The Grenada National Reparations Committee (GNRC) commends British descendants of enslavers and slavery profiteers — the newly launched “Heirs of Slavery” — for acknowledging the wrongdoings of their ancestors.
Enslavers, we note, not only condoned slavery but also built generational wealth from the transatlantic slave trade and chattel slavery— systems that were inhumane, unjust and unconscionable — crimes against humanity.
The unanimous call from members of Heirs of Slavery for the British government to apologise to the descendants of enslaved Africans in the British Caribbean and “to begin long-requested talks on reconciliation and reparatory justice for the 3.1million enslaved African people transported across the Atlantic by Britain,” is a call that is 400 years overdue.
As this diverse group of British authors, journalists and business people, including former BBC journalist Laura Trevelyan, embark on this journey to right the wrong of their ancestors — we applaud them for recognising the harms done by their ancestors. Furthermore, we amplify the group’s call for repair and restoration of a British Caribbean still suffering and struggling from the lingering social, economic and political effects of British-led slavery and colonialism.
“This is clearly a step in the right direction. A step that is long overdue,” said Arley Gill, chair of the Grenada National Reparations Committee. “The heirs of slavery benefited, and are still benefiting today, from the legacy of slavery. It’s a legacy that is fueled by more than 400 years of free African labour,” Gill added.
The Grenada National Reparations Committee welcomes this new initiative and encourages other individuals, families and institutions in Britain, as well as other individuals, families and institutions from across Europe to look within themselves, their families and nations and join this growing global movement for fairness, justice and repair. The time is now to repair the harm done to our countries in the name of empire-building in Europe.
In the spirit of Sankofa, which means “it is not taboo to go back and fetch what you forgot’’, the GNRC views the formation of the Heirs of Slavery “as the dawning of a new day in Britain. A day when descendants of enslavers begin a process of restoring dignity to our African ancestors who forcibly endured the worst of humanity,” Gill concluded.
About the Grenada National Reparations Committee (GNRC)
The Grenada National Reparations Committee (GNRC) is part of the Caribbean Reparations Commission (CRC) and is comprised of distinguished scholars, civil and human rights activists committed to advancing the quest for reparations for people of African descent in Grenada and throughout the Caribbean region.
Time Arley got a proper job….