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The continuing playing of the race card by Mr Jagdeo must be rejected by all citizens

 

May 5, 2015

 

Dear Editor,

My great, great grandmother came to Guyana as an indentured worker. Her name was Japalia. She was from Uttar Pradesh. Like all those brave souls who journeyed from the place of their birth she was searching for a better life. She was courageous and I am forever grateful for the choice that she made. I came to be born here, a beautiful, bountiful land, a place I am proud to call home.

I am a Guyanese. I do not distinguish myself from any other Guyanese even if others choose to do so by virtue of my race. I have no need to look back to a place that belonged to my ancestors my concern lies with the place to which I am bound, the place I call home.

In the run up to general elections and in recent days former President Jagdeo has made vile and ugly statements, assertions about what will happen to Indo-Guyanese if the APNU+AFC wins the elections. He, more than anyone else has played the race card in what seems to be a desperate bid to fuel hatred and division among Guyanese. It is sad that no one in the PPP has chosen to distance themselves from him.

In his speech at the Indian Arrival Committee’s concert at the National Stadium on May 1st he is reported to have said that those who are the purveyors of this past, now “come in new guises,” warning of long dark days if freedom is taken away. “If we allow ourselves to have this freedom snatched away from us then it would be long dark days for our country again and our ancestors would never be proud of us”.

This disgraceful play on fear and the emotional blackmail is what the purveyors of hate rely on to keep Indo-Guyanese loyal to them.

I am asking my fellow citizens to reject the continued assault on our intelligence.

Our own Martin Carter (No Separate Salvation’, March 5 1955) put it best when he wrote-

‘’Everybody living in this country ought to know that people of African, Indian, Portuguese and Chinese descent dwell here only because in the past sugar lords found it necessary to bring their ancestors to this part of the world to work in the cane fields…

There is no separate salvation for Indians in Guiana, no separate salvation for Africans. There is only salvation for a united Guianese people… Let those who advocate racialism in any form among the people confute this.’

Better must come.

Yours faithfully, 
Nadia Sagar

 

http://www.stabroeknews.com/20...ted-by-all-citizens/

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RE: 

Dear Editor,

My great, great grandmother came to Guyana as an indentured worker. Her name was Japalia. She was from Uttar Pradesh. Like all those brave souls who journeyed from the place of their birth she was searching for a better life. She was courageous and I am forever grateful for the choice that she made. I came to be born here, a beautiful, bountiful land, a place I am proud to call home.

I am a Guyanese. I do not distinguish myself from any other Guyanese even if others choose to do so by virtue of my race. I have no need to look back to a place that belonged to my ancestors my concern lies with the place to which I am bound, the place I call home.

cain

When Africans and mixed account for over 50% of the population in 2020 will Indians be happy that the party which will get most of their votes, the APNU AFC coalition starts screaming the language that Jagdeo is.

 

Jagdeo is signaling that he considers himself to be an Indian leader, and that only the Indian community matters to him.  He is making non Indians feel quite anxious.  One doesn't have to wonder why a few degrade themselves and urinate on the PPP flag, given that they see them as a threat.

 

Where is the PPP acknowledging that Guyana is multi ethnic and that NONE of the ethnic groups are dominant?

FM
Last edited by Former Member

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