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Friday, August 15, 2025

Rum talk: A diary of the trauma of Caroni

by

20150401

Last Sat­ur­day a new nov­el­ist joined the ranks of Trinida­di­an au­thor­ship. Sel­wyn Bha­jan launched his new book Rum Talk: Di­ary of an Hon­orary Drunk­ard at the The Big Black Box in Woo­brook, to a full house.

Bha­jan's nov­el is sit­u­at­ed in the heart of a wrecked com­mu­ni­ty that suf­fered the clos­ing of Ca­roni 1975 Ltd.

"I was the Hu­man Re­sources man­ag­er so I knew the com­mu­ni­ty very well," Bha­jan said. "When they shut down Ca­roni, they put 10,000 work­ers on the bread­line. The change was trau­mat­ic. I knew the same fel­las out­side the rum shop. I knew their sto­ries be­cause they would come to me be­cause of my own na­ture; they would come home and talk. I al­so went to the rum shop with them and chron­i­cled what they were say­ing."

Bha­jan ex­plained that at that time, Ca­roni 1975 Ltd was al­so was tak­ing care of the drains, ravines, roads and play­grounds and that when the fac­to­ry shut down, those ser­vices were re­scind­ed and put on­to the re­gion­al cor­po­ra­tion which did not have the ca­pac­i­ty to shoul­der such re­spon­si­bil­i­ties.

"While there are 10,000 em­ploy­ees on the HR man­u­al, these fam­i­lies had about ten to 15 peo­ple in them so the change af­fect­ed 150,000 peo­ple in one shot," he said. Then all of the par­lours and rum shops and the gro­ceries and the trans­porta­tion and every­thing had just gone in­to a kind of trau­ma. But no­body saw that. Gen­er­al­ly, that group of peo­ple is a re­silient, qui­et group of peo­ple. They take their licks and they plant their dasheen and baigan so they nev­er starve but they can't find work be­cause they worked in the sug­ar in­dus­try all their lives. Now they sud­den­ly have to reengi­neer and re­script their lives. They are bright and they know more about the en­gines in the fac­to­ries than the en­gi­neers who came out of UWI but they have no pa­pers so what kind of jobs will they get?

"You have to re­mem­ber that this is where we came out of; plan­ta­tion," he said. "This is­land was not born out of oil; we came out of sug­ar and the plan­ta­tion. There is so much with­in the com­mu­ni­ty of sug­ar work­ers who came from places like Baster Hall, Dow Vil­lage and Cou­va."

Rum Talk, pub­lished by Lis­sel Pub­li­ca­tions, was writ­ten in the span of six months in the lat­ter half of 2006.

The sub­ti­tle of the book, Di­ary of an Hon­orary Drunk­ard in­fers the style and mer­its of the writer. The nov­el is writ­ten in di­ary en­tries, com­plete with a hand­writ­ing font.

"The rum shop is like a silent­ly breath­ing, liv­ing be­ing. It lis­tens, hears, re­mem­bers, re­minds and ac­tu­al­ly pro­vides a com­fort­ing em­brace to tired, bur­dened and lone­ly hu­mans."

"The rea­son I chose a rum shop is a sim­ple one," said Bha­jan, who still re­sides on the Ca­roni com­pound.

"If I wrote a book that was po­lit­i­cal I would get in­to trou­ble in this coun­try. If I wrote the nov­el as a so­ci­o­log­i­cal work, then it's aca­d­e­m­ic and you can't tell the truth. The aca­d­e­m­ic lan­guage will cov­er the truth about the feel­ings. There is a line on page sev­en­ty that says, "But you will have to learn to lis­ten with your heart."

That is the sto­ry of that book, lis­ten­ing to the peo­ple with a heart, not judg­ing them but lis­ten­ing to them."

"The main thing is that it is chron­i­cled," he said. "It didn't dis­ap­pear. Many work­ers and their fam­i­lies sim­ply fad­ed and dis­ap­peared home be­cause where would they go? In Trinidad, usu­al­ly some­thing lasts nine days (in the head­lines) and it's gone. Now, this is chron­i­cled."

Bha­jan not­ed that the suf­fer­ing of those peo­ple is a scar that will stay with them.

"I was very af­fect­ed that the rest of the coun­try did not raise their voice," he said. "The tragedy with his now is that be­cause the com­pa­ny did not take the time to work with the com­mu­ni­ty for their own trans­for­ma­tion, their chil­dren saw what hap­pened to their par­ents and they keep in mind that mind that a group of peo­ple hurt their an­ces­try and a hos­til­i­ty per­pet­u­ates a very re­al di­vi­sion in so­ci­ety.

At the launch, vet­er­an ac­tors David Sam­my and Wen­dell Man­war­ren of 3Canal did read­ings. Sam­my and Bha­jan were ac­tu­al­ly school­mates in Na­pari­ma Col­lege. Their vice prin­ci­pal at the time, Dr James Lee Wah, was in at­ten­dance and re­ceived a to­ken of ap­pre­ci­a­tion from Bha­jan.

"I knew Sam­my for a long time as a lit­tle boy grow­ing up in Na­pari­ma Col­lege and Mr Lee Wah was our dra­ma and lit­er­a­ture teacher," Bha­jan said. "Mr Lee Wah was in­spi­ra­tional to this work."

"Mr Lee Wah was Vice Prin­ci­pal of the school at the time so he has in­flu­enced all of us," Sam­my com­ment­ed. "I am an ac­tor and that came out of our ex­pe­ri­ences at Na­pari­ma Col­lege. We used to have a lot of in­ter­class dra­ma, just for any­body who want­ed to strut on stage and then Na­pari­ma Bowl was next to us, so we would have in­ter­class dra­ma and we would have it in Na­pari­ma Bowl.

It was a group of crazy fel­las that James Lee Wah gave some vi­sion to, peo­ple like Ralph Ma­haraj, Tony Hall and Spran­galang."

Dr Lee Wah said that he was hap­py to see the boys go so far.

"I don't know how much in­flu­ence I had but I am hap­py to see them pro­duc­ing, writ­ing," he said. " It's very good. I am proud."

He al­so com­mend­ed Bha­jan on his nov­el.

"It is won­der­ful," he said. "I am so glad that you ex­plained the sit­u­a­tion and I hope that we don't have this kind of thing hap­pen­ing again in any com­mu­ni­ty."

Be­sides be­ing a po­et and nov­el­ist, Bha­jan is al­so and hu­man de­vel­op­ment spe­cial­ist who owns the ter­tiary ed­u­ca­tion fa­cil­i­ty, AHA, Ad­vanced Hu­man De­vel­op­ment As­so­ciates, which fo­cus­es on de­vel­op­ment based learn­ing.

Bha­jan's sup­port team in­clud­ed his wife Lisa and daugh­ters Tara and Shana. Gayle Ques­nel-Sal­loum al­so was piv­otal in or­ga­niz­ing the event.

So­phie Wight and David Mc­Cart­ney host­ed the func­tion and Sol­man pro­vid­ed mu­si­cal en­ter­tain­ment.

�2 Copies of Rum Talk: Di­ary of an Hon­orary Drunk­ard are avail­able at lead­ing book­shops through­out the coun­try.


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