volcano. It is called RACE. There is no way to sugarcoat, ignore, or dismiss this prowling, mindless monster in the midstâ€Ķ This nation has endured its share of the occasional racial eruption, the rush of consuming lava, the sweep of threatening peril; but these have been explosions in miniature, and only a precursor of greater dangers currently harnessed, and still ahead. Still, the burns and scars and memories are painful to the flesh, and irremovably embedded.” Gabriel H. K. Lall, exposes the dangerous manifestations of racism in all its parts in his second publication titled, Sitting on a Racial Volcano (Guyana Uncensored).

Gabriel H. K. Lall hoists a copy of Sitting on a Racial Volcano (Guyana Uncensored)

His first publication, Guyana: A National Cesspool of Greed, Duplicity & Corruption (A Remigrant’s Story) had been unashamedly truthful about the deep-rooted issue of corruption in Guyana from prominent institutions. This one is no different. The publication, which was launched at a simple gathering at Marian Academy on Friday last, introduces the subject of race and its repercussions on modern day Guyana. Speaker of the National Assembly, Raphael Trotman, at the launching stated that “our colonial predecessors effectively manipulated and used the issue of race and competition and rivalry to divide the Government. However, while we are not guilty of starting this rivalry, we are certainly to be condemned for continuing it”. Lall asks in his book, “Who are we? Where are we? Where are we going? As a society, as a nation, as a people?” According to the author, racism has long since caused people to retreat, to shelter and even to hide rather than to bring the issue to full public view. He described the issue as a volcano, with a future that “threatens” and “endangers”. The unashamedly scrutinising Lall brings to the fore the relationship existing between the two major races in Guyana; the East Indians and the Africans, identified in the book as “Indian” and “Black”, underlining the differences in perceptions between the two groups and mixing the preferences in political factions, primarily on the People’s Progressive Party Civic (PPP/C) and the People’s National Congress Reform (PNC/R). The publication made reference to tragic events in Linden and Agricola as “manifestations of the bubbling, heaving volcano.” Guns were referred to as “the final solution in Guyana”, the determining factor of peace, the only option to equilibrium. Evidently, change is emphasized as “the only way left”, the needed element to eradicate the deeply entrenched root of separation between the people of our nation. More importantly, change must come from the “top”, change that has thus far been involuntary. Essentially, unless the issue of race has been dissolved, progress will be obscured. Lall said that change has to come from those who are willing to tread in new and different paths and to inculcate hope. He urged all to put their heads together and stand up for each other, to take back our society and to look for the common good. The publication is now available for purchase at the Austin’s Book Store. (Tiffanne Ramphal)

Mitwah
Originally Posted by yuji22:
Originally Posted by Gilbakka:
Originally Posted by yuji22:

Afro Guyanese abandoned their religion and adopted Christianity. 

 

 

 

Indo Guyanese kept their names Ram and Rahim intact. Afro Guyanese chose to adopt Christian names.

 

Let us start the discussion now.

 

 

Either you have a poor understanding of slavery in Guyana or you are deliberately falsifying history.

 

Indian indentured workers were paid workers, they were not slaves working for free. In many respects, they had freedom of worship.

 

African slaves were legally the property of their white masters.

The white slave owners wrote off the original names of their slaves and gave them Christian names, imposing their own names on the slaves. For example, Gordon Amsterdam was owned by planter Amsterdam.

 

Simultaneously, the Dutch Lutheran Church and later the Anglican Church forced slaves to become Christians on orders from slave owners.

The slaves had no choice, no freedom of worship.

 

You are right to point out that East Indians generally clung to their original religions and cultures. You are wrong to misrepresent Africans.

 

Point taken.

 

What prevented Afro Guyanese from restarting their own and original methods of worship from their forefathers in Africa after the abolition of slavery ?

 

What prevented them from changing their names to their original names after the abolition of slavery ?

 

Let us keep the discussion civil.

Slavery was abolished in 1834 while Guyana was already a full-fledged British colony.

Virtually all schools were run by Christian churches. To become a teacher, ex-slaves had to be Christians.

For about 70 years after slavery, ex-slaves and their children comprised the majority of the population.

In the predominantly Christian-run schools every single child was indoctrinated in Christian and Western values. Up to 1962 when I finished my primary education in a school run by the Church of Scotland, every morning and afternoon I had to join my schoolmates in singing Christian hymns and prayers, or else serious licks with teachers' cane.

To get jobs in the colonial civil service, the police force or even in the private stores in Georgetown well up to 100 years after slavery, applicants had to be Christians, and had to provide recommendations/references from priests and other notables who were Christians.

Again, from 1834 up to the moment when the East Indian population surpassed the African, all the ex-slaves and their children and grandkids were firmly under the sway of British books, newspapers, magazines, missionaries, etc.

Having deserted the sugar estates en masse, and knowing that upward mobility meant being Christians, it was natural and understandable for Africans to put aside their African religions, though many continued to practice a watered-down version clandestinely.

By the time Guyana ceased to be a British colony in 1966, only a handful of Afro-Guyanese had cast off their Christian names. The most noteworthy were Sidney King who became Eusi Kwayana and Dr Walter Greene who became Omawale.

Put your feet in the shoes of Afro-Guianese during the entire 19th century and you will understand why they are overwhelmingly Christians with English names today.

 

 

FM
Originally Posted by yuji22:
 

Point taken.

 

What prevented Afro Guyanese from restarting their own and original methods of worship from their forefathers in Africa after the abolition of slavery ?

 

What prevented them from changing their names to their original names after the abolition of slavery ?

 

Let us keep the discussion civil.

Its a pity that Guyanese don't know our history.  Rent ROOTs and see what happened to Kunta KInte when he refused to allow himself to be called Toby.  There was a very systematic attempt to destroy all vestiges of African culture, because a people who know who they are, can organize and fight off their oppressors.  Indeed its a proven fact that most of those who led the slave rebellions were people born in Africa, and it was the local born slaves, especially the house slaves, who often betrayed these plans. 

 

So the freedoms that Indians had to maintain their culture was denied to the African, and had you listened when they taught you Caribbean history in school you would have known that.  Very basic.

 

 

Slaves were NOT allowed to be Christians because the slave masters were terrified that they would discover the bible and then be able to learn how to read. With this information they would become more cognizant of what the slave owners were up to.

 

Various small churches began to attempt to gain "market share" during the late days of slavery by attempting to convert Africans from their traditional religions, which they still practiced very discretely.  The planters feared that these church gatherings would spread literacy, would facilitate planning of rebellions, and most importantly would detract from the time that they preferred the slaves to be cutting cane.

 

Indeed in the Demerara rebellion in the 1820s there is evidence that slaves connected to one of these churches were very involved.  There was therefore aggressive attempts to crush all activities aimed at Christianizing the slaves, on pain of a hanging.

 

AFTER slavery in order to maintain its status as the Anglican church began to aggressively convert Africans.  They did this by establishing schools, knowing that the slaves wished literacy for their kids as a away to escape the harshness of the cane fields.

 

The Anglican and other churches thereby facilitated the creation of an African middle class because it allowed the development of a cadre of teachers.  Check the nbackground of any AfroGuyanese who is at least four generations middle class and one will see several teachers.  In addition many civil service jobs were distributed via the Anglican church, so if one wasn't Christian one didn't get those jobs.  You should be aware of that, given the fact that Hindus and Muslims were virtually barred from these jobs until the late 50s.

 

In any case I fail to see what maintaining a religion is that important, given the tremendous inroads that BOTH Christianity and Islam have made in Africa and among Caribbean Indians.  You do know that Islam is not an Indian religion.  It has common roots with Christianity and Judaism, and so is equally alien.  As of now at least 40% of Guyanese Indians are members of some Judeo/Christian/Muslim religion.

 

I don't know if you know this, but Christianity isn't a "white man's religion".  Do you know that it reached AFrica AND India before it reached the UK?  Yes Christianity was NOT brought to India by the British or the Portuguese, despite what the Hindu extremists might peddle.

FM
Originally Posted by Sunil:
Originally Posted by JoKer:
Originally Posted by Rev:
Originally Posted by JoKer:

Does the Rev and yuji want a black son-in-law?

 

* If he is honest, intelligent, decent, respectable, ambitious and accomplished like that black gentleman, then the answer is yes.

 

Rev

 

Nothing wrang wid being black bai. I suppose you're white

That guy needs to try this stuff
https://guyana.crowdstack.io/topic/whitelicious

 

LMAO

FM

Yuji.  I can trace my ancestry via DNA Ancestry to Ghana, Togo, Nigeria and Congo.  I am not sure what ethnic groups within those nations that I belong to.

 

So tell me which name should I chose?  And how does selecting what will clearly be a make up name change who I am.

 

You cannot speak fluent Hindi, nor can you write it properly I am sure.  So don't cast stones at me, as you too have made a cultural journey way beyond the lands of your ancestry.

 

I couldn't help but notice that even the racist Indian woman expressed her disrespect for blacks in a very African way.  She turned her back and bent over, displaying her buttocks.  That is what African women do.  I some how doubt that women in India do that.

 

FM
Last edited by Former Member
Originally Posted by JoKer:
 

 

Nothing wrang wid being black bai. I suppose you're white


Jokes:

 

* Don't take things personally bai.

 

* Rev was actually paying you some compliments.

 

* Those are admirable qualities you have.

 

* I can see why Ma insisted you choose a good girl as first lady.

 

* By the way, I see Sunil having some fun at your expense---suggesting you use whitelicious.

 

 

* Check out Sunil's avatar---he is the one who thinks he is white.lol

 

Rev

 

FM
Originally Posted by Rev:
Originally Posted by skeldon_man:
 

Rev: Some of my best friends are Afro Guyanese. I am not a racist; I hate everyone regardless of race(even Indo Guyanese). I call a spade a spade.


Skelly:

 

* The relationship between blacks and East Indians in Guyana today is very good.

 

*

Rev

Just the mere fact that you claim that the only ethnically based issue in Guyana shows what a racist you are.  You don't take the time to understand how AfroGuyanese think, because they don't matter to you.

 

There is ethnically based tension in Guyana because of mistrust of BOTH the PPP and the PNC.

 

While Indians and Africans both have friends from either group they don't trust those from the other group who they don't know because they fear ethnic domination by people from the other group.

 

Understand this and stop trying to fool yourself.  The PPP has FAILED to make any inroads into the African/mixed group.  It is rejected by this group in the same way as African Americans reject the GOP, coincidentally by the same margins.  They consider it to be a racist outfit which has a core goal of undermining the ability of blacks to progress,

FM

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