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Books by Jan
Carew
Green
Winter (1965) /
The Third Gift
(1981) /
Children of
the Sun (1980) /
Fulcrums of Change
(1988) /
Ghosts in Our Blood: With Malcolm
X in Africa, England and the Caribbean (1994) /
Rape of Paradise (2006)
The Guyanese Wanderer: Stories (2007) /
Black Midas
(2009)
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Jan
Carew
Mission Within the Mission
By Eusi Kwayana The first 2002 edition of
Race
and Class, a "London Journal of Black and Third World
Liberation" (Volume 43 Number 3) saw fit to devote itself
wholly to the celebration of the activity and the being of Jan
Carew, whose 80th. birthday, 24th. September 2000 is still being
observed. He is so well known in so many countries of the world
that some were late for the party.
Both the man himself and the special
publication of Race and Class deserve all the attention
possible. That is the aim of this article. After a review of
Race
and Class (Volume 43 Number 3), the article will leave aside
its material, which readers may obtain from any worthwhile
bookstore, and offer a unique perspective of this remarkable
individual.
The special issue is fittingly titled "The Gentle
Revolutionary: Essays in Honor of Jan Carew". It includes
essays by notable scholars. Frank Birbalsingh, who explores
'Race, Colour and class in
Black Midas an early Carew
novel set in his homeland, Guyana. There is A. Sivanandan's
"Jan Carew, Renaissance Man," which is closer to a
definition of the person and his thought. My favourite essay is
"Explorations into the 'Feminism' of Jan Carew" by Joy
Gleason Carew, his present wife, who reveals not only his
salutation of matriarchy, but the extent to which he has gone to
create in his plays and other works women who, whether in interpersonal, private, domestic sphere or in social
relations blazed the trail.
Clinton Cox reminds the failing memories of
Carew's weighty contribution to the revelation of the true
genocidal role of
Cristobal Colon, for English speakers,
Christopher Columbus; that Carew is far and away the
outstanding Caribbean artist and activist to put Caribbean and
western hemisphere history on its feet, shaking it roughly by
the shoulders out of the drunken stupor of Euro-coated
history, by his explanation of the critical and disastrous
role of Columbus, a subject which easily raises the adrenalin of
the gentle revolutionary.
Jan Carew's interest in cultures, as they
have developed, is not enforced by decades-old state programs of
multiculturalism. But his own inborn understanding of his
origins and of the society which cradled him. He formally
embraced, before it became the fashion, his country's and the
world's marginalized cultures without discrimination, though
distinguishing those ugly behaviors, seeking cover in the
culture, from the culture itself.
Race
and Class (Volume
43 Number 3) also contains poetic tributes from
Claire Carew and
Sterling Plumpp, and in prose from some of our most sensitive
contemporaries in various climates.
I had declined the honour of writing for this
issue on the ground that, living in Guyana as I do, I was
not up to date with Dr. Carew's works over the years,
only stumbling across one or two as the years rolled on.
I felt unequal to the task. Now that I have read
Race
and Class (Volume 43 Number 3), "The Gentle
Revolutionary," I am most excited by the excerpts of his
plays and their whole amazing scheme, conception and setting.
These plays broke the natural limits of human empathy and
imagination. His resurrection of
Thaddeus Stevens, another
figure of my curiosity, and his spouse is fascinating and
shows Carew's genuine closeness to all underdogs, regardless of
breed.
I knew Jan Carew when we were both young, my
year of birth being 1925, in another Guyana plantation. He was
then an urban city dweller and he had the strange habit of
cycling twelve lonely, uncomfortable miles on Friday nights to
deliver a series of talks to the Buxton Discussion Circle. This
was in the late forties, very likely in 1949 when, according to
his odyssey, as given in "The Gentle Revolutionary."
He was in his native Guyana.
His study of communities is holistic. That is
why he must be credited with reviving knowledge of the magic of
the grain amaranth and with launching a campaign inter-linked
comfortably with his literary and historical productions which
has brought amaranth to the notice of nutrition-conscious
community. And a cross section of consumers. He really wanted to
see amaranth cultivated by the indigenous and coastal
populations of his native Guyana, as an economic crop.
His archeological curiosity of the life of
Native Americans elsewhere in the hemisphere led him to the
vital knowledge of a grain, which flourished during the ancient
American civilizations. He wanted to see this grain
officially promoted in Caribbean countries—Guyana and every
country with under-developed, one-crop agriculture. I am sure
that he still cherishes that dream which I also share. Jan has
lived his own vision. He has served his visitors amaranth bread
and given it to his friends. Amaranth for him was a factor in
the cultural reconstruction of the Americas.
These are only some of his dimensions. A
glance at his printed odyssey shows his after-school youth
spent in a mood of expansion and motion, in teaching, serving in
the military in the second world war, writing, working at the
Customs as public servant in Trinidad and Tobago, and student at
Howard University and then at Western University,
like an artistic jack of all, but novice at none. He was active
in a theatre group with Lawrence Olivier the British
Shakespearean actor and has produced and acted in many
countries.
For many years he and
Dr. O. R. Dathorne
and others provided the leadership for the Association of
Caribbean Studies, which gathered annually somewhere in the Caribbean,
assembling many from various places. In addition, to what the
scholars have written there is more to be said about this
enduring personification of thought and action. One of his
deep concerns is his environmental intelligence.
He was an environmentalist long before it
become fashionable. In the Guyana Law Books there is an Act with
the following title, "An Act to provide for the sustainable
management and utilisation of approximately 360,000 hectares
of Guyana tropical Rain Forest dedicated by the government of
Guyana as the Programme Site for the purposes of research by the
Iwokrama International a Centre to develop, demonstrate, and
make available to Guyana and the International Community
systems, methods, and techniques for the sustainable
management and utilisation of the multiple resources of the
Tropical forest and the conservation of biological diversity and
for matters incidental thereto."
Almost a million acres, offered by the
Executive in Guyana from the people's endowments for the future
of the planet! This law in the statue books of his native Guyana
is witness to Jan Carew's aspirations for Guyana, his national
spirit and the fact that he has had practical impact on the
environmental policy.
He made this recommendation to the PNC
President of Guyana,
Mr. Desmond Hoyte recommending an
international involvement for a million acres of forest
and in Guyana. He was a supporter of the PPP, but gave the idea
to the PNC which was in office. Mr. Hoyte at once made the offer
to a Commonwealth conference, no doubt his first opportunity.
The unique offer from a sovereign country was
readily accepted. Carew was disappointed that it had been
offered to the Commonwealth and not to the United Nations.
Jan Carew also has an unequalled curiosity about the world's
peoples and especially of those of that world which endured and
still endures centuries of suppression after the invasion of
Columbus. For to him as well as to the historian
Basil Davidson,
it was Columbus who wielded the double-edged sword of medieval
genocide on the two continents facing each other across the Atlantic,
the Americas, and Africa, with extensions to Asia. Faced with
the whole complex outcome of an accomplished, multi-faceted
genocide, Carew seems early to have made the resolve to make his
jihad the unearthing and revealing of the hidden strengths,
hidden genius, and forgotten accomplishments of these
magnificent peoples whom history had all but written off.
Carew lent his talents to the effort of the
Nkrumah government to globalise the African revolution through
communication with the literate world outside, absorbing the
finest elements of the people's rich culture. His work on
Malcolm and his dramatisation of the rape of enslaved Africans
in the USA viewed through the windows of the civil war and its
complexities drew him typically to Thaddeus Stevens, a white
legislator whose empathy with the emancipated was remarkable.
Carew, I recall, earned early the reputation
of an adventurer—here today, gone tomorrow, seeking out
strange things among peoples he did not know and venturing into unkown seas. I learned from senior thesis
(unpublished) by Iyabao Kwayana of the Trickster in
Literature and how Carew's analysis of
Tar Baby, along with
Ivan Van
Sertima's showed the continuity of Africa in the West,
showing the force of mythology and the silent, elemental power
of the folk in the composition and cultivation of a people's
culture, in fact, in being the people's culture. She represents
him as arguing, "Tar-Baby is an archetypal symbol of the
oppressed black and indestructible, endowed with the strength
and powers of resistance of both the male and the female. Its
tormentors were themselves worn out raining blows on its
head and in the end the aggressor becomes the victim."
Taking the road not trodden, his interest in
Malcolm X and Carew's own family-bred matriarchy led him
to a search for Malcolm's mother, Ms. Little, who, he was
delighted to find, was a West Indian. This quest for the Mother
always gives validity to the historical character. He seemed to
have met Malcolm X in London in 1965 and then soon after to have
gone to Ghana. Malcolm had visited Ghana not long before
and had met Maya Angelo there along with
Ras Makonen of Guyana,
Nana Kobina Nketsia, a custodian of Akan culture,
Kofi Badu of Ghanian
Times, the late
Nevlle Dawes of Jamaica and his
Ghanaian
wife, Cho Cho and Kofi Baacha of the Spark and others.
At the time
Kofi Awoonor was a rather
young man known as a poet and a film producer. The tension, some
would say dialectic, between the USA and Africa is not
easily understood from one shore. The civil rights movement in
the USA and the African decolonisation movement mutually
reinforced each other. No one visiting African countries
then, any of them, could miss this interaction and
interdependence. Every statement made by
Malcolm X,
Martin
Luther King,
Stokely Carmichael and other leaders was
headline news in the newspapers of that continent. The
hard-pressed African leaders not only instinctively supported
the struggle of the down-pressed in the USA, but they perhaps
saw news of it as welcome diversion for the political energies
of their own populations.
The remarkable thing about Jan Carew, however, is his
ideological self reliance. He was perhaps the most eminent
Caribbean activist of the left community of change to emancipate
himself and his line of thought from the apron strings of an
invasive state, the
USSR. Thus he challenged the
USSR's monopoly
of revolutionary theory. And its tutelage of the so-called
Third
World.
As a young writer and dynamic theatre
personality Carew would have had the promise of ready made
promotion and prestige in the soviet half of the world and in a
large part of the rest of the world. He paid the
price and was the subject of vilification from the left in the
Caribbean. The price was heavy but he preserved himself and his
tradition as valuable resources for freedom of the down pressed.
He had gone to the promising new civilization, which had him as
guest of the Writers Union. Moscow was the spiritual home of
millions outside of the
USSR.
Like
[George] Padmore before him, like
C.L.R. James who
had not visited
USSR, Jan Carew found some dissonance and wrote
critically of the directions,
Moscow Is Not My Mecca.
He had disappointed many uncritical admirers of the Soviet
system, such as the PPP in Guyana, but he bore it
heroically. Carew's difficulty with Moscow was not its
official commitment to socialism, but rather its missing
the mark. His problem to be sure was not that of deviation, of
which he was accused.
This is what he said about it to Malcolm X in
1965. In an answer to Malcolm's question [Read
Ghosts in Our Blood.], Carew explained his own socialism as "a humane
and resilient socialism that is sensitive to the rhythms of life
and to all human needs—material, social, psychological
spiritual, collective, and individual. Above all it must be a
patient and tolerant socialism. 'But that is more
socialism as a religion than socialism as a political ideology',
derisory voices shout at me, and I reply, 'If it is, then
so let it be!' Dostoyevsky voicing one of his prophetic insights,
once said that should the Russian masses embrace communism, it
would succeed only if it turned into religion."
The Russian masses did embrace communism, for
a moment in history, but when religion was brutally suppressed
and a parasitic bureaucracy with a lamentable absence of
imagination tried to foist its own gods, saints and devils; push
its own gods saints and devils only to that society for three
quarters of a century, it collapsed. This collapse
brings another Dostoyevskian adage to mind: If God does
not exist then it becomes a carnival of devils."
Perhaps his singular effectiveness as teacher, activist,
revolutionary, political worker, adviser, dramatist, speaker,
researcher, explainer, came from the deep respect he accorded
every human culture in its sane manifestations. Perhaps this
respect sprang of his central rooting in culture. He knew that
when the culture of a movement is imperiled the movement is
imperiled.
His story reads at this time like an enjoyable romance
but Jan Carew has known the hardship of the money-less
condition, of poverty and confinement, hunger. A free man, he
did not free himself of obligations A modern mariner he had to
tell his story. Like his story was one of the unity of life. He
would carry out his obligation as cultural evangelist in a poem,
or a play or a pamphlet on a bean or grain, a grain good for
human nutrition.
His marriage with novelist and thinker, Sylvia Winter Carew of
Jamaica, was in addition a marriage of literature and
philosophy. They lived a productive union. In
Ghosts in Our Blood, he wrote of his marriage to a European woman. His
current marriage with Joy Gleason Carew, a linguist and Russian
specialist, also
had its intellectual ingredients, apart from the physical or
emotional. They have a daughter Shantoba,
and many joint and individual productions of the imagination.
Like the late
Andrew Salkey and the late
Walter Rodney,
historian and revolutionary, he felt a compulsion to speak
to children and help them out of the Caribbean rat race of which
Bob Marley so eloquently warns.
The work on Malcolm X is a "return to
source." Again as in his earlier works he explores the
strength and dignity of his own Caribbean people. He finds the
genius of Malcolm X, the amazing phenomenon, in his mother's
psyche and his mother's blood and he is delighted because that
is as it should be. To me his most influential political
works are
Grenada: The Hour Will Strike Again
and
Fulcrums of Change. For the composite diaspora which
is close to his work and relies on them for cultural
revelations through history, this work which helped
prepare this hemisphere for the self-redeeming assault on
the cult of Columbus, as the fifth centenary of his
invasion, 1992, loomed. By the time it came the hemisphere had
acquired many of the psychological and scholarly
antidotes to one of the most powerful myths of the world.
Thus
Fulcrums of Change opens with a chapter,
"Columbus and the origins of racism in the Caribbean."
Grenada: The Hour Will Strike Again came two
years after the Reagan invasion of Grenada in the wake of the
implosion of the short lived evolution there. To heal the trauma
of the masses of the people, Carew unearthed and revealed
sources of independence in the country itself. It went
back to and beyond the struggles of the rebellious African
captives, but to the epic resistance of the island's
indigenous population. A few impressions remain with me.
One is the guerilla warfare waged by the African captives
inspired by Fedon. Brightest is the Carib remnant which,
following their versatile hero Kaierouanne, and
rather than suffer defeat the hands the overwhelming force of
Spaniards, leaped from a cliff into the more congenial ocean,
the water the salty primordial matter.
Many Caribbean writers and in English thinkers have
overcome the undignified foster mothering of their
mother-deprived subjected populations and have sparked stream of
thought and consciousness in the world's thinking. Carew stands
out as the one who restlessly fought in the English
language to restore the personality of ancient American
civilisations and their descendants. Grenada also left a
picture of the communications network which the indigenous
people enjoyed even after Columbus, of their long boat journeys,
their conferences, and federations in the interest of the
sovereignty.
A tireless communicator, motivator, and teacher he has
a long bill of indictment before the judgment seat of
imperialism. Some charges will read: subverting innocent minds
and immunising them against duping and self depreciation,
preaching the damnable doctrine of human dignity and the
entitlement of all. My senior of a few slight years pursues his
mission. At eighteen he was precocious. At eighty he remains
innovative.
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Jan
Rynveld Carew, Emeritus Professor Northwestern University,
was born in Agricola-Rome, Guyana, South America on September 24,
1920. Novelist, poet, playwright, educator, Carew describes
himself as "an inveterate wanderer for whom travel is like
the breath of life." In addition to his education at Howard
and Western Reserve Universities in the United States, he also
studied at the Charles University in Prague, Czechoslovakia and
the Sorbonne in France.
He is a founder of the field of Pan- African Studies. Jan Carew has served as lecturer, professor
or program director at Princeton, Rutgers, George Mason,
Hampshire, Lincoln and London Universities. |
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Writer, artist, and educator, Jan Carew moved to Louisville
in Fall 2000 as a Visiting Scholar-in-Residence with the Pan-African
Studies Department. An authority on fields ranging from Third
World studies to Caribbean literature to race relations, he has
also served as an advisor to the heads of state of numerous
nations on the African continent and in the Caribbean.
A founder of the field of Pan- African Studies, Carew entered
academia after living for years in Britain as a writer, and in
an Emeritus Professors of African-American and Third World
Studies at Northwestern University. Among the many universities
that. He is a permanent advisor to the University of Namibia in
Windhoek, Namibia and to the St. Petersburg University of the
Pedagodical Arts in St. Petersburg, Russia.
He has been a major contributor to the Journal of African
Civilizations and Race and Class. He is the
author of
Grenada: The Hour Will Strike Again (1985),
Fulcrums of Change
(1988), and
Ghosts in Our Blood: With Malcolm
X in Africa, England and the Caribbean (1994). His
essays include: "Estevanico: The African Explorer,"
"Columbus and the Origins of Racism in the Americas,"
and "Moorish Culture-Bringers: Bearers of
Enlightenment."
Jan Carew is also the author of
Black Midas (1958),
The Wild Coast(1958), The Last Barbarian (1962),
Green
Winter (1965),
The Third Gift (1981),
Children of
the Sun (1980), Sea Drums in My Blood (1981),
and
Rape of Paradise (1984).
He has resided in Mexico, England, France, Spain, Ghana,
Canada and United States. The men and women that he has
interacted with include W.E.B. Du Bois, Paul Robeson, Langston
Hughes, Malcolm X, Kwame Nkrumah, Shirley Graham Du Bois, Maurice
Bishop, Cheikh Anta Diop, Edward Scobie, John Henrik Clarke,
Tsegaye Medhin Gabre, Sterling D. Plumpp and Ivan Van Sertima.
They all form a veritable pantheon of illustrious African
scholars and activists. |
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Jan Rynveld Carew (born 24 September 1920 in Agricola,
Guyana) is a novelist, playwright, poet and educator. His
works, diverse in their forms and multifaceted, makes of Jan
Carew an important intellectual of the Caribbean world. His
poetry and his first two novels,
Black Midas
and
The Wild Coast, were significant landmarks of the West
Indian literature then attempting through writing to cope with
its colonial past and assert its wish for autonomy. Carew also
played an important part within the Black movement gaining
strength in England and North America, publishing reviews and
newspapers, producing programs and plays for the radio and the
television. His scholarly research drove him to question
traditional historiographies and firstly the prevailing
historical models of the conquest of America. The way he
reframed Christopher Columbus as an historical character outside
his mythical hagiography became a necessary path in his mind to
build anew the Caribbean world on sounder foundations.—Wikipedia
* *
* * * The writer, Eusi Kwayana,
78, is a Guyanese who has lived in Guyana all his life except in
the last year (2002-2003). He has been active in the political
and cultural life of Guyana since the 1940s. He was once a
government minister. That was in the first People's Progressive
Party administration of 1953. He was a
lifelong teacher . He was one of the founders of the
African Society for Racal Equality (ASRE) and then of
ASCRIA (African Society for Cultural Relations With Independent
Africa ).
He spent four years as a
member of the People's National Congress and in 1974
joined the Working People's Alliance. He and his wife;
Tchaiko, of Georgia, are blessed with four offspring.
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Jan Carew
and Edward Scobie—The Columbian Era /
Jan
Carew and Edward Scobie—The Columbian Era 3
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Malcolm X
A Life of Reinvention
By
Manning Marable
Years
in the making-the definitive biography of
the legendary black activist.
Of the great figure in twentieth-century
American history perhaps none is more
complex and controversial than Malcolm X.
Constantly rewriting his own story, he
became a criminal, a minister, a leader, and
an icon, all before being felled by
assassins' bullets at age thirty-nine.
Through his tireless work and countless
speeches he empowered hundreds of thousands
of black Americans to create better lives
and stronger communities while establishing
the template for the self-actualized,
independent African American man. In death
he became a broad symbol of both resistance
and reconciliation for millions around the
world. |
Manning Marable's
new biography of Malcolm is a stunning achievement.
Filled with new information and shocking revelations
that go beyond the Autobiography, Malcolm X unfolds a
sweeping story of race and class in America, from the
rise of Marcus Garvey and the Ku Klux Klan to the
struggles of the civil rights movement in the fifties
and sixties.
Reaching into
Malcolm's troubled youth, it traces a path from his
parents' activism through his own engagement with the
Nation of Islam, charting his astronomical rise in the
world of Black Nationalism and culminating in the
never-before-told true story of his assassination.
Malcolm X will stand as the definitive work on one of
the most singular forces for social change, capturing
with revelatory clarity a man who constantly strove, in
the great American tradition, to remake himself anew.
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Ghosts in Our Blood
With Malcolm X in Africa, England, and the Caribbean
By Jan R.
Carew
Carew, an
activist, scholar, and journalist, met Malcolm X
during his last trip abroad only a few weeks before
he was killed in 1965. It made such an impression on
Carew that he felt compelled to search out Malcolm's
family and friends in order to flesh out the family
history. He interviewed Wilfred (Malcolm's older
brother) and a Grenadian friend of Malcolm's mother
named Tanta Bess. Comparing his family's experiences
with that of Malcolm X, he gives the most complete
picture yet of Malcolm's mother. Carew also offers a
tantalizing glimpse of Malcolm X's transforming
himself into El-Hajj Malik El-Shabazz, a man less
blinded by his own racial prejudices yet as
committed to the betterment of his race as ever.
Just before his death, Malcolm X became convinced
that a U.S. agency was involved with those trying to
kill him, and Carew here reveals the evidence
Malcolm X gave him to support these beliefs. The
mystery of Malcolm's death remains unresolved, and
we are once again filled with regret that he was cut
down before he could fulfill the promise of his
later days. While this book will not replace The
Autobiography of Malcolm X (LJ 1/1/66), it is an
important supplement. All libraries that own the
autobiography should also purchase this one.—Library
Journal |
 |
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The Wild Coast
By Jan Carew
In this
coming-of-age novel, a young boy learns firsthand
about the contradictions that bedevil the people of
Guyana, including the legacy of slavery, the clash
of cultural traditions, and the inhospitable
terrain. Hector Bradshaw, a sickly child living in
Georgetown, finds his life turned upside down when
his family decides he would be better off living in
the country and sends him away to the remote village
of Tarlogie. Once settled there with his kind but
old-fashioned guardian, Sister Smart, Hector
struggles to make sense of his new community. As
time goes by, he is given a dry colonial education,
is puzzled by his guardian’s fondness for moral
precepts, and is fascinated by the harsh African
vision of the old hunter Doorne. Above all, the boy
struggles to feel at home in a world where nature—so
beautiful and so tremendously dangerous—dominates
the people’s lives.—Peepal Tree
Press
Jan Carew is a native of Guyana who has lived all
over the world. During the time he taught at
Northwestern and Princeton universities in the
1960s, he was an important force in creating African
American studies departments in colleges across the
United States. He is the author of
The Last Barbarian,
Moscow Is Not My Mecca, and
The Wild Coast, as well as children’s
books, plays, and a collection of poetry. |
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updated 9 February 2009 |