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Inclusion Is Practice, Not Just Policy

Fostering disability-inclusive societies for advancing social progress is a commitment that requires a mindset shift. It also happens to be this year’s theme for the

Education for Endurance

If you are a descendant of enslaved Africans, the fact that you are reading this is also living testimony that your ancestors did more than just endure. They aspired. They had hope. Existing for hundreds of years in bondage, stuck for generations deep, being considered as beasts of burden, and still they aspired to freedom, for better. Think about it. What kind of indomitable spirit must a person have to risk learning to read, knowing that by sowing seeds of knowledge they risked reaping a whipping, and probably it would not bring any change in their status as slave? Without clear sight of the end they pressed ahead. With hands and feet restricted, they understood that the key to freedom was in their heads.

National Identity

These are all challenges that every nation may possibly face. But there is a unique challenge that faces nations like Barbados. Nations emerging from slavery and colonization have remnants of those systems woven into the fabric of their culture. How do you pull out the deep threads of oppression without unraveling the whole cultural cloth? This is a question that, in our aversion to dealing with hard questions of history, class and race, we have very much avoided. We can’t continue to do that if we want to transform Barbados and live as free and equal citizens of a strong nation.

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