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Nation of Islam welcomed home to Jamaica as final planning for Oct. 19 gathering in Caribbean underway
This will also be the first time that the commemoration has been held outside of the United States. Min. Farrakhan will deliver the keynote address from the National Arena in Kingston.
The Million Man March caused many of us to consider the marginalization of young men in Jamaica and the need for unity, self-help and self-determination, Mr. Samuels added.
Those qualities were also espoused by the Honorable Marcus Garvey, one of Jamaica’s national heroes, and having Min. Farrakhan and his followers here will be a historic milestone, he said.
“We are indeed very proud to be given the opportunity to show off our city to this awesome group of religious persons,” said Mr. Samuels.
Kingston is the heartbeat of Jamaica and see itself as the cultural center of the Caribbean and a place of intellectual discourse, Mr. Samuels continued.
“We welcome you to Jamaica, we welcome you to our city,” he said.
Kingston city manager Robert P. Hill, who opened with “Bismillah Ir-rahman, Ir-rahim: In the Name of Allah, the Beneficent, the Merciful,” gave spirited remarks, referring to the Minister as the “holy apostle.”
He offered greetings on behalf of Mayor Angela Brown Burke who met privately with the delegation the previous day.
This universe has conspired to produce this event and it is a transformational event, he said. “I believe on Oct. 19 something will be reset in Jamaica; I believe when the Honorable Minister touches the podium and shares his spirit and knowledge for the upliftment to the people of Jamaica, we will see transformation in its fullest and most enriched form,” he added.
It is time to come together to ensure that Jamaican society is moving in the right direction, he said.
The themes of self-reliance and responsibility are part of the thinking of Kingston and the Minister has a divine message from the Most Honorable Elijah Muhammad, and his teacher, Master Fard Muhammad, Mr. Hill continued. He also shared how he watched all except three or four webcasts of the Minister’s Time and What Must Be Done series online.
Chris Jarrett of the Kingston chapter of the Jamaica Hotel and Tourist Association estimated that $3.7 million could be spent on hotel rooms alone for the October event.
He estimated 2,600 hotel rooms will be occupied in Kingston and plans call for a cultural village to showcase the varied aspects of Jamaican life and tradition.
It is very exciting to have the spiritual sharing, cultural sharing and involvement of the Nation in trying to enrich youth and Black Jamaicans in general, he said.
We will be happy to have Min. Farrakhan and his followers with us, Mr. Jarrett said.
He continued by sharing how the Million Man March came as the Minister was guided to see the need for a counterweight to the negative image of Black males, increased tension with police forces and fratricidal conflict among Black males.
The march resulted in a recommitment to be better husbands, fathers, providers, protectors and community builders, said the son of the Hon. Elijah Muhammad. There was great unity and oneness Oct. 16, 1995 and there was not one arrest in Washington, D.C., he noted.
The world saw a vastly different image of the Black male and a true image that reflected God, he added.
After the march, Black men became more active socially and politically with increased membership in organizations, increased voter registration and increased adoptions, Ishmael Muhammad said.
With escalating crime in Jamaica and the Caribbean, increased violence and greater incarceration, the march message has resonance today in the Caribbean, he said.
Black youth in the region are troubled, hopeless and in despair because elders have failed to prepare a proper future and give direction that will lead young people to fulfill their purpose and great destiny, Ishmael Muhammad said.
There is no better time and no better place for this commemoration than the Caribbean and the event hopes to bring together diverse people and foster interaction between activists, clergy, artists to help decrease poverty, increase literacy, improve education, and strengthen family values, he explained.
A message of hope and healing that allows us to accept our responsibility to change our condition is critical at this make or break time in the Caribbean and the world, he said.
“We as Caribbean people underestimate the impact that this region has had on Black thought and the global struggle against injustice and oppression,” said David Muhammad, the Minister’s representative for the eastern Caribbean and Trinidad.
Citing the contributions of Marcus Garvey, founders of the Pan Africanist Movement, repatriation demands made by former slaves as well as other scholars and writers, David Muhammad pointed to the great minds and works that have come out of the Caribbean.
Min. Farrakhan’s father was born in Jamaica and his mother was born in St. Kitts, he observed.
Min. Farrakhan is sensitive to the Caribbean as a haven of consciousness and wants to spread consciousness throughout the region, said David Muhammad.
Work is underway to broadcast the Oct. 19 message throughout the Caribbean and parts of Central and South America, he said. The message should be historical in content and outreach based on countries touched by this occasion, said David Muhammad.
The Nation of Islam delegation also included Student Minister Hugh Muhammad, who has been facilitating work on the ground; Ademah Muhammad, who has been handling planning for the convention; Final Call editor Richard B. Muhammad, Final Call general manager Fontaine Muhammad, and Final Call Video Supervisor Duane Muhammad; as well as Clive Muhammad, the minister’s representative in Jamaica, local laborers and the Believers in the country.
Dr. Henley Morgan, who works with those who struggle on the margins of Jamaican society, was happy about the prospect of the Minister coming to Jamaica. But he feels a dialogue is needed with the Christian community as a dialogue occurred with the Jewish community on a previous visit by the Minister.
The major Christian leadership is wary of the Muslim movement, while people in the pews are not, he said. It is nothing that cannot be resolved by dialogue, said Dr. Morgan, who was educated in the United States and lives and works in “Trenchtown,” one of Jamaica’s cultural hotbeds and a place that has been plagued by struggle and poverty. He changed plans to host an event with pastors Oct. 19 since the Minister will be delivering a major address the same day.
“There is a common enemy we face globally and locally,” said Dr. Morgan. He was pleased and impressed that the Million Man March commemoration was not controlled by any individual or governmental entity.
Among ordinary Jamaicans, there is a feeling that justice is lacking and that a country democratic and controlled by Blacks on the surface is controlled by Washington through the IMF, said Dr. Morgan.
Dr. Morgan said he was touched by the Minister’s visit to Trenchtown when he came to Jamaica in 2011. There is still a lot of work to be done here perhaps more between classes than the races, he added.
Junior Lincoln has known the Minister since 1977 and previously organized a visit by the Minister to Jamaica. He is a developer and a respected figure in the music industry.
“Every one of his visits have been relevant,” said Mr. Lincoln. The Minister wants to do something in Jamaica as a base but really for the Caribbean, the timing is right, he said. “It is also extremely special because of where we are as a people, especially our young people. Every nation in the world will tell you that the youth are the future of every country and it is so. Yet the youth of our country and especially the Caribbean have not been given the right examples for them to excel.”
Mr. Lincoln, who works to improve conditions in Trenchtown for youngsters, said, “This visit is about young children, young people, direction and it also goes a bit further because it will be taking in the Caribbean, which we have found very hard to unite.”
Countries that fought and killed each other have formed a European Union, while the Caribbean has yet to come together, he noted.
Those two things, getting youth to focus on the positive side of life and helping the Caribbean to unite are what this trip is about, Mr. Lincoln said.