
________________________________________________________________________________________________
TWENTY-EIGHT YEARS AFTER DR. WILLIAMS’ DEATH,
THE ERIC WILLIAMS MEMORIAL COLLECTION
CELEBRATES ITS 11TH ANNIVERSAY
"Thank you very much for treasuring what is really ours."
Kimberley Correia, Trinidad & Tobago student
Media Contact
Erica
Williams Connell
305-905-9999
ewc.suilan@juno.com
PORT OF SPAIN, TRINIDAD (March 17, 2008)
—
March 22, 2009 will usher in the eleventh anniversary of the inauguration of The
Eric Williams Memorial Collection (EWMC) at The University of the West Indies in
Trinidad and Tobago, by US Secretary of State, Colin L. Powell. Dr. Williams, the country’s first Prime
Minister who died in office on March 29, 1981, was heralded by Mr. Powell:
“No one was a greater fighter for justice and equality.
No one was a greater leader.”
More recently in 2007,
Williams was honoured as scholar, politician and international statesman and
conferred posthumously with
The Collection consists of Williams’ Research Library, Archives and Museum. In 1999, it was named to UNESCO’s prestigious Memory of the World Register. At the time, the documentary heritage of only 47 other countries had been so designated. Available for consultation by researchers, the Collection amply reflects its owner’s eclectic interests, comprising some 7,000 volumes, as well as correspondence, speeches, manuscripts, historical writings, research notes, conference documents and a miscellany of reports. A Museum — containing a wealth of emotive memorabilia of the period; copies of the seven translations of Williams’ seminal work, Capitalism and Slavery (Russian, Chinese and Japanese among them) — Korean, Hindi and Urdu translations are in process; as well as photographs depicting various aspects of his life and contribution to the development of Trinidad and Tobago — completes this extraordinarily rich archive, as does a three-dimensional re-creation of Dr. Williams’ study.
Dr. Anthony
Bryan, Professor Emeritus,
In addition to its physical repository of
materials, the Eric Williams Memorial Collection has initiated a biennial Essay
Competition encompassing 155 schools in 17 Caribbean countries; instituted the
first Caribbean Examinations Council CAPE Prize in History; organized an annual
Lectureship at Florida International University (now in its eleventh consecutive
year), in addition to collaborating with the Mayor of London in his 2007 Slave
Trade Bicentenary Lecture Series, dedicated to Williams; partnered with the
University of Sheffield (UK) in an annual one-day seminar for Caribbean Masters
and Doctoral students; made inroads into Miami-Dade’s (US) student population of
some 414,128 with the inclusion of
Eric Williams in the County’s State-mandated African American curriculum;
sponsored four international conferences on Williams - as well as numerous
conference panels
— with many of their proceedings published; lectured to
interested groups and students about Williams and the Collection; received
multiple awards and recognition for its efforts; introduced an Oral History
Project which includes well over 150 calypsoes either sung about Williams or
mentioning his name
— calypso in the Caribbean being the art of social
commentary; facilitated encyclopedic entries on Williams; and actively promoted
the re-publication of Williams’ books
— many of them translations long out of
print. Several international book launches have been arranged by the EWMC, and
the
All of these
efforts have been amply promoted in the local, regional and international media
— from
Thus, with all
of its other endeavours, the EWMC is a model for the
Guests of the
EWMC Museum continue to be inspired by their experience, as were the
Vice President of India; the Prime Minister and
former Prime Ministers of St. Vincent/Grenadines
and Jamaica
respectively; former Mayor of New York City Rudolph Giuliani
and two Nobel Laureates in Economics,
Amartya Sen and Harry Markowitz.
Thousands of
“A must
come-after-school place!” Kendall
“It makes
me proud to be a Trinidadian.”
Amanda
“Illuminating!
A testament to a great life.” Professor David Trotman,
“What we research, is what we teach, is how we can give back.”
Professor Jane Brown,
- EWMC -