Barbados is hosting The 8th Annual African Diaspora Heritage Trail (ADHT) Conference at the Llyod Erskine Sandiford Centre from September 17-19, 2012. Visit the ADHT website to learn more!
A Graduate of Cultural Studies, Angela Trotman, shares some reflections on last week's Humanities Festival 2015 panel discussion on Memory and Barbadian Migrants in Panama and the need to honour this connection with explorations in the Humanities: To make an allegorical argument: As academics, we have taken lunches to Panama on several occasions, just like Biblical David. David, however, realized that lunch was not enough. He recognized that while it was sustaining and strengthening and nourishing it was not enough. He decided to bring his gutterperk and rockstone . In making that decision he turned the tide, Goliath fell! While the words historians use to explore this connection are vital and necessary, we should not leave our weapons behind: artists will make the difference; the singer will sing, the dramatist will perform, the poet will break the heart, the dancers will reenact and bring back memories of a connection in which so many migrants toiled and ...
When you disturb the earth… Ancestral memory awakens . Some Perspectives from History and Archaeology By, Dr. Tara Inniss Our ancestors believed that from the moment of birth, we are not only tied to our mothers but also to the land. The invisible and material cord that connects mother to child -- a child's lifeblood before and during birth once severed continued to have profound spiritual power that could be tied to the land. When Bajans gather around the world, they proudly say their "navel string is buried right here" -- in Barbados. Often with great care it is planted under a fruit tree in the belief that it will guarantee the child's future prosperity and self-reliance -- the spiritual and material bond between mother, child and landscape is sealed. Similarly, if care is not taken in burying the umbilical cord and the land around it is disturbed by the forgotten strike of a spade or a foraging animal, it is said that the child will also be disturbed later in li...
The Local Organising Committee (LOC) of the UWI/ OAS Caribbean Heritage Network (CHN) Caribbean Conversations in Conservation series is pleased to announce that it will move forward with a virtual/ online programme starting Thursday, April 15, 2021. We are organising monthly sessions that will take the Caribbean Conversation about Conservation Online! The original programme of this multi-disciplinary, practical conference was postponed in March 2020 due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. Conference organisers were hoping to deliver a face-to-face conference over the course of 2020 but that was not possible due to the changing nature of the pandemic. However, we are pleased to bring you a series of online engagements based on the original conference programme with some new featured sessions. The CHN is committed to bringing together heritage professionals from across the Caribbean region to discuss the challenges and opportunities in heritage conservation. We are pleased to welc...
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