Friday, May 13, 2022

My Lament to the British Virgin Islands

 

Road Town. The capital of the British Virgin Islands as it was in earlier days.

In 1975, while sailing north through the Windward Islands, stormy weather caused us to take shelter in the British Virgin Islands. The anchorage off the island’s capital was exposed and uncomfortable but we were told of a sheltered cove a few miles along the coast. Its entrance was narrow but and once inside the surrounding reef offered perfect protection. Our intention was to continue on our way as soon as the weather improved.

The weather did improve, but we stayed on and that idyllic cove became our home for the next twenty years.

My book Virgin Island Sketches was written in the early years of our stay. It celebrated the way of life of the islanders. Those sketches now serve as a reminder of halcyon times past, both physically and socially. 

But the writing was on the wall, and while I was busy preserving scenes from the past, Virgin Island poet Sheila Hyndman prophesized the future.

            They will come with tools and machines,        

            They will bring to light your secret places,

            They will demand your mysteries.

            They will destroy, build up.

            They will dilute your treasures,

            And rob you of your chastity.

            They will adorn you like ancient Jezebel.  

Events of the last few weeks have brought the present sorry state of those islands to the attention of the world. My feelings can best be expressed in the title of Alan Paton's novel: Cry the Beloved Country. 

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