Latest update April 16th, 2025 7:21 AM
Sep 30, 2017 Letters
Dear Editor,
Sugar cultivation was first introduced in Guyana around 1630’s when the Dutch ruled. By the second half of the 17th century, it had rapidly expanded and over three and a half centuries, sugar played an important if not the most important role in our country’s economy. Overtime, it became the largest single employment sector in Guyana. History has recorded that Guyana’s economy, up until the 1880’s, was based completely on the production of sugarcane and have remained a significant part of the economy until a short while ago.
The cultivation of sugar in Guyana commenced between the 1630 and 1658 under the Dutch rule. The Africans arrived here in the 1700’s. Hence it would have been the Amerindians and later the lower class of Europeans who would have worked on these plantations. After the abolition of slavery in1834, labour was sought by way of the immigration system with the arrival of the Portuguese and later from the East Indians who arrived in 1838 and worked under the system of Indentureship. The Chinese arrived in 1853 after the suspension of the Indian Immigration System.
Guyana’s unique ethnic composition is one that we brag about. Hence it is noteworthy that our country’s first official product saw the participation of every ethnic group. All six races played a pivotal role in the establishment, cultivation, expansion and sustenance of Guyana’s sugar industry over the centuries. Three hundred and fifty-nine years later, the industry has acquired the track record of positive growth and unparallel contribution to the economy with a decline only on two occasions, the first being in the 1980’s with a revival after 1992 and again in 2005 after the flood. However, recent events have revealed that the Government is somewhat unaware of these facts or they are vehemently bent on throwing out the baby with the bath water.
On the attainment of Independence, sugar being one of the two main agricultural industries in Guyana, was selected and is depicted on our Coat-of-Arms, one of our country’s symbols of nationhood. In like manner, the green on the Golden Arrow Head symbolises agriculture of which sugar is a part. Social Studies teach us from an early age that sugar is one of the five natural resources of Guyana and then there is the local expression that “sugar is king.”
What we have not been taught is that because of the blood, sweat, tears and suffering of our foreparents, sugar by way of its contribution to our economy for three hundred and fifty-nine years “Has made us free.” Yet, today as we witness and experience the rapid decline of our country’s economy, there are those who are unashamedly refusing to recognise the first official product and the oldest and largest single economic sector in Guyana.
The government talk of “Greening the economy” but it is hell bent on discarding the industry that can be a major contributor to this initiative by way of by products,which are used in the production of food, beverages, confectionery, medicines, paper and ethanol gas. The government complains of having to bail out the sugar industry in a manner that makes it seem as a burden on the economy, yet it willing to provide subsidy to other areas!
Red Plastic Bag in his calypso “Sugar Made Us Free” urged that “we need to stop and consider the consequences that we will suffer later.” These can be lifelong and detrimental not only to one sector of society but to so many others; directly and indirectly. The closure of the industry will have a ripple effect on individuals and the economy. Bias and visionless thinking will result in workers being placed on the breadline and the disruption of family and community life. When the government closes the industry, it is more than likely that we will now have to import sugar not only for domestic use but also for use in production. Isn’t that being penny wise and pound foolish? The toxic attitude, of the supposed to be caring government, reeks of blatant discrimination and no concern for the welfare of the sugar workers. What sins have the workers, in this aged old industry, committed?
Can it be that they are being made to suffer unduly based on the premise that the work force is made largely of Indo-Guyanese, and that they are ardent supporters of the PPP, that they are represented by the Unions GAWU and NAACIE which are air marked as affiliates of the PPP or that they were the first sector that was organised by the late Dr. Cheddi Jagan, Founder of the PPP? GAWU by way of its membership which comes mainly from the sugar industry is the largest individual union and by way of its affiliation make FITUG the largest umbrella trade union representative in Guyana currently. Can this be an attempt to destabilise the organisation by way of reducing its membership via the closure of the estates?
Gillian Burton Persaud, M.P.
Comments are closed.
Apr 16, 2025
2025 CWI Rising Stars Regional Under-15 Championship Round 1 Guyana vs. Trinidad and Tobago Kaieteur Sports- Captain Richard Ramdehol crafted a match-winning half-century to lift Guyana past...Peeping Tom… Kaieteur News- Democracy, as we know it, is a kind of ménage à trois — the elected, the appointed,... more
Freedom of speech is our core value at Kaieteur News. If the letter/e-mail you sent was not published, and you believe that its contents were not libellous, let us know, please contact us by phone or email.
Feel free to send us your comments and/or criticisms.
Contact: 624-6456; 225-8452; 225-8458; 225-8463; 225-8465; 225-8473 or 225-8491.
Or by Email: glennlall2000@gmail.com / kaieteurnews@yahoo.com
I said it before and I will say it again, this government will cry blood for closing the sugar industry.
“The cultivation of sugar in Guyana commenced between the 1630 and 1658
under the Dutch rule. The Africans arrived here in the 1700’s. Hence it
would have been the Amerindians and later the lower class of Europeans
who would have worked on these plantations.”
For someone of African descent, this deliberate attempt to minimize the African contribution to the development of the sugar industry is revolting and nauseating. Go read Walter Rodney’s History of the Guyanese Working People 1881-1905. This is after Abolition and Emancipation but he did give a description of life in the development of the coast for sugar production. Not many Amerindians live on the coast and there is no evidence of sugar plantations in the interior where they now live. In addition,if those Amerindians and poor Europeans were so good there would have been no need for the enslavement of Africans. You are a revisionist hell bent on keeping a job. Sugar is dead and it’s time to stop subsidizing this industry. Sell Skeldon.