A welcoming West Indian tradition

Emma Midgley
A PLACE to display souvenirs, read the bible or socialise with friends: For many West Indians in the 60s and 70s, their front room was a precious space.
A typical West Indian front room was on display in the town of Reading, southeast England during Black History Month celebrations in the UK.
The exhibition showed how important a single room in the house could be to the Caribbean community.
The front room became a place in which the family’s most treasured possessions were kept.

‘Best’ furniture
It included the most advanced hi-fi, the family radio, the ‘best’ furniture, which was not to be used except on special occasions, and treasured photographs and art work.
Sunday rituals would revolve around the room, which was only entered when visitors came by to listen to music and admire the room’s focal point of the mantelpiece and a cabinet containing prized objects.
The replica of a typical front room of the 60s and 70s was created by the West Indian Women’s Circle in the Asantewa House in Fobney Street, Reading.
Speaking to BBC Radio Berkshire’s Louise Chandler as she looked around the exhibition, Sherwin Springer, a volunteer from the West Indian women’s circle said the room evoked many memories.
“This is a 674 Murphy radio,” she said: “These radios had medium wave and long wave in those days.
“There was Jim Reeves and Glenn Miller, or West Indian music.
“At home, this was the radio they used to listen to on Sundays.
“The radiogram; that was something the dad operated.
“Ours had a glass bit where the records were stored; it was kept spick and span.
“This radio, I think, is more than 60 years old.”

Visitors only

The room also featured the home’s best furniture, often covered in plastic to keep it good as new.
“We didn’t have the plastic on ours,” said Sherwin. “You would have the beautiful cushions you didn’t use to sit on. Even now, I have cushions and I tell people: ‘don’t sit on the cushions!’
“In those days, the sofa cost quite a lot of money. The only time we got to go in there was when visitors came.”
The focal piece of the West Indian living room was the mantelpiece, often decorated with a mirror and photographs.
Sherwin said: “The rest of the house was the place that you lived in.
“The front room was a very special room where our parents had all their memories.
“A lot of people had left their families behind to come to this country.

Precious memories

“To go in that room, where they maybe had a picture of their mum or their dad, or even their siblings they had left behind, was very precious.
“In those days, photos were very scarce, so to have photographs cost quite a lot of money.
“It was about keeping the family together.”
Sherwin said: “I asked people what they remembered about the front room.
“People said things like ‘What I remember about the front room is how we had to clean it; we never had the chance to sit in it.’
“Other people said they went in it to read their bible.
“You couldn’t eat in the front room; it had all the best china, all the wedding photographs.
“It was just a special room in the house.”  (BBC News)


UK pledges aid to fight Haiti cholera epidemic

BRITAIN IS to fund more than 1,000 medical staff to set up treatment centres for victims of Haiti’s worsening cholera epidemic.
Ministers confirmed the UK would pay for 115 doctors, 920 nurses and 740 support staff from the region, as well as emergency supplies.
The announcement comes after the UN warned 400,000 people could be infected by the disease in the next six months.
Cholera has killed 1,400 people since January’s devastating earthquake.

‘Crucial relief’

Around 220,000 were killed in the aftermath of the magnitude seven ‘quake’, and more than a million survivors moved into temporary camps in the capital, Port-au-Prince.
International Development Secretary, Andrew Mitchell said the aid would help prevent the disease spreading across the region, bringing “crucial relief.”
“Despite considerable pledges of support to help Haiti, there are still dangerous gaps in the provision of emergency medical supplies, and a desperate shortage of trained medical staff, especially in the northern part of the country,” he said.
“It is clear much more needs to be done. Analysis from the UN and our own field team reveals that the response needs to be significantly increased if we are to save thousands from the disease.
“We must stop the disease spreading further, and trained medical teams and equipment funded by the British taxpayer will bring crucial relief to the devastated country.”
The medical staff will set up 12 major cholera treatment centres, and 60 subsidiary treatment units, capable of treating several thousand patients over the next two months.
Beyond Port-au-Prince, Haiti is suffering from a chronic lack of decent water, sanitation and medical supplies.
Cholera causes acute diarrhoea, and can be fatal if left untreated. (BBC News)

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