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As the final brushstrokes dry on Labour Day projects across Jamaica, the month of May closes with more than cleaned gullies, painted schools, and restored parks. It leaves us with reflection. Beneath the bright Caribbean sun and rising summer temperatures, Jamaicans are reminded that the spirit of nation-building did not begin with modern campaigns. It was forged through sacrifice, resistance, and an unbreakable belief in dignity.
On the Kingston Waterfront stands the Workers Monument, overlooking the harbour like a silent guardian of Jamaica’s labour legacy. It is no coincidence that this monument rests near the docks where generations of workers carried the weight of the nation’s economy on their shoulders. The harbour became one of the great theatres of the 1938 labour uprising, a defining chapter that changed Jamaica forever. While the rebellion erupted in the cane fields of Frome, its momentum was strengthened by the courage of dockworkers and labourers in Kingston who demanded fair wages, justice, and human rights.
Further west, in the historic heart of Montego Bay, Sam Sharpe Square reminds us of an even earlier fire. Long before the labour movement of 1938, National Hero Samuel Sharpe stood against slavery with a Bible in his hand and freedom in his heart. Executed in May 1832 for leading the Christmas Rebellion, Sharpe proved that faith and human dignity could never be permanently chained. His vision became the blueprint for generations of Jamaicans who later fought for workers’ rights and self-determination.
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