Review Article: GROWING UP IN 1920s GUIANA

 

 

                  In "Potaro Dreams" (2015), presented as the first installment of his 
                  memoirs, Guyanese author Jan Carew describes what it felt like growing
                  up in the colony of British Guiana. The 1920s would seem to be a
                  particularly fertile period for Guianese authors. The village of Agricola
                  where Carew started life was also the birthplace of Roy Heath (b. 1926)
                  who wrote with great affection about his boy to manhood years in
                  "Shadows Round The Moon" (1990)
 

                  Anyone who lived in that swath of landscape from Eccles to Diamond
                   ̶  back in the time of the old cane fields, the narrow public road running
                  cross country  ̶  might readily recall days of near-idyllic boyhood;
                  making Demerara as important as the county of Berbice which is often
                  hailed as the "spiritual" birthplace of several established writers; and,
                  you could add, beginner politics.
 

                  Roy Heath's memoirs were written       _________________________
                  during the firm, retiring years of
                  the author's life. Carew appears to              POTARO DREAMS
                  to have put off writing his for the                          by
                  longest while. Finally  ̶  at age 87,
                  and urged on by "friends, colleagues                 Jan Carew
                  and fans"  ̶  he turned his attention 
                  to its construction.                                 Hansib Publications Limited 
                                                                                    United Kingdom, 2014        
                                                                                           132 pgs.
                                                                             ________________________              
                                                     

                   He'd planned to write two or three volumes; but (it seems, with writer
                  energies flagging, and the risk of memory evaporations) he expressed
                  concern he might not be able to finish "this opus". Five years later he
                  died.
 

                  In the opening chapters readers might recognize the latticework of
                  relationships that secured Carew's life in several homes, and nurtured his
                  boyhood "dreams".

                  You meet his parents and his sisters, Grandfather Fitzroy Carew (b.
                  1869); Aunt Enny, Aunt Harriet, Dr. Francis, the District Medical Officer;
                  Nurse Myah, Cousin Maria, the family chronicler "who read Charles
                  Dickens' novels to me"; and Edmond Rohlehr, a "visiting uncle whose
                  ghost", when he died, "cried out in the wind".

                  The names of family members, neighbours and first friends seem
                  embedded in the minds of many Guianese growing up in the colonial
                  1920s. You get the impression there were always so many well-
                  intentioned relatives, and so much unavoidable comings and goings, the
                  child had little choice then but to live with the many stern hands raised
                  for the task of shared parenting.
 

                  Carew mentions the names of his next-door neighbours, those articulate
                  members of (what might one day be referred to as) a great generation
                  of Guianese achievers: the Luckoos [sic], "a clan of East Indian lawyers";
                  Edgar Mittelholzer, "an eccentric writer and painter". What readers
                  might find more engaging is the account of his educational (high school)
                  beginnings in the county of Berbice that helped forge his character.
 

                  The school he attended, Berbice High School (BHS), functioned like an
                  academy for the privileged,  for "the scions of a multi-racial middle-
                  class", he explains.  It was patterned "after elitist English private
                  schools", and administered by trained  local teachers (among them Jerry
                  Niles, Ranji Chandisingh Sr., James Rodway); and the occasional
                  graduate of Oxford and Cambridge on a teaching stint in the colonies.
 

                  The "scions" of the Courentyne peasantry in attendance felt uncomfort-
                  table and unwanted. (Their parent hardships would be covered in
                  fiction by the aforementioned "eccentric writer and painter" Edgar
                  Mittelholzer.) But already within the confines of the 1920s British 
                  syllabus and exams, the forms of dress and authority, a process of
                  "independent" thinking had begun.
 

                  Carew singles out Yisu Das, "a Gujarat and a third-generation Guianese"
                  who taught classes in "The History of the British Empire", but encouraged
                  his students to seek out alternative versions of conquest and suffering.
                  He would read to students Spanish versions of the same historical event.
                  Consequently Carew felt inspired once to present an essay on
                  Bartholomew de las Casas as a mid-term class assignment.
 

                  And there was Teacher James Rodway who introduced to his class dozens
                  of prints of Renaissance paintings, as well as the works of the Dutch
                  masters (Rembrandt, Brueghel, Rubens). "It made me see the landscapes
                  around me through different eyes," Carew writes. "By recreating images
                  of their reality they had enabled me to construct images of my own
                  with greater assurance."  
 

                  Though not 'top of his class' Carew attributes the grand sweep of his 
                  literary-academic life to those probing high school days when his
                  teachers opened the mind's capacity to engage faraway ideas, and
                  taught him the responsibilities of intellectual freedom. 
                

                                                         ≈  ≈         
      

                  In drafting his memoir Carew appears to switch narrator roles,
                  using one hand (the professor) to write, then the other (the famed
                  novelist). "Potaro Dreams" comes across as an assemblage of anecdotes
                  and vignettes, with historical commentary and asides interspersed to
                  add weight to the personal stories.
 

                  There might also be in the book a trace of (elite) school elevated 
                  mapping, starting with the author's assumption that the (casual or the
                  young millennium) Guyanese reader, who usually struggles through
                  each day's challenge to "read", would summon the effort to stay with
                  every pulsing minute of his nostalgias, or with people they'd never heard
                  of.

                  It is entirely possible, though, that to be overly impressed with the
                  achievements of the village boy who had travelled was acceptable form
                  in 1920s Guiana.

                  Carew recalls, for instance, that in those days one man "reputed to be 
                  the most highly educated Black man in British Guiana" had a résumé that
                  hinted at a remarkable accretion of credits based on his wanderings 
                  around the world. That man was his Uncle John, who from Guianese
                  beginnings became "an artist… a classical scholar…graduated from 
                  Heidelberg…ordained in Germany … sent to Nicaragua as a Moravian
                  missionary …[then] transferred to serve as pastor, principal and
                  Superintendent of Moravian churches and schools [back in Guiana]."

                  "Potaro Dreams" will be appreciated by Carew's colleagues and followers
                   in higher departments; but readers in Guyana and the Caribbean might
                   walk away more likely curious and "informed", though possibly thinking:
                   this is a good though not a compelling, vital account.

                   Others might find the book too slender to stand on its own, offering too
                   little (about the 1920s) that has not been addressed with greater  
                   warmth of feeling and reference in Roy Heath's memoirs ("Shadows", 
                   1990).
                   

                   Much of the biographical material in "Potaro Dreams"  ̶  and this is
                   pointed out in the book's Foreword  ̶  has been subsumed in Carew's
                   fiction (notably the fabulous stuff of "The Wild Coast", "Black Midas").
                   If the intention now is to present a "prism" through which readers can 
                   review the body of Carew's life work, it's debatable whether "Potaro
                   Dreams" sharpens the focus, or generates new reader interest in early
                   20th century Guiana.

                   This volume draws to a close in 1939. (At this point no sign yet of a 
                   youthful desire to "change the world".) We learn that Carew and his 
                   friends, once inductees in the BHS Cadet Corps, are preparing to join up
                   and serve in the British Armed Forces.

                   Assuming the second volume gets published, Guyanese readers  ̶  and 
                   they include the culture house keepers for whom the colonial past has
                   become a harbour bustling with fearful faith remainders  ̶  could
                   anticipate more names, places and events; more snapshots of the
                   seemingly unsinkable memory episodes that occupy the pages of "Potaro
                   Dreams".
              
                                                                ̶  Wyck Williams