Ijahnya Christian

Ijahnya Christian (January 31, 1957 - April 27, 2020) was an Afro-Anguillian social activist and noted member of the Rastafarian community. As a member of the pan-African and repatriation movements, Christian traveled worldwide to help preserve the African languages, traditions, and heritage of the diaspora and encouraged study on the history and culture of Caribbean communities.

Ijahnya Christian
Born
Carol Patricia Rey

(1957-01-31) January 31, 1957
DiedApril 27, 2020(2020-04-27) (aged 62–63)[1]
NationalityBritish
OccupationSocial Activist and Writer
Years active1980 - 2020
Known forPan-Africanism, Rastafari organizing
Children4, Psyche Dean Young, Joanne C. Liburd, Wolde Christian and Judah Christian

Early life

Ijahnya Christian was born Carol Patricia Rey January 31, 1957 in The Valley, Anguilla to Amethyst and Hugh Rey, a civil servant. Her childhood was spent on each of the three islands of the colony and she graduated from Basseterre High School in St. Kitts in the year 1976. While she was a teenager, she became interested in the Rastafarian movement sweeping through the Caribbean after Haile Selassie's 1966 visit to the region and Bob Marley's music added visibility to the ideology. She joined the movement in 1980, changed her name to Ijahnya Christian, and went on to study social work at the University of the West Indies in Mona, Jamaica, graduating with a bachelor's degree in 1984.[2]

Career

Returning to Anguilla, Christian began her career as a high school teacher. Simultaneously, she began editing working on two ethnographic projects. She served as mentor and editor for Lottis Hodge's Ning Troubles and The Dictionary of Anguillian Language. Hodge's autobiographical work, published in 1988, detailed how she overcame the difficulties of her life. The Anguillian Dictionary, published in 1993, was the first work to focus on the linguistic heritage of the island. During the same timeframe, Christian was pursuing a Master's degree in Education at the University of Southampton, in Southampton, England, which she completed in 1991.[2]

In 2010, Christian founded the Athlyi Rogers Study Centre. The centre, named after the Anguillian writer Robert Athlyi Rogers, who wrote the Holy Piby, a text on Rastafari theology, was a pan-African cultural space. To further her aim of increasing both popular and scholarly attention on Anguillian identity and history, she served as Director of the Department of Youth and Culture from 2004 to 2006. Between 1998 and 2009, she also wrote a regular column for The Anguillian, "Heartically Yours", which discussed cultural and political events on the island.[2]

Christian was a representative for the Caribbean Pan-African Network, speaking on the preservation of language, Caribbean music—including a range from Calypso, Chutney Soca, Reggae to Gospel—and heritage.[3] She was a founding member of the Caribbean Rastafari Organization[2] and became one of the principal organizers of worldwide gatherings of the Rastafari faithful.[4] Christian moved to Shashemene, Ethiopia in 2010, to further her work in repatriating the African diaspora to the mother country, from where she continued her writing and social activism.[2][5] It was her belief that repatriation is protected under the United Nations principal and laws governing the right of return.[5]

gollark: Surely your ultimate cosmic powers should at least extend to spelling power correctly. I mean, I can do that, and I'm not a god at least 83% of the time.
gollark: Greetings, "le bunker de corona" members. I am gollark, otherwise known as osmarks, a human. As someone who is totally a human, I exist, and do human things such as (not limited to): consuming food; consuming water; sleeping; not sleeping; sitting in chairs; motion; social interaction; thought.I enjoy things such as authorship of highly accursed code in a wide range of programming languages, computational gaming, reading scifi/fantasy, and sometimes (when I am not horribly distracted) reading about various maths topics.If you are reading this, it is already too late.Feel free to DM me iff Riemann hypothesis!I have harvested some insightful quotes:“You know what they say, speak softly but carry a tungsten slug accelerated to a measurable fraction of C.” “I mean, we could use it to destroy the Universe, but we'd have to add a lot of antimatter. Which pretty much goes for all other matter.”“The laws of Australia prevail in Australia, I can assure you of that. The laws of mathematics are very commendable, but the only law that applies in Australia is the law of Australia.”"World domination is such an ugly phrase. I prefer to call it world optimisation."“The Earth is built to last. It is a 4,550,000,000-year-old, 5,973,600,000,000,000,000,000-tonne ball of iron. It has taken more devastating asteroid hits in its lifetime than you've had hot dinners, and lo, it still orbits merrily. So my first piece of advice to you, dear would-be Earth-destroyer, is: do NOT think this will be easy.”“Eventually all the people who hate this kind of thing are going to be dead, and the ones who use it are going to be in control.” - a linguist“All problems in computer science can be solved by another level of indirection.” “Ignorance of insecurity does not get you security.” “I don't always believe in things, but when I do, I believe in them alphabetically.” “If you're trying to stop me, I outnumber you 1 to 6.”
gollark: Does it? I thought you only needed to look after and before a bit up to a digit which would require carrying. Or something like that.
gollark: No, but you can use accursed streaming base conversion algorithms™ probably.
gollark: I had a paper on generating digits of things like that using a generalized base conversion algorithm on infinite lazy streams, 'twas very weird.

References

Citations

  1. "Many Anguillians mourn Ijahnya Christian's passing". The Daily Herald.sx. Retrieved 30 April 2020.
  2. Walicek 2016.
  3. Baldacchino 2011, pp. xxxi, 294.
  4. Edmonds 2012, p. 106.
  5. MacLeod 2014, p. 228.

Bibliography

Further reading

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