The Gleaner

PM urges greater appreciation of monuments, civic structures

Bryan Miller/gleaner Writer

MISPLACED VALUE has been cited by Prime Minister Andrew Holness as the reason why Jamaicans are not generally appreciative of improvements to civic infrastructure such as monuments.

Holness made the observation while delivering last Friday’s keynote address at the official ceremony where he unveiled a life-sized statue of Sir Alexander Bustamante, national hero and the first prime minister of independent Jamaica, accompanied by two storyboards.

“There is a sense in Jamaica that if you spend resources on improving infrastructure such as a monument, improving civic buildings, building a new Parliament building, for example, there is a sense that it is a waste of money,” he said on the grounds of the parish library in Hanover, the parish of Bustamante’s birth.

“We wrestle with this in our country because there is a lack of understanding in the public discourse about what the symbols of our civil bureaucracy and our civil administration mean and what the monuments of our history mean,” he added. “And that speaks to how we see our nation, our government, and how we view our history, how important it is.”

The prime minister argued that there was a disconnect between the people and state institutions, which leads to a devaluation of history.

“The irony, of course, is that the more we devalue our history, we devalue our monuments, we devalue our civil bureaucracy and our administration, it is the less likely they will perform to the standards that you want them to,” Holness stated.

Commissioned and financed by the Tourism Product Development Company Ltd (TPDCO), under its ‘Spruce Up Jamaica’ campaign, the statue celebrates Sir Alexander Bustamante’s contribution to nation-building. The $3-million statue and accompanying storyboards were designed and sculpted by Scheed Cole, director of Sculptural Elements and Construction 001 Limited, which is a creative artistic company with more than 20 years of experience in the provision of sculptural solutions for attractions.

Hanover Western Member of Parliament Tamika Davis said that the parish was proud of Sir Alexander not only because of his many achievements, but “more importantly because of the fact that he hails from a small, rural community called Blenheim”.

NEWS

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2022-08-15T07:00:00.0000000Z

2022-08-15T07:00:00.0000000Z

https://thegleaner.pressreader.com/article/281543704708181

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