Jacqueline Creft

Jacqueline Creft (1946 – October 19, 1983) was a Grenadian politician, one of the leaders of the revolutionary New Jewel Movement and Minister of Education in the People's Revolutionary Government from 1980 to 1983. She was executed in October 1983 along with Maurice Bishop, prime minister of the country and father of her son Vladimir (1977–1994).

Jacqueline Creft
Minister of Women's Affairs of the People's Revolutionary Government
In office
1982–1983
Minister of Education of the People's Revolutionary Government
In office
1980–1983
Personal details
Born1946 (1946)
Samaritan, Grenada
DiedOctober 19, 1983(1983-10-19) (aged 36–37)
St. George's, Grenada
Cause of deathGunshot
Political partyNew Jewel Movement
Domestic partnerMaurice Bishop
ChildrenVladimir Creft
OccupationPolitician

Biography

Early years of militancy of exile

Jacqueline Creft studied political science at Carleton University in Ottawa, and returned to Grenada at the end of 1971. She became involved in the revolutionary struggle early on, and was already participating in the New Jewel Movement from its beginning. In January 1973 she was among those who led an unprecedented protest against the British aristocrat Lord Brownlow, cousin of Elizabeth II of England, when he erected a gate on his estate of La Sagesse, denying the community its traditional privileges of access to the beach and use of the pastures.[1] The protest was organized by members of Jewel,[2] including Maurice Bishop.[3]

In 1976 and 1977 Creft resided in Trinidad and Tobago, where she was the regional coordinator for youth affairs in Christian Action for Development in the Eastern Caribbean (CADEC), a branch of the Caribbean Conference of Churches (CCC), until the government of Eric Williams (influenced by journalist Rickey Singh) banned her from the country. She returned to Grenada in 1977, but the government of Prime Minister Eric Gairy refused to give her work "as I was a new mother," Jacqueline complained.[4]

On December 4, 1977, Creft's son Vladimir was born. She then traveled to Barbados with the organization Women and Development. She returned to Grenada to participate in the revolution of March 13, 1979.

The challenge of transforming the education system

In January 1980, Creft was appointed Minister of Education of the People's Revolutionary Government. She coordinated the Volunteer School Repair programs and was in charge of Cuban scholarships. The revolution was especially committed to the construction of more schools and the eradication of illiteracy. Creft was dedicated to the transformation of the educational system inherited from colonialism, with the challenge of making it relevant to the population, and making education a right rather than a privilege.[2]

The speeches of the People's Revolutionary Government, in the First International Conference of Solidarity with Grenada in November 1981, included "The construction of mass education in Free Grenada", by Minister of Education Jacqueline Creft.

Comrades, ever since our party was founded in March 1973, high upon our list of priorities has been the transformation of this twisted education system that we inherited from colonialism and from Gairy.

We were determined to change a system which so powerfully excluded the interests of the mass of our people, and which also wove webs of fear, alienation and irrelevance around our children's minds ... whether it was Little Miss Muffet, the Cow That Jumped Over the Moon, William the Conqueror, Wordsworth's Daffodils, or the so-called "Discoveries" By Christopher Columbus of the "New World".

The lucky few of us who went to secondary school, learned about Cromwell's Revolt but not about that of Fedon. We learned about the reforms of Wilberforce yet nothing of Marryshow. They made us read Shakespeare and Jane Austen, but kept silence about George Lamming.

Right from the beginning of our struggle we called for an education system which not only services all our people, secondary schools which would freely open the doors to all our people without the constraint of fees, but also a curriculum which would eliminate absurdity from our classrooms and focus our children's minds upon their own island, their own wealth, soil and crops, their own solution to the problems that surround them. For too long we had been brainwashed to think that only Europe and America held the answer.[5]

In June 1982 Creft created, and was placed in charge of, the Ministry of Women's Affairs. The secretary of that ministry was Phyllis Coard, wife of Bernard Coard, who would later overthrow Bishop and execute him, along with Creft herself.

Creft left the party's leadership in November 1982, after having been active in it since its founding. In March 1983, Creft was demoted from candidate member to applicant member, though the reasons for this are not clear. According to writer David Franklyn, the situation was related to internal disputes in the movement between Bishop and Bernard Coard. The movement professed that the government would have co-leaders, but Bishop, though initially accepting and appointing Coard as vice president, changed his position and criticized Creft's support of Coard. The opposing faction, moreover, accused Bishop of sowing rumors that Coard planned to assassinate him.[2]

Execution

In the tense days of early October 1983, Creft met in private with Maurice Bishop, being one of the few that visited him. When Bishop was placed under house arrest on October 12, 1983, at his home in Mount Wheldale, she went to visit him the next day. Security warned her that if she saw him, she would be arrested. According to reports, she accepted this.[2]

At midday on October 19, 1983, a student from the Grenada Boys' Secondary School (GBSS), Thomas Cadore, led a group that surrounded the Mount Wheldale house where Bishop was confined and released him and Creft. Bishop was led to Fort Rupert by a crowd celebrating his release, and Creft decided to follow him.[2] The army, under the command of General Hudson Austin, took action against Bishop's supporters. They arrested the leader and several members of his government and followers, including Creft, lined them up against a wall, and shot them.[6][7]

In December 1986, 14 people (including Bernard and Phyllis Coard) were convicted of murder, and 3 of manslaughter – the so-called Grenada 17 – for their role in the killings.[6] Death sentences were given for the murder charges, but these were subsequently commuted to life imprisonment. In 2008 and 2009, all of the remaining prisoners were released.[8]

Personal life

According to texts published after her death, Jacqueline Creft and Maurice Bishop maintained a romantic relationship since his time as a student at Carleton University, despite the fact that he was married. It was an "open" and public relationship.[2] They had a son, Vladimir, who was born on December 4, 1977, and died in 1994 after being stabbed at a nightclub in Toronto.[9][10] In the Wilberforce cemetery there is a bust of Maurice Bishop next to Vladimir's tombstone, whose date of death is erroneously given as 1995.[4] Some media have indicated that Creft was pregnant with their second son, and that's why Bishop had begged for her to be left alive.[11] This information could not be confirmed, as Creft's body has not been found.[2] In the 1986 trial of the Grenada 17, a witness testified that the bodies had been burned with gasoline.[12] Jacqueline Creft left behind her mother and father Lynn and Allan Creft and four siblings: Colleen Mahy, Michael Creft, Claudette Warner and Selwyn Creft.

gollark: What?
gollark: Are you unaware of "all mesh networking ever"?
gollark: The internet does routing, as far as I know, in a mostly noncentralized way through something something BGP. IP addresses are centrally allocated, but they don't *have* to be done that way (although the design of the routing stuff requires it I think?).
gollark: If they know other people on the network you can connect through them.
gollark: People you know somehow?

References

  1. Grenade, Wendy C., ed. (January 28, 2015). The Grenada Revolution: Reflections and Lessons. University Press of Mississippi. ISBN 9781626743458. Retrieved October 31, 2017 via Google Books.
  2. Franklyn, David (October 16, 2014). "The tragic fate of Jacqueline Creft". Caribbean News Now. Retrieved October 31, 2017.
  3. Rose, Euclid A. (2002). "Revolutionary Socialism". Dependency and Socialism in the Modern Caribbean. Lexington Books. p. 291. ISBN 9780739104484. Retrieved October 31, 2017 via Google Books.
  4. Wilder, Ann Elizabeth. "Jacqueline Creft [1947–1983]". The Grenada Revolution Online. Retrieved October 31, 2017.
  5. Creft, Jacqueline. The Building of Mass Education in Free Grenada. Retrieved October 31, 2017 via Google Books.
  6. "14 Convicted of Murdering Grenada Leader, 10 Others". Los Angeles Times. St. George's. December 5, 1986. Retrieved October 31, 2017.
  7. Ganase, Pat (September 2014). "Death of a Revolution". UWI Today. University of the West Indies. Retrieved October 31, 2017.
  8. "Last of 'Grenada 17' released". BBC Caribbean. September 7, 2009. Retrieved October 31, 2017.
  9. Braveboy, Marcia (August 26, 2013). "Mother of Grenada's former revolutionary leader Maurice Bishop dies at 97". Caribbean News Now. Retrieved October 31, 2017.
  10. Osborne, Deirdre (November 2, 2012). "Revealing the Revolution: a Few Home Truths". Hidden Gems Volume II: Contemporary Black British Plays. Oberon Books. ISBN 9781849436984. Retrieved October 31, 2017 via Google Books.
  11. Weinraub, Bernard (November 4, 1983). "Darkness and Light on the Isle of Spice". The New York Times. St. George's. Retrieved October 31, 2017.
  12. Treaster, Joseph B. (July 28, 1986). "To Ordeals in Grenada, Add a Trial". The New York Times. St. George's. Retrieved October 31, 2017.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.