Last
week as British Prime Minister David Cameron visited Jamaica intellectuals in
the Caribbean seized the opportunity to indulge in their two great pastimes;
blaming colonialism for our problems and
calling for reparations for slavery.
One
such person was UWI’s Vice-Chancellor, Sir Hilary Beckles who penned an open
letter to Mr. Cameron in the Jamaica Gleaner, and which received widespread regional
attention. Possibly making it the most read thing anyone working at UWI has ever
published.
In
his letter, Sir Hilary called on Mr. Cameron to recognize the need for
reparations saying that the legacy of slavery continues, “to derail, undermine
and haunt our best efforts at sustainable economic development and the
psychological and cultural rehabilitation of our people from the ravishes of
the crimes against humanity committed by your British state.” Though presumably, Sir Hilary is fine with the
legacy of being able to accept Knighthoods from the Queen.
Of course no attempt
at scolding our former colonial overloads would be complete without a racial
guilt trip. In his letter Sir Hilary describes Mr. Cameron as having been “enriched
by your forebears' sins of the enslavement of our ancestors.” This is a jab at
the fact that Mr. Cameron’s first cousin six times removed, once owned slaves.
If morally indicting Mr. Cameron for the sins of a distant cousin who lived in the 1700s is acceptable, then we may as well also indict him for killing Jesus. I’m sure we can find a cousin of his who was there.
The
idea that the British people should feel perpetual collective guilt for the
Trans Atlantic slave trade, something, which happened over 100 years ago, is
ridiculous. As well, the idea that the Caribbean is poor because Britain is
rich, the zero sum game fallacy Caribbean intellectuals like Sir Hilary love to
perpetuate is equally ridiculous and needs to stop.
This
isn’t to excuse Britain’s involvement with the slave trade, an unquestionable
human atrocity that needs to be remembered forever. Nor is it to forget the inequalities and
injustices of British colonial rule in the Caribbean. But Sir Hilary and others
in the reparations brigade should perhaps consider a few things before
demanding the Queen cut them a cheque.
Firstly,
during the height of the British slave trade most Britons lived in dire
poverty. In the mid 1700’s half of people in Britain relied on subsistence
farming. Profits from slavery may have enriched elites and helped build Oxford libraries
and stately homes for the privileged few but it did little for ordinary Britons.
It
was the steam engine giving birth to the Industrial revolution and the many
social and political reforms that came with it that gave rise to modern Briton
as we know it today. Certainly Britain’s colonies played a pivotal role in the industrial
revolution, but the idea that there was a finite amount of wealth that was
stolen from colonies in the Caribbean and transplanted to Britain is just
false.
Sir
Hilary and Caribbean governments should ask why it is that countries like
Singapore and South Korea with little or no resources; have gone from being
provincial backwaters into economic giants in the same time independent
Caribbean countries like Jamaica were rejecting the idea of free market
economics.
The
second thing to consider is the question of the morality in thinking financial
reparations somehow equalizes the injustice of the Trans-Atlantic slave trade.
The reparations brigade point to the fact that Britain compensated slave owners
in what would be billions of pounds in today’s money. It’s only right that former slaves be
compensated as well they say.
This
would make sense if reparations could be paid directly to former slaves
themselves. But for Caribbean Governments a century later to feel entitled to reparations
appears to smack of the same moral failing of slave owners; that human beings
can be property to be claimed and with a debt to be owed in case you break
them.
The
real insidious nature of the reparations brigade though is the way in which it
wants us to see ourselves. To them we are perpetual victims forever wounded by
the injustices of slavery and colonialism. Instead of being in control of our
destinies we are forever chained to the past, and the best we can hope for is
for our former masters to see the light and unshackle us. This goes against the very nature, spirit and
beliefs of the Independence movement.
During
his visit Mr. Cameron was widely derided by local and foreign commentators when
he dared to suggest that it was time for Britain and the Caribbean to both “move
on” from the past. Sir Hilary may not like it, but Mr. Cameron was absolutely
right.
1 comment:
Even if it was justified to give reparations, their simply is no power to force the British to give them. Cut your losses and move on.
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