Saturday, 14 December 2019

Circular No 945






Newsletter for alumni of The Abbey School, Mt. St. Benedict, Trinidad and Tobago, W.I.
Caracas, 14 December 2019 No. 945
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Dear Friends,
Instructions on how to operate the Blog spot
Abbey School - Finding an earlier Circular
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idmitch@anguillanet.com
06:03
Hi, Tim,
I just tried opening No 934 and had no difficulty. 
Let me see.
I use Mozilla as my browser.  When I go to the Blog, only No 935 (the most recent) appears on the page on my screen.
So, I know that I shall have to go to Blog Archives in the right-hand column to find No 934 (Ladislao publishes each one on a Saturday, once a week).  
No 935 is dated 5 October.  That means that No 934 was published in the last week in September.  In the right-hand column, I click on September.  All four of the September Circulars open up in a list.  I then select No 934 and it opens.
Hope that works for you.  If not, let me know.
Best,
Don
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From: Tim Mew MHC <tim-mew@bigpond.com> 
Sent: Sunday, 17 November 2019 01:52
Hello Don,
Thanks for this new advice and I have a quick question for you.
I can open 935 but have tried with no luck to do the same for 934, what am I doing wrong?
Cheers Tim.
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American Boys
From:  Nigel P. Boos <nigelboos@eagles-wings.ca>
Dear Elspeth and Richard,
Great idea.
Let's try.
I'm sending this msg to the OB's from the period 1945-1950.
We'll see what the seine hauls in.
All you Old OB's: Richard O'Connor is posing you a question.
Can anyone help to throw some light on the matter for us?
1.         What was the family name of Tom, Dick and Harry, three American boys who studied at the Mount while their dad was stationed at Ft. Reid in Wallerfield? (I have photographs of a Tom Turner, but no mention of a Richard or Harold Turner. There was also another American boy, named Peter Tarr, whose father donated a lot of equipment from the U.S. base in Chaguaramas, as I understand it, after WWII, when the soldiers were returning to the States.)
I would also appreciate if you could answer these two additional questions for me:
2.         Does anyone remember whether Harold La Borde was ever a student at MSB? (Harold and his wife, Kwailan became famous as a result of their circumnavigation of the planet a number of years ago, for which, I believe, he was awarded the Trinity Cross. See:
3.         Does anyone remember whether Leo De Gale was ever a student at the Mount? (He later became Governor General of Grenada, but has since died.) R.I.P.
Nigel P. Boos
EAGLE'S WINGS LTD.,
95 Warwick Ave.,
Ajax, ON L1Z 1L5
CANADA
Ph: (905) 426-8999
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On 1-Oct-09, at 9:02 PM,
Elspeth O'Connor wrote:
Nigel,
I was wondering that now your subscription is so far and wide whether you could ask if anyone knows the names of the three American Boys who were at Mount St. Benedict with Richard in the early years. 
All Richard can remember is that they were called Tom, Dick (Richard) and Harry and their father was at the American Base in Wallerfield
The father took pictures of the College from an aeroplane, which were among the first to be taken and published of the College. 
Now with Facebook, Twitter etc. (none of which I understand or am a member of) you may be able to find out some history about the Mount if you can discover their surnames.  Cheers. 
Elspeth
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In carnival country (in memory of my classmate)
A look at the history
Wayne Brown
Sunday, January 27, 2002
"THE 1990s have seen the eruption of a global identity crisis.
Almost everywhere one looks, people have been asking, 'Who are we?' 'Where do we belong?' and 'Who is not us?'
These questions are central not only to peoples attempting to forge new nation states, as in the former Yugoslavia, but also much more generally...
Identity issues are of course particularly intense in cleft countries that have sizeable groups of people from different civilisations."
(Samuel P Huntingdon: The Clash of Civilisations and the Remaking of World Order)
In his nationalist and socialist heyday in the '70s (national socialist would of course be something quite different),
Michael Manley was fond of drawing an analogy between the nation and a family.
Like most proffered analogies, it was false -- not least because the difference between personal acquaintance and mere shared nationality is definitive -- and it was made, moreover, just at the time when nationalism, after 500 years as the west's ruling 'ism', was beginning to fail.
The world that Samuel P Huntingdon would depict some 25 years later, a world defined by ethnic and cultural solidarities, even where these might divide a given nation into two or more mutually hostile groups or classes -- amid the "cleft countries" of the Caribbean, at any rate, that world had already long dawned.
Those here who watched Rastafarians mob the airport, for example, for the arrival of Haile Selassie back in the '60s, while, even as this is being written, a different class of Jamaicans is quite exciting itself over the imminent arrival of the Queen of England, should have no difficulty recognising its existence in our midst.
It's a mysterious blessing that -- except in isolated cases -- such trenchantly opposed cultural orientations are yet to find expression in violence (perhaps because Huntingdon's prescription, of "two sizeable groups of people from different civilisations", has not been met).
Likewise -- and even more so -- in Trinidad.
In Trinidad, for example, in the 1971 Test series between India and the West Indies, the Indian opener Sunil Gavaskar scored a century.
Nothing particularly noteworthy about that:
Gavaskar was a great batsman.
What was noteworthy, though, was that at that point (and with the West Indies prospects looking increasingly dim) a crowd of Trinidadian Indians rushed onto the field and managed triumphantly to hang a garland of flowers around Gavaskar's neck.
In the mainly Creole-occupied stands, you could have cut the tension with a knife.
And that was fully 30 years before, in the wake of September 11, a prominent British Muslim announced that he was a Muslim first and a Briton second.
This by way of slight but telling background to the current 18-18 stalemate in Trinidad (one whose simplest lesson is that, under the Westminster system, it really is unwise to have an even number of constituencies).
Last month's general elections might have been dismissed in advance by this columnist as "a battle between evil and vacuity" (an assessment neatly echoed by Trinidad Express columnist Donna Yawching, who saw the recent contest as one "between a crook and a fool"), but its outcome has been disastrous – more so because of the absolute lack of moral stature on the part of the three men involved.
The third man, President ANR Robinson, has been perhaps the most culpable, in that in dead-heated situations the constitution gives him the uncontestable right to appoint a prime minister of his choice.
In the current situation that power was essentially arbitrary: there was no politically meaningful basis on which he could possibly choose.
Robinson had a duty, therefore, to go before the country and acknowledge this; to invite (as he did) Messrs Panday and Manning to meet and "work it out" -- but then to warn that, if they failed to do so, he was going to stand in front of the television cameras and spin a coin.
Trinidadians are natural gamblers.
They would have understood that; and they would have understood also both the essential hopelessness, and the fey fairness of it.
Instead, Mr Robinson muttered something about morality (which immediately antagonised Indo-Trinidad), on the express basis of which he appointed as prime minister Mr Manning -- who promptly appointed his own wife a cabinet minister, leaving the president to try to extricate his foot from his mouth.
Beyond that, Mr Manning broke with tradition and appointed nearly twice as many ministers as a Trinidad government normally makes do with -- behaving in effect like someone who had come to office in a riotous landslide, not like someone with no political basis whatsoever to his power.
In the meantime, Mr Panday -- misreading, curiously for someone whose political muse has always been paranoia, the fervour of the president's dislike of him -- had come to all sorts of agreements with Mr Manning, including that he, Panday, would abide by Mr Robinson's choice of prime minister:
this clearly in the complacent belief that he himself was going to be reappointed.
When that didn't happen (well, of course, Baz! You really thought Robinson was going to appoint you?),
Mr Panday promptly disowned all his solemn agreements and began denouncing everybody.
To me, on the phone, such exemplars of Trinidad as I happen to know have since expressed their utter despair.
It seems that a choice between evil and vacuity -- between a crook and a fool -- is really no choice at all, after all.
The situation as it stands is that the new Manning government cannot govern.
It can't appoint a speaker of the House, because for that it would need a majority; and therefore it can't convene Parliament.
Indeed, without a speaker, Parliament cannot nominate a new president (Mr Robinson's tenure is almost up) which means that very soon the members of parliament, of both parties, won't have anyone to stand in front of and take the oath of allegiance.
And that means (as the dour Trinidad bureaucracy has wasted no time in pointing out) that they can't start receiving their salaries.
Which, come to think of it, is probably the one bright note in the whole mess.
Follow the money, as Deep Throat used to tell the Watergate journalists.
It may yet force a compromise upon two thoroughly debased political parties.
What's confusing about all this is Trinidad: Trinidad itself.
Trinidad is a country which prides itself in not believing in anything; in "not taking on" anybody; in "not digging no horrors"; in "not holding strain".
Four times in the past century, Trinidad -- as opposed to famously violent Jamaica -- went berserk and "mashed up the place": with the 1903 Water Riots (in the course of which this columnist's grandfather, who was attorney-general at the time, was hit in the back with a brick, and died soon afterwards); with the 1937 labour riots; with the 1970 army mutiny and Black Power marches; and with the 1990 Muslimeen uprising.
And each time the dominant emotion on the part of the citizenry was shock. How could such a thing happen in carnival country?
So, from Jamaica, I watch now the extraordinary sangfroid of the Trinidad media -- not ignoring the horrific and shameful political debacle in their midst, but trying to keep the country calm, and to give an impression of business as usual -- look, Carnival coming, all yuh check out these costumes!
And, sitting here, I have no way of knowing whether it really is carnival country, nobody caring, nobody giving a damn who rules...
Or whether Trinidad is preparing to shock itself once again
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EDITED by Ladislao Kertesz,  kertesz11@yahoo.com,  if you would like to be in the circular’s mailing list please collaborate with a subscription
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Photos:
12LK4099FBGEV, Glen Evelyn
15LK5296FBIHA, Ian Haynes
18LK4744FBAKAWFE, Avalon Kallo and wife
07WK0010REUNION2007, Bro Rupert and Manuel Prada






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