Dear Editor:
Dr. Harold Drayton, the individual who was tasked by then Premier Cheddi Jagan to establish the University of Guyana (UG) in 1963, passed away in the early hours of Sunday morning, March 11, in the United States. He became ill on Friday and was rushed to the hospital where he died. He was was my Biology professor and close friend. On behalf of myself and my family to whom he endeared himself, and his many friends in the now dormant Ontario Chapter of the UG Guild, I extend our heartfelt condolences to his wife Vonna, children Alison and Richard, his grandchildren, and his siblings. We are deeply saddened by his passing.
Harold Drayton was born in Georgetown, Guyana (then British Guiana) in 1929 and grew up with a doting mom and step-father. Of them, in his memoir published late last year under the title An Accidental Life, he writes “together and cooperatively (they) made it possible for me to survive, to grow and develop both physically and intellectually, and gave me my earliest insights into the world, beauteous and hideous, that mankind has made”. The book was launched at the UG through the office of Dr. Barbara Reynolds, Deputy Vice Chancellor, Planning and International Engagements, and supported by a number of organizations. A Toronto launch by the Ontario Guild is scheduled for May 5, 2018. This event will now evolve into a celebration of his life.
He was one of Guyana's most brilliant sons and a Caribbean intellectual who has not received the recognition he so rightly deserved. Both the PNC and the PPP led governments have not seen it fit to recognize him with a national award. For the sake of the historical record, this article repeats some of my previous writings on this outstanding, patriotic Guyanese. Upon learning of his death, a fellow UG alumnus wrote “He was an icon”.
Drayton received his secondary education at Modern High School where one of his classmates was Sir Shridath Ramphal whose father was the founder and Principal of the school, and later, at Queen’s College. In 1948 he won an open scholarship to the University College of the West Indies, Jamaica, now University of the West Indies, but was soon expelled because of his left wing political activism. After a stint of high school teaching in Jamaica, he entered the University of Edinburgh, Scotland where he completed his bachelor’s and doctoral degrees before taking up a lectureship position in Ghana. In December 1962, he heeded Dr. Jagan's call to return home and take on the “university project”.
As Technical Advisor on higher education to the Guyana Government, he worked feverishly and under difficult conditions to transform the government’s vision into reality, thereby creating a national institution which, in 2013, celebrated its 50th anniversary. Starting from scratch, in less than ten months he was able to get the UG operational with classes commencing in October 1963.
As if getting legislation in place, recruiting students, hiring staff, and finding accommodation were not challenges enough, Georgetown was paralyzed by an eighty-day general strike, including a strike of civil servants, from around the middle of April to the beginning of July 1963, with ensuing disturbances and violence. This was the environment in which members of the first batch of students, were interviewed in an old building on Brickdam by a selection panel comprised of Dr. Drayton, Mr Eddie Gilbert, a secondee from the Ministry of Education who became the first registrar of UG, Dr. Gyanchand, a United Nations advisor in the country at the time, and Mr Fred Case, Chief Education Officer of the Ministry of Education.
He was instrumental in establishing a core curriculum of compulsory courses to provide a well-rounded education to students in all faculties. The benefit of courses such as Social Biology, which he taught, and Caribbean Studies were later recognized and promoted by older and more prestigious universities. And his initiatives in the Biology Department such as the training of medical technologists, etc, subsequently evolved into a full Faculty of Health Sciences for the training of health care professionals. Undoubtedly, he was one of the most popular lecturers and one of the very few individuals who lectured to students in all three faculties of the UG at that time.
After leaving UG in 1971, he joined PAHO as a consultant in Human Resources Development, stationed in Barbados. During this time he he worked extensively to improve health education in the region while still maintaining contacts and providing advice to UG and the Ministry of Health. In 1989 he moved to the University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston, Texas, USA, as Director, WHO Collaborating Centre for International Health and Professor of Preventative Medicine where he remained for ten years. Again, he visited Guyana frequently providing advice to the Faculty of Health Sciences and the Ministry of Health, occasionally securing funding for various projects.
He spent his retirement living in the US, however, his heart remained in Guyana. He was very excited when a chapter of the UG Guild was established in Toronto in 1993. In 2002, he contributed the largest chapter in the book University of Guyana – Perspectives on the Early History, published by this chapter. During the more than twenty years of the active life of this chapter, he visited Toronto almost every year to attend the annual dinner and dance and reconnect with his former students who loved him dearly. On those occasions, over dinner and drinks at my home, we would spend many hours chatting about Guyana and the UG. Until just before his passing we kept in contact on a regular basis, spending hours on each call.
Harold Drayton is gone but his legacy will live on. The UG which was derogatively called “Jagan's night school” when it was established, is now a national institution and expanding still.
In 1995, the Ontario Guild established at the UG an annual award in his name for a student who demonstrates the most outstanding leadership during the year.
Harry Hergash, Toronto |
Dear Editor:
The daily letters published in the newspaper continually call on government to ensure they get it right the first time with regard to the emerging oil market. Exxon and the government have both lamented the scrutiny. It is within their right to express their opinions, but the scrutiny must continue and the questions will not stop; public discourse is necessary for the advancement of any civil society. Every person that is privy to information that affects decisions on key issues for the oil and gas sector must be held accountable.
With that said, my question is why is the Minister of State, Joseph Harmon now responsible for the Department of Energy? What difficulties did they experience that led to this decision? And is it reasonable to assume then, if the oil sector was using up so much effort and time, that other extractive sectors have been neglected? While I will not dwell on sheer speculation as to the creation of said department and why it comes under Minister Harmon’s purview, I will say, it would be harder to scrutinize the activities of the Department of Energy if it is being cloaked behind the big green fence.
I recall the cataclysmic announcement of the signing bonus issue and Minister Trotman came under heavy criticism for withholding the information. While he is directly in the line of fire over the non-communication of this, it is wise to remember the President later made a statement indicating he made a decision and that’s that. However the spin doctors want to portray it, it comes down to I’m the boss, I’ll decide what’s best. This stance engenders a breeding ground for corruption and malpractice.
Malcolm X gave a comparison between Gandhi and Martin Luther King Jr and he said “Gandhi was a big dark elephant sitting on a little white mouse…King is a little black mouse sitting on top of a big white elephant.” He sought this explanation to describe the relationship between each man and his opposition and how they succeeded or failed.
Guyana is a small dark mouse, sitting on top of a big white elephant but we don’t have to be. We can be that big dark elephant if we choose to.
But this isn’t about race, this is about our country and nationhood; this government can be successful in transforming our economy; Singapore did it. But it can only be achieved by adhering to the tenets of true democracy and shedding the cloak of arrogance and isolation.
It is wise to remember Lord Acton’s words “absolute power corrupts absolutely.”
Yours faithfully,
Cassandra Persaud via email |