Renowned Barbadian novelist George Lamming dies at 94 – Carib Vibe Radio
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Renowned Barbadian novelist George Lamming dies at 94

Renowned Barbadian novelist George Lamming, a leading writer of the Caribbeanโ€™s colonial experience, died on Saturday, June 4, at 94.

Barbados Prime Minister Mia Mottley said that she had planned to visit the author on his 95th birthday, just four days away.

โ€œWherever George Lamming went, he epitomized that voice and spirit that screamed Barbados and the Caribbean,โ€ she said in a statement. โ€œAnd while he has written several novels and received many accolades, none of his works touches the Barbadian psyche like his first โ€” โ€˜In The Castle of My Skinโ€™, written back in 1953, but which today ought still to be required reading for every Caribbean boy and girl.

โ€œBarbados will miss George Lamming โ€” his voice, his pen, and of course, his signature hairstyle,โ€ Mottley added. โ€œBut I pray that the consciousness of who we are that he preached in all that he wrote will never fade from our thoughts.โ€

Born in Carrington Village, Barbados, on Jun. 8, 1927, Lamming attended Roebuck Boysโ€™ School and then won a scholarship to the historic Combermere School, according to Global Voices, an international, multilingual, primarily volunteer community of writers, translators, academics and human rights activists, headquartered in Amsterdam, The Netherlands.

It said Lammingโ€™s teacher, Frank Collymore, the โ€œBarbadian Man of the Artsโ€ and publisher of the literary journal BIM, mentored him, โ€œand his passion for reading began; he started to write poetry.โ€

Global Voices said Lamming left for Trinidad in 1946, where he was a school teacher for four years at El Collegio de Venezuela in Port-of-Spain, the Trinidad capital.

He then migrated to England, where he worked in a factory for a short time, Global Voices said, adding that, in 1951, he became a broadcaster for the BBC Colonial Service.

Global Voices said Lamming entered academia in 1967 as a writer-in-residence and lecturer at the Creative Arts Centre and Department of Education at the University of the West Indies.

It said he later served as a visiting professor and writer-in-residence at the City University of New York, and as a faculty member and lecturer at the University of Texas at Austin and the University of Pennsylvania.

He was also a distinguished visiting professor at Duke University and a visiting professor of Africana Studies and Literary Arts at Brown University, according to Global Voices.

Throughout his life, it said he also taught or lectured at universities in Tanzania, Denmark and Australia.

โ€œAlthough he claimed to be a โ€˜slow writer,โ€™ Lamming wrote a total of six novels and four non-fiction books,โ€ Global Voices said.

It said Lammingโ€™s novels included โ€œThe Emigrantsโ€ (1954), โ€œOf Age and Innocenceโ€ (1958), โ€œSeason of Adventureโ€ (1960) and โ€œWater with Berriesโ€ (1971).

Included in his non-fiction works was a collection of essays called โ€œThe Pleasures of Exileโ€, which explores how culture, politics and individual identity were shaped by colonialism, Global Voices said.

It said Lamming did not just write books. During the 1960s, he and several other writers collaborated on a radio series entitled โ€œNew World of the Caribbean,โ€ which looked at the regionโ€™s place in the world, Global Voice said.

โ€œAs a teacher and lecturer, his voice was heard, and listened to, across the Caribbean and beyond,โ€ it said.

Mottley said Lamming was โ€œthe quintessential Bajan, born in as traditional a district as you can get โ€” Carrington Village, on the outskirts of Bridgetown.

โ€œAnd his education was as authentically Bajan as one could possibly acquire โ€” Roebuck Boysโ€™ School and Combermereโ€, she added. โ€œAs Bajan as he was, he still distinguished himself as a world scholar.

โ€œOn behalf of the Government and people of Barbados, I extend deepest sympathy to the Lamming family,โ€ continued Mottley, stating that an official funeral will be held at a date to be announced.

The Caribbean Community (CARICOM) on Sunday joined with the people of Barbados in mourning the passing of Lamming.

CARICOM Secretary General Dr. Carla Barnett described Lamming as a poet, novelist, essay writer, orator, lecturer, teacher, editor and tireless activist.

โ€œGeorge Lamming was more than a literary icon,โ€ she said in a statement. โ€œHe was an authentic Caribbean voice.โ€

In conferring the Communityโ€™s highest award, Order of the Caribbean Community (OCC), on Lamming in 2008, his citation noted that CARICOM was honoring โ€œfifty-five years of extraordinary engagement with the responsibility of illuminating Caribbean identities, healing the wounds of erasure and fragmentation, envisioning possibilities, transcending inherited limitations and applauded his intellectual energy, constancy of vision, and an unswerving dedication to the ideals of freedom and sovereignty.โ€

โ€œThose words fully encapsulated his extraordinary contribution to the region he loved unreservedly and to which he dedicated his considerable skill,โ€ Dr. Barnett said. โ€œOur Community is richer for his interventions and poorer for his loss.

โ€œGeorge Lamming has left a treasure trove of works, which remain relevant and reflects the Caribbean condition,โ€ she added. โ€œI extend deepest condolences to the family of Mr. Lamming and the Government and people of Barbados on the death of this true Caribbean icon.โ€

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