Each year we struggle to decide how we are going to observe this date in our history.
It has been largely left to the PLP and to the academe to determine what to do. But this is a national occasion and demands national attention. The history is the history.
It has also become fashionable to seek to change what Majority Rule actually means. Today in a kind of politically correct attempt to make the whole idea more saleable, it is seen as the full flowering of Bahamian democracy. That it is but at the time of the victory in 1967, the contrast was more stark. What you had simply to do was to look at the pictures of the Cabinet of the United Bahamian Party and then look at the Cabinet of the incoming PLP and you knew the story without more being said. That is what majority rule meant. In 1967 it meant the end to the notion that one ethnic group had a monopoly on brains and power.
As I say in the present orthodoxy, we seem to struggle with what to do with it. Today I am proud to join my colleagues of the National Heroes Day Committee headed by Fr. Sebastian Campbell gathered at the mausoleum of the late Sir Lynden O. Pindling in St. Agnes Cemetery in order to lay a wreath and mark the occasion.
Inevitably, what comes up on a day like this is; do we make this a national holiday? Some argue that we should. I have ceased to resist the point. What I do want to do this morning however for the country is to make a distinction between days that are public holidays and days that are ones for national observance.
When in the last Cabinet, we made a decision to move for the creation of National Honours and to set aside the second Monday in October as National Heroes Day, we settled that distinction.
Today, both bills are passed by the legislature but neither has been brought into Force.
The National Heroes Day Bill would set aside the second Monday in October to observe the contributions of all National heroes to the country this would include a list as long as the country would like. It would also make it possible for someone to be officially declared a national hero.
It would establish local honours and local honour societies.
In the resignation comments of the former Director of Culture, she lamented the fact that this legislation has not been brought into force and in fact, the work of the cultural commission that looked into all of these matters seems largely to have been discarded.
I have personally raised these matters on the floor of the House. I raised the matter with Loretta Butler Turner who is a member of the National Heroes Day Committee about seeking to use the influence on her Cabinet colleagues to bring this legislation into force. Nothing so far has been done.
I would suggest that our history is important. I spoke to a 30-year-old last evening and told him that this day is important to all Bahamians.
I have often said that I understand that there is a tradition in Jewish families on special occasions that the youngest child is made to repeat the history of their people so that they will never forget.
I think that Majority Rule Day should be a day of National Observance. In other words, there are certain ceremonies that the state should support to mark the day. It should also mean that the schools should take special note of the day and that churches around the nation should be encouraged to take special measures to observe the day. This should also mean that the curriculum of the subject of history should reflect what happened on 10th January. Some people simply do not know what happened and it is important that the story be told and be known. Just the facts. This is the way to treat it with the due solemnity and importance that it deserves.
I am calling again for the National Heroes Day legislation and the National Honours Legislation to be brought into force so that this year we will mark National Heroes Day on the second Monday in October as a public holiday.
Dame Marguerite Pindling normally goes to mass on this morning and comes here to lay a wreath to commemorate the occasion. This year she cannot be here to do so. I am happy that Fr. Campbell has agreed and her son Leslie has also agreed to come. It is the least we can do.
Paul Moss, PLP National General Council Member for St. Cecilia with his son Paul III at St. Agnes Cemetery.