Let me be today’s wet blanket at a time when so many are declaring the redemptive qualities of fetes and revelry in the face of both imminent and actual tragedy and pain.
There is, admittedly, some 1990 T&T and
Saint Lucia 2010 PTSD on my part. These were two completely different
encounters with death and destruction marked by so-called emotional “safety
valves” of different varieties.
I am willing to risk being part of a tiny
minority of Caribbean folk not committed to the view that socio-economic and
socio-psychological imperatives can provide a level of re-assurance that life may
continue “as normal” even after the most atrocious assaults on lives and the
quality of life in our tiny states.
In 1990, it amazed me that there had been
some boastfulness associated with the fact that people had organised “curfew
fetes” and danced long nights away even as bodies lay rotting in some
facilities and on the streets of Port of Spain.
Then when Tomas struck Saint Lucia in 2010 and
the mountainside came crashing down on Livity Arts Studio and other nearby
structures, and bodies were still being excavated from muddy piles, and there
was water in hotel swimming pools and none in Castries homes, the Caribbean
Tourism Organisation announced that the island was “back in business.”
The string of angry emails to the
organisation perhaps cost me some friends and (most likely) participation in
future forums with my usual messages of caution about the net value of tourism
as a stable, long-term solution to poverty and need.
Colleagues and friends and complete
strangers from Caribbean countries (of which I have more than passing knowledge)
hate when I meddle in “their” business this way, so I cleave to a few marginal
voices expressing caution and care to secure a degree of validation.
For example, accomplished Jamaican
journalist and attorney, Dionne Jackson-Miller, took some heavy blows on social
media when she attempted to explain why some Jamaicans seemingly avoided the
advice of disaster officials on the question of hunkering down at home. She hit
an important nail smack on the head.
“So, a lot of people got REALLY upset when
I posted that it's easier to talk about staying home when you live in a
comfortable home!!!”, was her retort when faced with the accusation that she
was implicitly encouraging slackness. She need not have explained more than she
eventually did. My own response was that while there were clear dangers
associated with the act of ignoring officialdom, there must also be space for
some of us to “recognise our own privilege.”
It generated some additional queasiness
when Tourism Minister Edmund Bartlett announced on Friday that “Jamaica is open
for business and, once again, the resilience of the Jamaican people is on full
display … We are grateful that there has been no wide-scale impact to our
general tourism infrastructure and our tourism industry is fully operational.”
Some clever social
media user juxtaposed photographs of communities picking up heart-breaking
pieces following Beryl, and the idyllic promotions of a tourism industry that
cannot afford to miss a single revenue step.
Like Saint Lucia in
2010, there is space for a measure of (even contrived) “balance.” If tourism
fails, the ability to recover from the annual assaults is substantially reduced.
So, we resort to a kind of bi-polarity descriptive of completely different
realities within a single space.
In St Vincent and the
Grenadines where, if you don’t try to be strong nowadays you would shed tears
every single day, post-Beryl, a scaled-down Vincymas proceeded over the weekend
and up to yesterday. Here, again, is territory with which I am familiar. But
they don’t like you in their business.
One person told me
that the same way some people turn to prayer and religious devotion to cope, so
too there are people who believe that dancing their sorrows away can help.
I hear this – loud and
clear. But I think that these things underpin a significant psycho-social
shortcoming. It might be that this is because I am not prone to superstition,
and do not easily subscribe to a notion of socio-cultural “safety valves” of the party
kind.
In the meantime, there
is also a new generation of cranks sharing voicenotes and social media posts on
“geo-engineering,” the mythical connection between earthquakes and hurricanes,
and general challenges (in some instances aligned to political preference) to
clear scientific evidence that explains more intense weather events.
How is this different
from the music cranked high while people pick up the pieces from broken lives?
It’s yet another fete in the face of grief and suffering.
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