Virgin Islanders Mark 176th Emancipation Day with Celebrations and Critique

From poetry readings, quelbe performances, conch shell blowing, and the annual “Fort to Fort Walk to Freedom”, the St. Croix community gathered at various events on Wednesday to celebrate the territory’s 176th Emancipation Day anniversary— honoring the day’s history while reflecting on the current conditions of Virgin Islanders.‌

2024-07-05 12:05:04 - VI News Staff

“I want to say happy emancipation to everyone, but the question is: are we emancipated?” asked Karen Dickenson, a local community activist, of the residents gathered at the United Caribbean Association (UCA) “Lionnes/Wombmen Rise” Emancipation event. UCA’s activity, held annually at Buddhoe Park in Frederiskted, also featured storytelling, youth presentations, and community dances, with many of the performers echoing Ms. Dickenson's sentiment. As one poetry performer suggested to the crowd, “176 years and still we can’t see change.”‌

Many community members said that their frustration with what they believe to be a lack of progress in the mobilization of Virgin Islanders over the past 176 years stems from recent alleged cases of government corruption as well as long-standing issues in the territory, such as poor access to health care and education, and the poor quality of both services. “For all that our ancestors done, all the blood that they have shed, today they look down on us and they’re embarrassed cause we stand down as a people and our government continue to do us what they want because we are not emancipated,” Ms. Dickenson declared.

For Ms. Dickenson, the government’s roughly $1 million in funding for 175th anniversary celebrations last year compared to paltry government support for this year's anniversary represents the disingenuous nature of the government. “Last year was such a disservice to the whole celebration. We could have come together and made it bigger. Why we didn't get some funding for this today?” Ms. Dickenson said in an interview with the Consortium following her speech. According to Dickenson, emancipation used to be a “true, big celebration” with student and youth involvement. This year, she said that the turnout, specifically youth participation, was disappointingly low.‌


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