An edition of De roaring 70's (1996)

De roaring 70's

an introduction to the politics of the 1970's

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De roaring 70's
Zeno Obi Constance
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Last edited anonymously
December 27, 2011 | History
An edition of De roaring 70's (1996)

De roaring 70's

an introduction to the politics of the 1970's

  • 0 Ratings
  • 0 Want to read
  • 0 Currently reading
  • 0 Have read

In the early months of 1970 – February 26th to April 21st – the newly independent nation of Trinidad and Tobago was rocked by the massive street protest demonstrations of the poor and the dispossessed under the banner of Black Power. Led by the charismatic Makandal Daaga (Geddes Granger)1 and the National Joint Action Committee (NJAC)2, a coalition of university students. Trade Unions leaders and concerned citizens, the people protested the conditions of poverty and colour discrimination that was 1970 Trinidad and Tobago. Protests were aimed primarily at the foreign domination of the country especially with regards to White Power and the external white control and influence on the local economy and culture. In meetings, marches and demonstrations which became a daily occurrence, NJAC leaders called for the end to racial prejudice and economic inequality, described by one poet as ‘the luxury of the few at the expense of the many’3. Thousands took to the streets daily with the cry of Power to the People!, with the banner proclaiming “Indians and Africans Unite”, and the symbols of the clenched fists, the massive afro hair style and the red, black and green flags.
After virtually two months of meetings, marches and mass demonstrations by all sections of the community, the leaders of the movement felt that the time was near when they could demand and obtain the resignation of the government. A nationwide general strike was planned for Monday April 21st, a massive march from Caroni to Port-of-Spain was organised for the same day, and sections of the army were prepared to give military support to the movement. The government, wary of rising disenchantment within the entire society, declared a state of emergency in the early hours of April 21st, imposed a dusk to dawn curfew and arrested and jailed the leaders. One year later a second State of Emergency was declared when the movement was once again gathering momentum.

The book documents these historic events using interviews, newspaper sources and well documented analyses.

Publish Date
Publisher
Z.O. Constance
Language
English
Pages
64

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Edition Availability
Cover of: De roaring 70's

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Book Details


Edition Notes

Includes bibliographical references.

Published in
Fyzabad, Trinidad, West Indies
Other Titles
Roaring seventies

Classifications

Library of Congress
F2122 .C66 1996

The Physical Object

Pagination
64 p. :
Number of pages
64

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL420507M
LCCN
98124919
OCLC/WorldCat
36095162

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December 27, 2011 Edited by 190.213.87.96 The major players involved were added
December 27, 2011 Edited by 190.213.87.96 Added new cover
February 3, 2010 Edited by WorkBot add more information to works
December 9, 2009 Created by WorkBot add works page