BARBADOS: Prime Minister Announces Major Heritage Project — & — Barbadian Stories, Structures & Monuments Must Be Celebrated

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DEC 3, 2021 – BY SHARON AUSTIN

Press conference on the creation of the Barbados Heritage District featuring Prime Minister Mia Amor Mottley. (PMO)

Prime Minister Mia Amor Mottley today announced a major heritage initiative – the Reclaiming Our Atlantic Destiny (ROAD) Project, which she described as “a moral imperative and an economic necessity” for this country.

The project, which Ms. Mottley labelled as one of the most significant projects ever undertaken since the country’s Independence, will have four phases, with the first being a Memorial at Newton Slave Burial Ground, where 570 slaves were interred.                               

During the press conference, Ms. Mottley stated: “This will be a labour of love, but it won’t only be financed by the Government of Barbados. We wish we could do all on our own; we cannot. But we have the commitment to start and to do enough of it, that we believe that other persons of like mind, who recognise that this is a global asset and not just a Barbadian asset, will also come to the fore.

“That is one of the reasons why we have put together the consortium that we have to work alongside Adjaye Associates, in order to ensure that this project can be completed over…the next three years or so. We would love to have it completed by 2024, but at the very latest we are trying for 2025.”

Sir David Adjaye, world renowned British-Ghanaian architect of Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture fame, is the designer of the Newton Memorial.

Underscoring the importance of the project, Ms. Mottley said it had allowed officials to develop international relationships that would position Barbados as that place from which the world could understand what transpired during slavery.

“Outside of the United Kingdom, Barbados has the largest Transatlantic Slave records and to that extent we believe that we have first a moral duty to protect them and a duty to share with our people those records and to ensure that Barbadians understand all aspects of what happened to us when we came to this land, …every aspect of our life that can be gleaned from those records.

“And then of course, thirdly, that we having been the victims, in many instances, of what transpired in those records, we must now be able to reap a bounty from those records by creating a heritage economy and a heritage district,” the Prime Minister said.

Prime Minister Mia Amor Mottley announcing the Reclaiming Our Atlantic Destiny (ROAD) Project today while Deputy Director of the Barbados Museum and Historical Society, Kevin Farmer (left) and world-renowned architect Sir David Adjaye, look on. (GP)

She explained that three other aspects of the project were being developed. She said discussions were ongoing with Codrington College about establishing a spiritual university, to reflect all of the religions of the world.

“We believe Barbados can be that place that helps to show the world how different religions can coexist in a small space.  We are hoping that we will have international linkages but you will hear more about that as we go forward,” she told her audience.

Ms. Mottley added that there needs to be talks with The University of the West Indies, as she expressed the view that a school of public policy should be set up, focusing on small island developing states and their opportunities and challenges, among other things.

Ms. Mottley also proffered the view that Barbados’ stories must be told and suggested that an indigenous film industry should be developed.

“We have many, many, many stories to tell….  We have received a proposal looking at how we can redo some of our older installations into that kind of sound stage, and we are in the process of starting those discussions,” she stated.

The other speakers at the press conference were Deputy Director of the Barbados Museum and Historical Society, Kevin Farmer; Sir David Adjaye; American Art Historian, Author and President of the Souls Grown Deep Foundation, representing the ESAIYO/LMI Consortium Consultant, Dr. Maxwell Anderson, and Chief Archivist at the Barbados Archives Department, Ingrid Thompson.


Barbadian Stories, Structures & Monuments Must Be Celebrated

Press conference on the creation of the Barbados Heritage District featuring Prime Minister Mia Amor Mottley. (PMO)

World-renowned British-Ghanaian architect of Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture fame, and Designer of the Newton Memorial, Sir David Adjaye, has told Barbadians that their stories, structures and monuments need to be acknowledged worldwide.

Speaking at a press conference today, Sir David joined Prime Minister Mia Amor Mottley and other speakers to discuss plans for the Reclaiming Our Atlantic Destiny (ROAD) Project and the Newton Burial Ground in Christ Church.

As he emphasised why these stories of people of the African diaspora needed to emerge in the 21st Century, he said: “We need to emerge and memorials are a profound way of creating a moral compass for future generations to understand who they are as human beings. We are ritual creatures. We think we’re not, but we are ritual creatures, and we need sites to celebrate and commemorate our rituals as human beings.”

Sir David is best known for his magnificent work in the African American Museum in Washington, DC, which was designed by him and his firm, and for other work being undertaken in the Middle East, Africa, Europe and America.

While pointing out that the historical link of humankind extended to the Rift Valley, right across the great civilizations of West Africa and those of East Africa and the Mediterranean, he said it spoke also to the “deep need to acknowledge who you are and who you want to say you were to your future generations and to the generations there”.

The renowned architect opined that the Newton Memorial was to him about honouring the extraordinary moment that saw the site never being ploughed, never becoming agricultural, but “staying as a burial ground” because of a phenomenon of geology and geography in that area.  

“It’s a gift to us and one that I’m so proud that Barbados is/has been a steward of – looking after this and now will use this to honour the ancestors that were buried there,’ he declared.

World-renowned British-Ghanaian architect, Sir David Adjaye, speaking at a press conference today to announce the creation of the Barbados Heritage District. (PMO)

He noted that 570 ancestors were buried at the Newton site and said this was the starting point of the project, which visualises these ancestors as totems.  

“Totems that are no longer invisible but totems that will become visible. Totems that are connected to the cosmos because they come/we all come from this soup of a universe that we live in and there are discs of light. If you look at our histories, our ancestors always understood that we connect to the cosmos, and we belong to the land. And this monument is about honouring that.

“The totems connect us to the cosmos and connect us to our desires and futures. And the circle is made from the land. And we searched for the land that connects to the motherland, and Barbados has it in a place that you call Scotland [District]. It’s a beautiful place; this extraordinary laterite red iron oxide earth, which is all over; the sort of beginnings, the cradle of where you know humankind has created civilisations and came from,” Sir David explained.

Alluding to the memorial, he expressed the belief that it would be a ‘circle of commemoration” and “a place of ritual” to honour our ancestors.  

He also expressed hope that it would become a place where Barbados could see the connections to all the different parts of the world. And he stressed: “We will also find this space as a space to remember and to ritualise and to create as a time capsule to the ambitions of this new republic and its future.”