Skip to main content

The Lion Has Learned to Write!

                       




 Until the lion has learned to write, every story will glorify the hunter.   - An African Proverb









Photo showing Manchile at his book launch in Grand Bay






 Historian and author Mr. Harian Manchile Henry is a true son of the soil. He attended the Grand Bay Boys School and then moved to England, where he furthered his education. 


In 1982, he attended a lecture series by Mr. Yosef Benjamin Jochannan and Ivan Van Sertima. Two great men whose findings have had a tremendous impact on Black history.


Manchile has made considerable contributions to Dominican history. He has lectured in St. Lucia, St. Thomas, and Dominica. In 2020, he hosted a radio show on Liberty FM in St. Lucia. Mr. Henry firmly believes in passing on the knowledge of our past to younger generations to ensure posterity. Hence the reason he frequently visited schools such as the Pierre Charles Secondary School in Dominica.


In his recent contribution A Brief History of Grand Bay, he retells stories of origin, triumph, and tenacity of his people. 


Working with this gentleman has been one of the most notable moments in my career. His passion and zeal for our Black heritage are nothing short of contagious. I learned several lessons from this life teacher, and I have decided to cherish these gems forever.


Black Is Beautiful.


Regardless of what we learned about beauty and Blackness, they can co-exist. There is beauty in our coarse hair, in our skin, in the way we speak and tell our stories. There is beauty in our rebellion.


We Ought To Be Proud Of Our Heritage. 


There is no shame in where we come from as Black people. If anything, we should use it as inspiration. A people ripped from their homeland and brought across the Atlantic into slavery. Yet hundreds of years later, their descendants are making history and breaking every ceiling used to conceal their magnificence. 


Question The Stories They Tell Us. 


If history could speak, it would tell us that most of what we learned in school and society (about ourselves and our history) was not the truth. We have to find out the truth and pass them down. 

i.e. They Came Before Columbus is a must-read.


A Dream Deferred Is Not A Dream Denied. 


Mr. Henry tells the story of wanting to get published for years and having that dream denied. At one point, he wondered if he would ever see his dream come to fruition, but it did. 


Indeed the lion has learned to write, and I can not wait to hear what other stories he has to tell. 




                                            


To check out A Brief History of Grand Bay use the link below: 


https://www.blurb.com/b/10800769-a-brief-history-of-grandbay






Comments

  1. This book is such a page Turner....from beginning to end....
    Very refreshing....

    ReplyDelete
  2. It's about people like him we need to know and talk about. These books should be on shelves and read to our children, in helping us to preserve our blackness.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

We Are Moving!

Thank you.  This blog has served as a safe space; connecting me to readers all over the world for us since 2019. For that I am truly grateful.  I was first encouraged to start this blog by a friend who felt that that I had a lot to say. (It turned out she was right. Thank you, Lisa. ) This space has helped me to find my voice and my niche. It has been a blessing to witness to my evolution on here as well as learning the cathartic power of community.  It has been quite the journey. Thank you for walking with me. You have seen me through good times and hard times. You have witnessed the publication of two poetry collections. You have read about my heartbreaks, my life's work, my struggles and much more.  I am moving to Substack and I would love if you would come along.  If you wish to continue this journey with me, please use the link below.    Anella's Bits and Pieces Don't forget to hit the subscribe button so you can be the first to read future posts....

It Is Okay To Rest.

 Rest  Photo by Annie Spratt on Unsplash I recently rang a relative to wish her happy birthday and asked her what she planned to do for the day. She candidly replied, "Work. We are a hard-working family, remember?"  She was telling the truth. I grew up watching my family till the soil with their bare hands, after all "by the sweat our brow" we had to eat. There is nothing wrong with working hard to provide for yourself and others but at what cost? I decided a long time ago that would not be my narrative.  Balance  Photo by Karsten Winegeart on Unsplash  I know what it means to work yourself to the ground. I know what it means to grind and hustle. I know what it means to get caught up in the horrors and toxicity of capitalism. I had to watch my mother do it and, for a while, I inherited that culture.  But there is nothing wrong with laying it down and walking away to redefine productivity.  I know what it means to work myself to exhaustion but, I...

The Reasons Behind "Bonfire"

Several of my readers have been asking about my recently published collection of poetry "Bonfire". The story is quite fascinating, if I do say so myself. Had someone told me a few years ago I would have been published at age 26, I would not have believed them. Don't get me wrong, I have always considered myself to be a writer. But it was never a priority; I wrote only when I felt like it.  My most accomplished piece of writing would most definitely be my manuscript for my first novel. But it has yet to be published. The reason for this is because I was turned down by several publishers and I let that deter me. When I finally found a publisher, I was also asked to change the plot of my story because it was too controversial. I considered self-publishing but I was afraid of how it might be received.  I felt defeated and I felt like quitting on the novel altogether. But that was when "Bonfire" came to me like a candle in a dark room. The poems cam...