Showing posts with label Pan Africanism Anti-Imperialist Perspective. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pan Africanism Anti-Imperialist Perspective. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 4, 2026

Jamaica’s Curry Cow Education: A Cultural Sovereignty Fight!


 ...Jamaica’s education crisis is rooted in corruption, colonial legacy, and mental slavery. Cultural sovereignty demands radical transformation now!
“We must emancipate ourselves from mental slavery, for though others might free the body, none but ourselves can free the mind.”

Marcus Garvey



By Norris R. McDonald, Sulfabittas News Syndicate @sulfabittas

There are few tragedies more enduring than an education system that systematically undermines the very people it claims to uplift. In Jamaica, where more than 11 per cent of the adult population remains functionally illiterate, the consequence is not merely academic failure but the slow burial of potential.

Generations of children are being consigned to low-wage labour, economic uncertainty, destroyed hopes and dreams.


Jamaica's political and business elites thrive while the education system collape.

This crisis is not the result of scarce resources; it is the outcome of deliberate mismanagement, corruption, and a colonial mind-set that continues to shape the Jamaican society.

ELITISM, CULTURAL AND SOCIAL STAGNATION
Let us be clear: this is not accidental. From its inception, Jamaica’s education system was designed to serve a narrow elite while disciplining the majority into obedience. As Professor Errol Miller and others have long demonstrated, decades of reform have failed to close the gap between the privileged and the working class.

Instead, schooling continues to socialize our children into submission – training them to fit neatly into a global capitalist order where their creativity is extracted, their  labour exploited, and their aspirations contained.

My friends, the government’s endless parade of trust-deficit “solutions” has produced little beyond press releases and procurement contracts while fostering corruption.

Despite high enrollment, a United Nations study has found Jamaica’s learning outcomes to be dangerously weak. Only about 20 per cent of teachers are university graduates, and digital literacy remains an afterthought in a world increasingly defined by technology. Meanwhile, we continue to fund a system that reliably produces illiteracy, underemployment, and social stagnation.

We are producing societies with perpetual deep rooted poverty and social stagnation. 


A CORRUPTION-DRIVEN ‘CURRY COW’ EDUCATION SYSTEM

The crisis in education cannot be separated from Jamaica’s broader political economy. Government officials routinely cite budget constraints to justify chronic underinvestment, but this explanation collapses under scrutiny.


The problem is not scarcity; it is priority. Auditor General reports from 2012 to 2023 document billions of dollars lost to waste, fraud, and corruption across state agencies, including the Ministry of Education. Procurement scandals, inflated contracts, and vanity projects drain public funds while classrooms crumble and teachers struggle without basic resources.


This is a government that finds ample money for foreign travel, consultants and ceremonial excess, yet pleads poverty when asked to invest in children. Education has become a “curry cow” – a lucrative feeding trough for political insiders rather than a vehicle for national development.


Despite the rhetoric of reform, outcomes worsen, inequality deepens, and the gulf between elite institutions and underfunded public schools grows ever wider.


At its core, this dysfunction reflects the logic of capitalism itself. Jamaica’s education system is not designed to cultivate critical thinkers, innovators, or self-determining citizens. It is engineered to produce a compliant workforce for a global economy that thrives on cheap labour and limited horizons. Western capitalist nations preach meritocracy and opportunity, yet actively structure education to reproduce class hierarchies at home and dependency abroad. Minds are not developed; they are conditioned.


CUBA: A GOOD EXAMPLE AMERICA LOVES TO HATE


Contrast this with Cuba – a country relentlessly demonized and economically strangled by the United States and its allies for over six decades.


Despite an unforgiving blockade and material scarcity, Cuba has built one of the most successful education systems in the world, boasting near-universal literacy and strong outcomes across disciplines. This achievement is not rooted in excess wealth or cutting-edge technology but in political will.


Cuba consistently invests between 10 and 12 per cent of its GDP in education, prioritizing human development over profit. Education is treated as a public good and a cornerstone of sovereignty, not a commodity to be rationed or privatized.


In doing so, Cuba exposes the lie at the heart of capitalist ideology: that poverty, rather than policy, explains educational failure.


While Jamaica squanders public funds and bends to the dictates of international financial institutions, Cuba has built an education system that equips its people to participate in – and challenge – the global knowledge economy. Its success is not incidental; it represents a direct challenge to Jamaica’s, British inspired, colonial education system.


Cuba's educational system and outranks all developed, industrialized nations, including America. 


CREATIVITY, CULTURE AND NATIONAL SOVEREIGNTY


Cuba’s educational philosophy extends beyond the classroom. Creativity, culture, and community are central pillars of national development. Jamaica, by contrast, commodifies its cultural output — reggae, dancehall, athletics – without embedding creative education or economic ownership into the school system. 


Our global cultural influence has not translated into broad-based empowerment because we have failed to integrate creativity, technology, and heritage into a coherent educational strategy.


If Cuba can produce world-class doctors, engineers, scientists, and artists under siege, Jamaica has no excuse beyond political cowardice and ideological capture. Instead of cultivating national talent, our leaders defer to the IMF and their foreign masters. They therefore, wittingly or unwittingly, appear servile; pushing and implement policies that destroy the lives of black poor people and the middle class.


Loans replace vision, technical assistance substitutes for structural change.


My dear friends, what Jamaica requires is not more debt or donor-driven reform, but a fundamental reorientation of education toward cultural liberation rather than compliance.


EDUCATION MUST EMPOWER AND LIBERATE MINDS


Jamaica’s national hero Marcus Garvey warned that “a people without the knowledge of their past history, origin and culture is like a tree without roots.” He further reminded us that ‘we must emancipate ourselves from mental slaver to free our mind.’


Jamaica’s education system – shaped by colonial residue and enforced today through IMF and World Bank austerity – does precisely the opposite. It uproots African memory while institutionalizing mental captivity, training children for dependency rather than sovereignty.


Until education restores historical consciousness and rejects imperial supervision, political independence remains hollow, and liberation deferred.


Breaking free from colonialism and imperialism demands an education system rooted in black consciousness, cultural confidence, and national pride. Knowledge must be understood not merely as a means of survival, but as a weapon of resistance. 


We must abolish this education system that perpetuates ignorance, illiteracy and economic servitude and cultural enslavement.


Education must reflect the society it serves. 


If we desire a Jamaica that is just, sovereign, and self-determining, we must begin by transforming how and why we educate. 


Anything less is an endorsement of the cultural imperialist status quo.


That is the bitta truth.


[Norris R. McDonald is an author, economic journalist, political analyst, and respiratory therapist. Send feed back  miaminorris@yahoo.com.]














Thursday, January 29, 2026

The Myth of the Black Ancestral Curse: Religion, Race, and the Psychological Legacy of Slavery!


Norris R. McDonald, DIJ CRT, Author, Economic Journalist, Poet, & Human Rights Activist 

Myth of the Black Ancestral Curse is a critical study of  phycological legacies of slavery and the role religion and race plays in reenforcing racist stereotypes. 

This book:

For centuries, Black people have been told that their suffering is divine punishment—ordained by God and passed down through a mythical “ancestral curse.”

In this powerful, eye-opening work, Norris R. McDonald, DIJ, dismantles one of the most enduring and damaging lies in Christian history: the so-called 
Curse of Ham. From the hymnals of colonial churches to the halls of modern academia, this myth has been used to justify slavery, colonization, and systemic racism.

With clarity, historical depth, and spiritual conviction, McDonald traces how scripture was distorted, how Black history was erased, and how liberation must begin with truth.

Drawing from the Bible, classical history, and Black theological thought, this short but impactful book challenges readers to confront religious indoctrination, reclaim their dignity, and break spiritual chains that have lasted for generations.
Whether you're a student of theology, an activist for racial justice, or a seeker of historical truth—
The Myth of the Ancestral Curse will inspire, inform, and empower you.





The Myth of the Black Ancestral Curse is a bold and revelatory work that exposes how colonial powers distorted Christian doctrine to justify the enslavement of Black people. From the Curse of Ham to papal decrees that sanctioned genocide, Norris R. McDonald, DIJ dismantles centuries of theological manipulation and calls for spiritual truth, historical clarity, and psychological healing.

This book is a journey—from ancient African greatness to colonial oppression, from religious lies to liberation theology. A must-read for seekers of justice, students of history, and defenders of faith rooted in freedom.

We are not cursed. We are called.
The Myth of the Black Ancestral Curse is a bold and revelatory work that exposes how colonial powers distorted Christian doctrine to justify the enslavement of Black people. From the Curse of Ham to papal decrees that sanctioned genocide, Norris R. McDonald, DIJ dismantles centuries of theological manipulation and calls for spiritual truth, historical clarity, and psychological healing.





This book is a journey—from ancient African greatness to colonial oppression, from religious lies to liberation theology. A must-read for seekers of justice, students of history, and defenders of faith rooted in freedom.



Titled ‘The Myth of the Black Ancestral Curse: Religion, Race and the Psychological Legacies of Slavery’, this provocative and deeply researched essay confronts the historical and spiritual abuse of sacred texts that helped legitimise slavery, colonialism, and systemic racism.

“This is more than a critique – it is an act of intellectual liberation,” McDonald said. “The myth of a divine curse on Black people is not just false – it was fabricated to justify mass atrocities and to psychologically shackle generations of African descendants.”

The book pays special tribute to Professor Sheldon ‘Uwezo’ McDonald, a Caribbean legal scholar and revolutionary whose life and work inspired this essay. Drawing from Caribbean history, Pan-African philosophy, and biblical critique, McDonald examines how European empires - backed by religious institutions - constructed a theology of racial inferiority that lingers today in both church and state.


BOOK REVIEW: JAMAICA GLEANER
‘The Myth of the Black Ancestral Curse’

Norris R McDonald’s new book dismantles dangerous religious myth used to justify slavery and colonialism

Published:Wednesday | April 16, 2025

“Our ancestors were never cursed – they were targeted. And now it is time to reclaim the truth.”

A powerful new work by Jamaican author and public intellectual Norris R. McDonald, DIJ, is taking aim at one of the most insidious and enduring lies used to oppress Black people across the globe: the so-called Black Ancestral Curse.

KEY TOPICS EXPLORED:

• The origins and misuse of the so-called “Curse of Ham” doctrine

• How religious institutions gave moral cover to slavery and colonisation

• The psychological legacy of spiritual indoctrination in Black communities

• Resistance through Rastafari, Maroon heritage, and African spirituality

• A poetic invocation of liberation in the included poem ‘DRUMS’

• A moving tribute to Prof. Sheldon ‘Uwezo’ McDonald and his legacy

“This essay is a celebration of Black excellence and a call to reject inherited shame,” McDonald noted. “Our ancestors were never cursed – they were targeted. And now it is time to reclaim the truth.”

Published by Afro Caribbean Riddims via Amazon KDP, ‘The Myth of the Black Ancestral Curse: Religion, Race, and the Psychological Legacies of Slavery’ is available now in paperback and eBook on Amazon Kindle Direct Publishing (KDP).


About the author

Norris R. McDonald, DIJ, CRT, is a storyteller, cultural researcher, wordsmith and poet from the heart of Jamaica. His work blends humor, history, and heritage to preserve the vibrant spirit of the Caribbean.

With a voice as powerful as Granny’s slap and a pen dipped in sweet potato pudding, McDonald brings island folklore to life for readers across generations and continents.

Norris is an Author, Respiratory Therapist and Economic Journalist who writes public commentary features for the Jamaica Gleaner. He writes on critical issues regarding Political Economics, Health Care & Public Policies, Black Culture and, World Affairs.