Victoria Falls, Delices Buy Dominica products
Home
Welcome Message
Prior Issues
Feedback
Current Issue
Contact Us
Advertise
About Dominica

Spiderline

In the Spotlight
Dr Edmund Tavernier:Leader in Agricultural Policy Research
John Moorhouse: Extreme Sports Cyclist

Dominica Academy of Arts and Sciences
National Development Fund
Rosie Douglas Foundation

Become A Sponsor
The Dominican provides a unique opportunity to advertise to the thousands of people who access this free site daily, while becoming a sponsor of the site. For additional information, please

Inquire Here


Volume No. 1 Issue No. 54 - Monday January 26, 2004
On the Passing of Prime Minister Pierre Charles
by Julius Sampson


One of the first things I do when I arrive home from an overseas trip is to turn on my computer. More often than not, there is no earth shattering development since I lost contact with cyberspace.

Whether I am en route to Dominica, or this occasion, Miami, I do not expect to be overwhelmingly surprised by what I learn when I turn on my computer. Today was different.

Several email messages carried the sad news of the Prime Minister�s passing.

This is an occasion of epic proportion. Extremely sad, yet epic in the sense that it may amount to a seismic shift in the political landscape.

How sad the loss and heavy the sorrow felt by his family and numerous supporters. One gets the sense of �d�j� vu all over again�, to quote Yogi Berra.

For it was not long ago that Pierre Charles took over from the deceased Prime Minister Rosie Douglas whose untimely death cast a dark cloud of sorrow over a struggling nation.

I never got the opportunity to meet Pierre Charles in his capacity of Prime Minister. My earliest memories of him was as the athletic looking President of the Youth Council whose office was located across from the New Chronicle where I worked in the tumultuous 70�s.

But over the past few days he featured in one way or other in various anecdotes which make the news of his death at this time seem rather eerie.

While not meaning take way from the sadness of the occasion, it was just last week that a tasteless political joke was making its rounds on the internet: In the Windwards, the mischievous joke went, there are three �doctors� and one �patient�, or some variant on that theme.

Its reproduction in communiqu�s among the Dominican diaspora produced a ground swell of passionate opinion which is perhaps representative of the political fault lines in Dominica.

And just last night, before I left Dominica for Miami, I ran into Attorney General Dyer and some others at the Port Of call in Roseau.

The topic of the Prime minister, his health and his place in the political equation in Dominica, came up for discussion. And I agreed with those who opined that the prime Minister was vastly underestimated, that he showed political courage and resolve when he agreed to the economic stabilization effort; that he is an honest man whose lack of a tertiary education did not diminish his ability to provide effective leadership; that the alternatives to him within his Labour party were not attractive and that those who were calling on him to be replaced, a �doctor� in particular, would not inherit the level of trust and honesty that �Piero� was believed to possess.

So the timing of the death of Prime Minister Pierre Charles, amidst the political turmoil in Dominica, a general election around the corner, the IMF imposed austerity measures in place as part of an economic retooling effort, and deep divisions within the country as to the wisdom of the current course, make it an especially significant event, in addition to the sadness that all feel.

And yes, it seems like yesterday when circumstances were similar, that Pierre Charles walked on the stage to fulfill the role of lead actor, replacing the departed Rosie Douglas.

He seemed like a transitional figure at the time: The unassuming head of a coalition government, the least of all evils, both perceived and real. And with his death, the deck of cards has been reshuffled, as it were.

Real political drama such as the death of a prime minister often looks like a work of fiction, an interesting plot laid out by a very gifted writer.

This was the case with FRANKLYN AND WINSTON, an account of the interplay of the giant personalities of Franklyn Roosevelt and Winston Churchill and their friendship, set against the backdrop of World War II and their respective roles in the defeat of Nazi aggression.

I devoured the book over the Christmas holidays in Dominica. The account of the death of Franklyn Roosevelt, the popular four term president of the United States at a time of war, was fresh in my mind when came the news of the death of prime Minister Charles.

In the book, the death of Winston Churchill followed almost two decades after Roosevelt, after a life of political ups and downs, and yet, living behind a legacy of valor that has made him immortal.

The book left me with the impression that political leaders at great moments in history are chosen by the Creator to carry out a certain mission. And then they bow out gracefully when their mission is accomplished.

I can hear some saying that it is foolish to mention Pierre Charles in the same story as Winston Churchill and Franklyn Roosevelt. No effort is made here to compare him to these men.

It will be left to Dominica historians to determine Pierre Charles� place in his country�s history. And for this, we may have to wait many years.

I just find it somewhat uncanny, that at the very moment I am consumed with the story of the life and death of Franklyn Roosevelt and Winston Churchill, up come reports of the death of Pierre Charles. This is weird, and more so the more I think about it.

Pierre Charles may well have been a transitional as well as a transformational, figure. If he left a mark, history may well record it as one of political courage.

He took decisive action on the economy, he spent his political capital when others may have cowered. In his apparent simplicity and lack of achievement at the tertiary level, he may have set the benchmark for the �doctors� that are seeking to replace him.


Comments about this article? Email:
editor@
thedominican.net
Telephone:
1-703-861-9411
Fax:
1-202-589-7937

Volume No. 1 Issue No. 54
PM Charles Made the Tough Choices
And the Lord Made This Land
On the Passing of PM Charles
Adieu Pierro
Tribute to the Late PM




Subscribe Now
Subscribe to our newsletter, and receive updates by e-mail.

Subscribe


  | Home | Welcome Message | Prior Issues | Feedback | Current Issue |
| Contact Us | Advertise | About Dominica | Privacy Policy |

� Copyright 2002 TheDominican.Net.
Designed by Caribbean Supplies -- All Rights reserved