
 
        
         
		Caribbean pols join in tribute to veterans 
 Assembly Member Rodneyse Bichotte. 
   Offi ce of Assemblywoman Rodneyse  
 Bichotte 
 A salute to Guyanese World War I veteran 
 Caribbean Life, November 13-19, 2020 3  
 By Tangerine Clarke 
 Guyanese journalist and legendary  
 playwright,  Francis  Quamina  Farrier, 
  never described as a historian, but  
 deserving of the title, in his recent  
 Veterans  Day  article,  recalled  meeting  
 and interviewing Gershom Onesimus  
 Browne, the last surviving Guyanese  
 veteran and hero of World War I. 
   According to the prolific veteran  
 writer, Gershom Browne, who lived in  
 rural Bagotsville, enlisted for the military  
 before reaching the mandatory age  
 of 18. He was born in 1898, and died at  
 the age of 102 in 2000. 
 The army veteran who lived across  
 three centuries, according to Farrier,  
 who interviewed him on a number of  
 occasions — told of his tour of duty in  
 World War I, where he served in North  
 Africa and Palestine. 
 Gersham was one of many young  
 men from British Guiana who volunteered  
 and served in the war where 16  
 million men, women and children were  
 killed globally. 
 “I had the opportunity to interview  
 three Guyanese veterans of the First  
 World War when they were in their 90s  
 said Farrier, who stayed in touch with  
 Gershom “because he was more accessible  
 than the other two veterans.” 
 “I visited with him from time to time.  
 I  also  interacted  with  him  on most  of  
 his many visits to Georgetown. When  
 World War I started, he was officially  
 too young to enlist at age 17, but Gershom  
 was so eager to go to war for King  
 and country that he forged his age as 18  
 and was accepted.” 
 “I did not let my mother know that  
 I was going to volunteer, because she  
 would have stopped me,” he admitted  
 to Farrier, adding, “he traveled from his  
 Bagotville home to Georgetown, excited  
 about going to far-away lands.” 
 “He also spoke of an English woman  
 based in Georgetown whose job it was to  
 officially put out encouraging appeals  
 for young men to join the military and  
 to go overseas and defend Great Britain  
 from her enemies,” according to Farrier’s  
 interview. 
 Gershom was part of the British West  
 Indies Regiment, which was made up of  
 Guianese, Trinidadians and other volunteers  
 from the British West Indies. 
 “When his ship sailed from the Atlantic  
 Ocean into the Mediterranean Sea  
 and approached a port in North Africa,  
 they enlisted young men of the British  
 West Indian Regiment who experienced  
 a culture shock.” 
 “Gershom Browne who found himself  
 in many battle zones both in North  
 Africa and Palestine, spoke of some of  
 his comrades being killed. Fortunately,  
 he was never injured but he did put his  
 life on the line for his country and the  
 rest of the British Empire. At the end of  
 the war, he opted to return to his home  
 country. On his return after almost  
 three years in foreign lands, he got  
 down to being a productive citizen.” 
 He first worked in the hinterland,  
 but  his  inner  calling  to  agriculture  
 brought him back to his home village of  
 Bagotville. “My ancestors are from the  
 Loko tribe in Sierra Leone in Africa,”  
 he  told  Farrier  during  one  of  their  
 interviews. 
 “We are a people who excel in agriculture. 
  A man in the Loko tribe who  
 has a good knowledge of the ramifications  
 of agriculture is highly respected.”  
 He also told Farrier, that the Loko language  
 was spoken by some of the older  
 people  of  Bagotville  up  to  the  1950s,  
 according to the writer. 
 By Nelson A. King 
 Several Caribbean American legislators  
 on Wednesday joined the nation in  
 paying tribute to veterans on Veterans  
 Day. 
 “Happy Veterans Day to our city and  
 nation,” said New York City Public Advocate  
 Jumaane Williams, son of Grenadian  
 immigrants.  “As  the  pandemic  
 prevents  us  from  mass  gatherings  as  
 a show of support or appreciation, we  
 must be sure to convey our respect and  
 gratitude in our personal interactions  
 and, perhaps, most importantly, in our  
 policies. 
 “We do this not as a tacit approval  
 of war and violence but to pay homage  
 to those who answered their country’s  
 call  to  service; many of whom are disrespected  
 or abandoned by our government  
 when they return home,” he  
 added. 
 “Too many veterans see their service  
 met by a government not fulfilling their  
 end of the contract,” Williams continued. 
  “This is an injustice not confined  
 to any one party or administration, and  
 one we must correct moving forward as  
 we transition into new national leadership. 
 “I  stand  in  appreciation  of  all,  past  
 and present, who have chosen to serve  
 our nation in uniform, including within  
 my own family and staff,” he said. 
 Williams said Veterans Day takes its  
 origin from Armistice Day, born from a  
 celebration of peace. 
 “May we always work toward achieving  
 that peace at home and abroad!”  
 he said. 
 Brooklyn  Democratic  Party  chair,  
 Assemblywoman  Rodneyse  Bichotte,  
 the daughter of Haitian immigrants,  
 noted that there are over 50,000 veterans  
 in Brooklyn. 
 “They  selflessly  served  our  country  
 to protect our democracy, and we  
 must  continue  to  give  back  to  them  
 by  ensuring  that  veterans  have  robust  
 employment opportunities and access  
 to housing, health care and education,”  
 added the representative for the 42nd  
 Assembly District in Brooklyn. “I thank  
 every veteran for their service.” 
 New York City Councilwoman Farah  
 N. Louis, also the daughter of Haitian  
 immigrants, said: “We owe a debt of  
 gratitude to our former servicemembers  
 and their families who made tremendous  
 sacrifices to protect our freedoms. 
 “Without  their  contributions,  the  
 American Dream and spirit would cease  
 to exist,” said the representative for  
 the  45th Council District  in Brooklyn.  
 “Despite fulfilling their commitments  
 in the US or abroad, many veterans  
 continue to serve our community – particularly  
 during this pandemic. 
 “They are our first responders, nurses  
 and doctors, small business owners,  
 educators,  sanitation  and  transportation  
 workers,” Louis added. “Regardless  
 of  their  uniform,  it  is  their  courage,  
 strength and determination that are  
 admirable. 
 “After caring for our families, we must  
 also ensure that our veterans receive  
 the best care,” she continued, stating  
 that, through the City’s Department of  
 Veterans Affairs, “we are streamlining  
 access  to healthcare, housing, employment, 
  food, assistance with VA (Veteran  
 Administration) claims and benefits.” 
 Additionally, Louis said Mission: Vet- 
 Check is an initiative “that will help us  
 end social isolation by creating a veterans  
 support network. 
 “This is how we show our appreciation,” 
  she said. “District 45, the City and  
 State of New York would not be where  
 it is today without our distinguished  
 honorees – the valiant veterans. Thank  
 you for your service, both past and  
 present!” 
 For Brooklyn Borough President Eric  
 Adams, Veterans Day is “an important  
 moment to reflect on those who put  
 their lives on the line for our country,  
 some  of whom  have  paid  the  ultimate  
 sacrifice to preserve our freedoms. 
 “More  than  54,000  veterans  call  
 Brooklyn home, and so many of them  
 have continued to serve our communities  
 far beyond their military service, 
  including amid these challenging  
 times,” he said. 
 Adams said it is not enough to simply  
 thank our veterans. 
 “We must demonstrate, in tangible  
 ways, that we appreciate the magnitude  
 of their contributions,” he said. “That  
 includes  providing  them  with  excellent  
 health care, stable and affordable  
 housing, as well as high-quality opportunities  
 for employment and entrepreneurship. 
 “May this be a happy and meaningful  
 observance for veterans in our borough  
 and beyond, and may we all know peace  
 and prosperity in the year to come!”  
 Adams added. 
 Caribbean American New York City  
 Public Advocate Jumaane Williams.  
   Offi ce of Public Advocate Jumaane Williams 
 Gershom Onesimus Browne, World  
 War I veteran.   Gersham family