Tuesday, July 22, 2025

Summer vacation

I recently visited St Kitts & Nevis. It was interesting on so many levels - beyond just enjoying beaches in the West Indies. 

First, and foremost, Nevis is where Alexander Hamilton was born.  We did a brief tour, and his life there was a little complicated. His father was a wealthy plantation owner, who was married, and Alexander was born to a woman who many believe was a prostitute. 

In any case, he was a bastard raised in Charlestown.  He couldn't attend school because of that fact, and was tutored by a Jewish woman (there was a decent sized Jewish community there!).  Of course, he saw slavery first hand, and that was pointed out as an influence on his life. After his mother died at age 9, he left for NY.  It's really interesting how connected these islands are to the Americas. 

Second is about this being Charlestown. As it happens, the first colonists who made it to the Americas in the 1600s landed on the island, reprovisioned their ship, and continued on their voyage, eventually settling in Massachusetts. But because they found the island, and its land was fertile, it became a stopping point for the explorers, and at some point, they founded Charlestown and of course the British "defended themselves" against the native population. By exterminating them. 

The slave trade was big business. Nearly all of the slaves that made it to the colonies came through the West Indies. They were auctioned off in public squares, and sometimes made to work on the islands for the cash crops (sugar cane most notably) that were grown on the island. The current inhabitants of St Kitts & Nevis (like most islands here) are descendants of the enslaved. They are well educated and know the history of their islands. Even if - because it was once a British colony - they are not specifically taught about slavery and the Christopher Columbus story is prominent. It's weirdly ironic. And of course, the West Indies abolished slavery by law, 30 years before the United States became disunited and engaged in the civil war. 

St Kitts & Nevis rely heavily on tourism. It's the main industry today. Even though the temperature remains fairly consistent during the year, tourism is very seasonal with more people visiting during the winter months. So it's a struggle during the summer months for a lot of people, with limited income during the offseason. And, interestingly, it's taken them a lot of time to recover from COVID as well. A year of lost business means some things that used to be available simply aren't any more. 

And finally, a note about climate change. They say that "the poor" are affected first. And while these islands are not poor, per se, they don't have the same affluence as we have in the United States. And they see things first. There's a huge problem of sea level rise. There are downstream impacts from pollution. The weather is less predictable in some ways. And there are few answers. 

You can learn an amazing amount by visiting a place and paying attention to the reality that's around you, rather than just ignoring it and sitting on the beach.

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