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Days after the Barbados government’s announcement that it would buy the Banyan archives from T&T caused an uproar in some quarters, the THA has revealed it is works on a digital archive meant to preserve Tobago’s history. Speaking exclusively with Guardian Media at Carifesta XV in Barbados, Secretary of Tourism, Culture, Antiquities & Transportation Tashia Burris said they are working on a digital heritage archive.
She said, “We have tons of footage, we have old VHS tapes, we have CDs, we have people who have recorded history in their houses. We still have a lot of our knowledge bearers alive that were able to record the stories live and to be able to preserve them in a database and a cloud setup that is designed for storage of those kinds of replicas of our history. And for me, that is critical because if we don't do that, we're going to lose that. We're going to lose that history.”
Burris said the priority is to get the material under the division’s care into the archives and then the generally public will be invited to contribute to their own material. The division also plans to advocate for the return of items from Tobago’s past to be brought back to the island. “We are trying to build out our museums, so there are some exhibits that we will have to request to make sure that we have certain things resident in Tobago that really truly belong to Tobago. But we're starting with what we have first before we can go outside, because it's not just what the National Archives has, we also have some stuff in museums in England, for example. So when that time comes, we want to be able to write those letters and request our items, our artefacts to come back home.”
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