ELLIE MANNETTE – JOURNEY TO ROOTS
By Terry Joseph
Section 2
October 29, 2000
Page 4
Overwhelmed by the reception from the very people he once felt had
rebuked him, tears flowed from visiting pan pioneer and innovator Ellie
Mannette as he journeyed back to his roots this past week.
Mannette’s
visit, the first since he emigrated some 33 years ago to the US, healed decades
of disenchantment with his birthplace, occasioned largely by the disdain in
which authorities held the instrument up to that time. The final nail was driven by a 1967
newspaper article severely critical of his decision to leave.
During
the long interim, it had generally been believed that Mannette suffered from
nothing more significant than fear of flying.
“It was not that at all,” he told the Sunday Express. “There was a view that I was selling my
birthright, by going to another place to teach pan. The article even said that I was selling it for 30 pieces of
silver, putting me I the class of Judas Iscariot.
“I
wanted to spread the pan. I wanted to
get pan into the schools and the authorities here we not about to allow that,”
he said. “The opportunities were not
like they are now and I went to the US when I had the chance and as the records
will show, I was afforded the opportunity to do what I wanted to do for pan all
the while.”
“But
all is forgiven,’ Mannette said. “I
have washed that from my mind and we re all operating with a clean slate. There was also the physical kind of violence
of the old days that helped me make up my mind to leave. In fact, the experiment with the 55-gallon
drum was the result of aggression.”
It
was, in fact, the search for an alternative to the smaller 35-gallon variety,
after an instrument he cherished was hijacked by a rival group and taken to the
dreaded East Dry River area, with descriptions of the fate likely to befall
him, if he attempted to reclaim it.
“It
was that kind of senseless and reckless violence that gave pan the serious
stigma that is apparently still keeping away people who are in a position to
help the instrument,” Mannette said.
“What I would like to ask today, though, is that the people of Trinidad
and Tobago stop punishing the young boys of today for what we did in our youth.”
“We
were the ones who were reckless. The
young people who are playing pan today are serious about the music and about
the instrument. They are not into
fighting for fighting sake and the instrument should not be made to continue
paying for our mistakes. It is now an
instrument of integrity and stands up in the world. It is for Trinidad and Tobago to realise that at all levels and
begin to do the things to make it go further forward.”
It
was a philosophy he frequently repeated at all speaking opportunities during
what has been an emotionally charged and physically demanding visit for the
74-year-old Mannette. The whirlwind
week included meetings with pan researchers, Government officials, talk-show
appearances and two nostalgic trips to the yard of the steelband he helped
found in 1940, now known as the BWIA Invaders Steel Orchestra.
He
was yesterday due to receive an Honorary Doctorate from the University of the
West Indies (UWI) St Augustine Campus.
His
arrival October 20, was treated as a state function. The following Sunday, he was feted at the home of Dr Clemont
Imbert, university lecturer in engineering and long-standing pan researcher,
who has worked with him on several projects.
Mannette
met with government officials up to Friday evening at the Ambassador Hotel,
thrashing out details of an exchange programme. “Actually, I met with the Culture Ministry three times during the
week and I must say that the people there are now prepared to look at pan very
differently. The Minister is ready to
go with a number of things that can help the steelband movement.”
“The
meetings with the university have been very fruitful as well. We laid the groundwork for a continuing
collaborative exchange. People from WVU
and UWI drew up an outline of some of the things we want to do.”
From
this point on, we will take it back and forth and it will begin to grow. We are quite certain that the enthusiasm we
felt there would make it happen in the shortest possible time,” he said.
“All
in all, my time here has been spent in a very productive way and with the kind
of reception that our discussions enjoyed, I can tell you that I will be back
soon and indeed very often,” he said.