Yesterday I was flicking through
the local radio stations and heard what sounded like a parliamentary
debate on
the Economic Citizenship program. The passion in the speaker's voice who
clearly
was against the idea was intense. Whenever I hear people speak about it
they act
like having an Antiguan passport is the best thing a person can have in
their
possession, and that permitting others to get it somehow dilutes it's
value.
Antiguans have to be some of the proudest nationals in the world. They
make sure
everyone knows that they are from Antigua. "Me bharn yah", "Antigua me
come
from" or "Me nuh bang water" are some of the first phrases in dialect
any new
resident learns when they make the move here. To be honest they are
phrases that they are never permitted to forget, but that's another
story altogether. I see more and more young people
with tattoos of the flag on their arms, or of the name Antigua inked
across
their backs, or of the word Wadadli across a forearm. Many local artists
sing
about Antigua in their songs and there is no shortage of people naming
their
businesses after the ancient Amerindian name for the island. Despite
Wadadli
being a slightly modified version "ouladli" found in that famous Carib
to French
1666 dictionary, it's still cool to see and hear the word which was used
by the
Arawak people now long gone and often forgotten here. Island pride or
country
pride isn't unique to Antigua and I have witnessed it in many of the
countries
around the world that i have traveled to. However, what is different to
me is
that many Antiguan's seem to be blindly patriotic or proud of the fact
that they
are Antiguan. As a proud Antiguan reading this can you easily answer why
you are
proud to be from Antigua? What makes it so special to hold a passport
from this
little country? Think about that while continue reading.
There are so many
examples of things that are happening in our country which makes you wonder
where the patriots have gone. I'd like to touch on one of these examples.
Recently on my walks at dawn with my young son I have been astonished by the
amount of garbage on the sides of the road. Currently I am renting in Hodges Bay
and it truly makes me wonder where these people who throw the garbage come from.
They can't be the same
proud Antiguans who "were bahn ya" who didn't "bang water" can they? It's a
shame to say that the answer is often a resounding YES. Everyday our proud and
patriotic people do things to this little island which corrode the very thing
that we should be most proud of.
The pristine and beautiful environment which
all of our ancestors found here when they first "bang(ed) water" to get here has
never taken the beating it's getting at the moment, and we all need to do more
as patriots to save our patrimony. I don't think i ever remember seeing as much
garbage laying around the place as I do now. Even with regular cleanups the
garbage returns daily. Fresh KFC boxes and cups, Guinness bottles, styrofoam
food containers are more easy to spot than wildlife down at the beach. Whenever
I see people discarding trash I say something. It shouldn't be acceptable to
watch people discard garbage on the beach, in the bush or on the side of the
road. Yesterday I drove to the government's Hospitality Training Institute at
High Point, and realized that I had to write about this issue. I had to say
something. Here is a school of young Antiguans and Barbudans who may be the
future leaders of our nation, and right outside the school there are piles of
garbage up and down the road. Where the students wait for the bus a pile of
garbage grows daily. If these future hoteliers ignore the trash sitting
at their feet and don't have the interest to do something about it then I am not
sure what we can do as a nation. Proud Antiguans have to find a voice and
remember what it is that you are proud of. Be brave as well as proud and stand
up for what is right otherwise before long your pride may be something as
historic as the Arawaks.