Monday, July 31, 2017

Embracing My Maroon Family History

Thesis: Understanding one’s family history is very important in helping to shape one’s character and personal growth and development.

In this blog,  I will discuss  my family history. My family history is very important to me because it helped me to understand who I am and to embrace my strengths and weaknesses.  Understanding one’s family history is very important in helping to shape one’s character and personal growth and development .  When I was growing up, my grandmother told me that our family were descendants of a great Jamaican leader. The leader was a woman called Nanny of the Maroons.  Nanny was the first woman in History to cause the British to sign a peace treaty with slaves in Jamaica. Nanny was one of the leaders of the Maroons who were runaway slaves. Nanny was also from the Ashanti warrior tribe of Ghana. Today in Jamaica, Nanny is recognized  as a National Hero of Jamaica and her portrait  has been used on Jamaican currency.
The maroons were a group of rebel slaves. They ran away from the plantations and formed their own government in the hills of Jamaica. The territory they occupied was dangerous. The area is known today as the cockpit country. This land  is made up of sharp limestone rocks. They understood the hills and were able to successfully evade the British. They understood how to survive on the land , to find food and water, something that was mind boggling to the British at that time. Many british soldiers who tried to capture the maroons died while doing so because they did not understand the terrain of the land and some starved because they were unable to find food and water. After  starving and having a hard time to survive, they were forced to sign a peace treaty with the Maroons . This was a result of Nanny’s leadership. This Treaty was signed in the year     .   The treaty  would allow the Maroons to live in peace and keep their own government and in return, the Maroons would teach  the British how to survive in this land and how to find food and water.
At the time when my Grandmother told me this important part of my history, that I was a descendant of Nanny, I did not understand the importance. Now that she has passed away, I wish I had gotten the chance to be around her more, to learn more of my family history. In the community known as Maroon Town, St James,  my Grandmother was very well known. She moved from her community in Portland, to Maroon Town St. James when she was young. She was six (6) feet tall and was a  very beautiful and confident woman. She was very strong physically. She was also known to fight any man that tried to challenge her. She was  however well liked by her community and a very generous person. She had six (6) children, of which my father was the last, and she also took care of many other children who did not belong to her. She lived to be one hundred (100) years old. Up until about age 92, she was still very active, she would walk down to the town center, she still had some of her own teeth, her skin was very nice, she had a sharp memory, she loved to talk. She looked thirty years younger than her real age. After age ninety two (92) however, her brain started to degenerate and she eventually succumbed to alzheimer’s disease. 
I  feel very proud whenever I think of my Grandmother and also my Ancestor, nanny of the Maroons.  I have learnt to understand more about myself, my behavior and my life goals. I am very community centered. I take great pride in being involved in community activities, volunteering and giving back to the community. My ambition is to use my abilities and skills to become a community activist and philanthropist like Oprah Winfrey whose  life and work  is a great inspiration to me. Understanding my family history has also helped me to understand my personal traits, for example, I am very competitive, I always take on leadership roles in various clubs and organizations, I am very ambitious and sometimes have huge surges of confidence to do things that most people would shy away from. Sometimes I look back at my achievements and wonder where the confidence comes from.

In conclusion, understanding my family history has been  very important for me. It has helped me to recognize my strengths and weaknesses, it has helped me to appreciate my family heritage more and understand their behavior, it has given me pride and confidence that has helped me to cope in times when I feel low. I am proud of the history of the Maroons, my ancestor known as Nanny and all that she did to help to fight for the freedom of  slaves. It has given me hope for the future, to one day use my abilities to make a lasting positive impact on my community. I have been able to research more about the Jamaican maroon tribe and their contribution to the Jamaican society, appreciate my grandmother’s  role in her community. Understanding one’s family history is very important in helping to shape one’s character and personal growth and development.