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Some great men and women in later days.

1 - 1011 - 15
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Messenger: I Selahssie i son Sent: 1/30/2006 3:54:41 PM
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Big up Haile Selahssie the Lion of judah,Marcus Garvey,Bob Marley,Charles Edwards Emmanuel,Nelson Mandela,Malcom X,Harriet Tumbman,Annie John,Booker T,Cuffy,Nanny etc. Some much of them fight for our rights. Please add some more great men. Jah bless all those great men. Freedom fighters!


Messenger: White dread Sent: 1/31/2006 2:31:11 AM
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Peter Tosh, Garnett Silk


Messenger: RAS B Sent: 1/31/2006 3:06:52 AM
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HOLY MOSIS I

Yeah big op Chris Hani an' Steven Biko an' Mahatma Ghandhi
seen dem fight fah IanI

Jah arise an' let di wicketman scatta
Fya


Messenger: Empress Nzingha Sent: 1/31/2006 12:46:13 PM
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Huey P. Newton


Messenger: Ark I Sent: 1/31/2006 11:09:51 PM
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Nanny

Nanny of the Maroons lived about 250 years ago. She died in the 1750s. Her ancestors were the Asante people of Africa. They lived in the country now called Ghana. When Nanny lived, most of the African people in Jamaica were slaves. They were brought to Jamaica to work on the sugar plantations.

At the time Jamaica was captured by the English, a number of slaves were set free by the Spanish to prevent them falling into the hands of the English. They were the maroons.

Nanny was not a slave, but she led many Maroons into the hills in Portland. They called the place where they lived Nanny Town. The owners of the plantations wanted to get the slaves back. The colonial forces came into the hills, and Nanny and her people had to fight these soldiers to stay free.

Nanny became the Queen Mother. In Asante Land the Queen Mother was the "Mother of the people". She was the political leader and a religious leader. Nanny was very powerful. Her people thought she could work magic.

The Maroons did not have many guns. They took some from dead soldiers. They stole some, and they traded for some. Mostly, they had to fight without guns. They were very good at living and fighting in the bush. They had to be, in order to survive. They hid in the bush, and they set traps for the colonial forces. They surprised them, and they frightened them. This way of fighting is called Guerilla warfare. While the Maroon men were fighting, the women planted and grew food. Everyone had a job to do. Nanny used an Abeng to call her people in the bush.

An abeng is a cow horn. And the Maroons still use them.

Nanny town was hidden in the hills, but in the end the colonial forces found it. They captured it and kept it for about a year. They built a small fort there. But Nanny took her people further into the hills. Later, they went back to Nanny town. They surprised the soldiers, and they took the town again.

Maroons in eastern and Central Jamaica made peace with the English. Nanny did not want to, but the English persuaded her War-chief Quao to sign a peace-treaty. Nanny was one of the most important fighters for freedom and independence.

In the end, the English let Nanny have land at a place called New Nanny Town, which we call Moore Town. Nanny got this land for her people forever.


Messenger: Ark I Sent: 1/31/2006 11:12:29 PM
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Paul Bogle

Bogle was born before the abolition of slavery, probably between 1815 and 1820 and he lived at Stony Gut in St. Thomas.

Bogle grew up when slavery was ending. The plantation owners did not want the slaves to be free and they did not want them to get land. The people wanted to have land that would give them security and independence. They wanted to grow their own food but the British Government told them to work hard on the planters' sugar estates.

Most people in St. Thomas were small farmers and labourers. Bogle owned about 500 acres of land. He could read and write. He could also vote. Only 106 people in St. Thomas could vote at this time, Bogle was better off than many people.

When the slaves were made free, most of the rulers tried to keep them down. They made the people pay a lot of taxes, and they punished them badly. They did not give them fair trials in court. They did not think freed slaves should get justice or opportunities. Bogle was a friend to the poor people. He wanted to share their problems, and help them so they respected him.

Bogle's neighbour was George William Gordon, a big landowner, and a politician who cared about poor people. Bogle voted for him, and got other people to do so. Gordon was a Baptist, and so was Bogle. In 1864 Gordon made Bogle a deacon in the Baptist church so he became a religious and political leader of the people.

Bogle led a group of people from Stony Gut to Spanish Town to tell the Governor about their problems but people in Stony Gut gave up hoping that the Government would help them.

One day, in 1865, two men from Stony Gut were on trial in the Morant Bay Court House. Bogle and some of his people went to support them. A man called out in the trial and the police tried to arrest him, but Bogle and his men came between them. The man got away. The police went to Stony Gut to arrest Bogle. But the people did not let them. They fought the police and sent them back to Morant Bay.

Then Bogle and his people marched to Morant Bay. They went to the Courthouse where a council meeting was going on. Armed policemen and soldiers were on guard. A fight broke out and the guards fired. About 20 of Bogle's people were killed or hurt. The others drove the guards back into the Courthouse and set fire to the building then killed people who tried to run away.

Bogle and his people went back to Stony Gut. The Government sent troops into Portland and St. Thomas to stop people rebelling against the Government. The troops shot and whipped many people. They burnt 1,000 houses. Bogle's followers killed a few people and burnt some estates but they could not really fight, because the soldiers were well trained and they had lots of weapons.

The troops destroyed Stony Gut, and Bogle's chapel. Bogle was captured and taken to Morant Bay where he was put on trial. Then he was hanged at the Court House. Four hundred and thirty-eight other people were also executed.

The Morant Bay Rebellion of 1865 made the Government listen to the people. It forced the Government to try to make life better for them by setting up fair courts, making better roads and providing better education and better medical services. So Bogle did not die for nothing.

Bogle is a national hero because he did his best to help the people of our country. He died for what he believed was right.


Messenger: Ark I Sent: 1/31/2006 11:14:24 PM
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George William Gordon

Born to a slave mother and a planter father who was attorney to several sugar estates in Jamaica, George William Gordon was self-educated and became a landowner in St. Thomas.

In the face of attempts to crush the spirit of the freed people of Jamaica and again reduce them to slavery, Gordon entered politics. He faced severe odds as the people whose interests he sought to serve did not qualify to vote.

He subdivided his own lands, selling farm lots to the people as cheaply as possible, and organised a marketing system through which they could sell their produce at fair prices.

Gordon urged the people to protest against and to resist the oppressive and unjust conditions under which they were forced to live.

Gordon was arrested and charged for complicity in what is now called the Morant Bay Rebellion in 1865. He was illegally tried by court martial and, inspite of a lack of evidence, convicted and sentenced to death. He was executed on October 23, 1865.


Messenger: Eleazar Sent: 3/31/2010 10:17:21 PM
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Give Thanks for these articles on Nanny, Paul Bogle, and George William Gordon, its nice to Recall Great Men and Women fighting for their Rights.



Messenger: Ark I Sent: 4/1/2010 12:06:44 AM
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Give thanks for bringing this forward. It is nice to remember them.




Messenger: GKnow Sent: 4/1/2010 2:50:17 PM
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Elmer "Geronimo" Pratt


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