Hot topics close

Barbados becomes a republic – and Britain faces a reckoning

Barbados becomes a republic  and Britain faces a reckoning
On Tuesday, Barbados replaces Queen Elizabeth II with president Sandra Mason – and while some are celebrating the change, others ask if a symbolic shift is really enough to reckon with the legacy of colonialism. Michael Safi visits Bridgetown to ask if

On Tuesday, Barbados replaces Queen Elizabeth II with president Sandra Mason – and while some are celebrating the change, others ask if a symbolic shift is really enough to reckon with the legacy of colonialism. Michael Safi visits Bridgetown to ask if the country can free itself from the history that got it here – and what Britain owes to the people of its former colonies whose ancestors were enslaved

How to listen to podcasts: everything you need to know

The first British monarch to claim Barbados was James I. At midnight on Tuesday, Elizabeth II became the last. At that moment, the country made a symbolic break that it hopes will help it take another step on a journey that began with emancipation but is still far from over.

Some see the establishment of a republic with a president instead of a queen as a profoundly important moment, but many are more sceptical and point to the day-to-day deprivations that are still part of life on the island as the far more significant legacy of colonialism. In this episode, Michael Safi visits Bridgetown to explore what might come next.

Esther Phillips, Barbados’ poet laureate, takes him to the Drax plantation that was one of the country’s most heinous examples of the brutality of slavery and is still a going concern today. He hears from David Comissiong, an activist and diplomat who’s been campaigning for a republic all his life, about the concrete consequences of colonialism that remain an impediment to Barbadian progress. And he meets Alexander Downes, the author of a petition that led to the removal of a statue of Lord Nelson in Bridgetown, who argues that while many might be apathetic about dumping the British monarchy, the moment’s true significance will be felt for decades to come.

You can read Safi’s feature on the creation of a republic in Barbados - Nelson, BLM and new voices: why Barbados is ditching the Queen – here.

Prince Charles and Sandra Mason
More ways to listen
  • Apple Podcasts
  • Google Podcasts
  • Spotify
  • RSS Feed
  • Download
Support The Guardian

The Guardian is editorially independent. And we want to keep our journalism open and accessible to all. But we increasingly need our readers to fund our work.

Support The Guardian
  • Share on Facebook
  • Share on Twitter
  • Share via Email
Similar news
News Archive
  • Dricus Du Plessis
    Dricus Du Plessis
    UFC 297 results: Dricus Du Plessis wins middleweight title from ...
    20 Jan 2024
    7
  • Astaxanthin
    Astaxanthin
    Natural Astaxanthin Market would Register a Healthy Growth of USD 49.93 billion by 2027 :Cyanotech, Fuji, BGG ...
    9 Mar 2024
    1
  • Wearable technology
    Wearable technology
    January: Wearable tech could revolutionise Parkinson’s treatment | News and features
    3 Dec 2024
    7
  • Valorant
    Valorant
    Valorant Battle Pass – Details, Rewards and More
    2 Jun 2020
    15
  • Bill Roache Anne Reid
    Bill Roache Anne Reid
    Coronation Street's Bill Roache reunited with former screen wife Anne Reid
    18 Apr 2022
    4
  • Gaza
    Gaza
    Israel minister tells army to plan for Palestinians to leave Gaza
    3 days ago
    10
This week's most popular news