BANNEDTHOUGHT.NET

Suppression of News in and about Grenada,
and about its Revolutionary History


      Grenada is a small island country in the Caribbean, which was long a colony, first of France and then of Britain. Even since its nominal independence in 1974 it has still mostly been a neo-colony of British and American imperialism, except for a brief revolutionary independence period from 1979 to October 1983.

      On March 13, 1979, a revolutionary party called the New Jewel Movement (from an acronym), which was led by Maurice Bishop (1944-1983) and Bernard Coard (1945-  ), seized power from the autocratic comprador Prime Minister, Eric Gairy, who was out of the country at the time. This occurred in a bloodless coup d’état rather than in a mass insurrection. New Jewel and its leadership were largely inspired by the Cuban Revolution and its methods and policies; and its leaders had numerous past connections with Soviet-style revisionist parties. (Coard, for example had been a member of the CPUSA [in 1967], the CP of Great Britain, and a similar party in Jamaica.) But once in power they did attempt to make a number of progressive reforms in Grenadian society.

      However, after a few years, the contradictions within the New Jewel Movement itself became extreme. Maurice Bishop was going quite slow in the nationalization of industry and agriculture, which to the “more radical” wing of New Jewel was viewed as identical to going slow in the transformation of society into socialism. Bishop also had the dubious idea that promoting Grenada as a tourist haven for rich Americans and Europeans was a major part of the solution to the country’s economic problems. But doing so required building a very expensive international airport; not offending the U.S. too much with its economics and international alignments; and maintaining a “mixed economy”, part capitalist, part “socialist” (or state capitalist?); and so forth. This slow pace of nationalization, and these other compromises, so offended Coard and the new “People’s Revolutionary Army” which had been set up following the revolution, that they felt Bishop had to go. So the “radicals” staged their own coup, deposed Bishop and put him under house arrest.

      However, Bishop had widespread public support, so his arrest led to large street demonstrations, one of which freed him from house arrest. But the Army, after some further conflict and chaos, re-captured Bishop and executed him and seven associates.

      All this internal conflict gave the U.S. imperialists the opening they needed to militarily invade Grenada a few days later (October 25, 1983) and oust the New Jewel Movement completely. The U.S. then re-established a comprador regime in Grenada.

      A few of the documents below have been copied from the Marxist Internet Archive (MIA) at: https://www.marxists.org/history/grenada/index.htm Additional documents, in HTML format, can be found there. The versions we have copied here have been transformed into PDF files.

      If you know of other suppressed or hard to find documents, news reports or international commentary about Grenada that should be posted here, contact us at: freespeech@bannedthought.net





The Suppression of Free Speech and Democratic Rights in Grenada


Documents of the New Jewel Movement


Documents of the People’s Revolutionary Government of Grenada (1979-1983)


Maurice Bishop: Writings


The Burning Spear (and associated organizations)


U.S. Government Documents (Including Grenada documents seized during the U.S. invasion)





— NOTICE —

      Due to the repressive legislation and judicial decisions in the United States, we at BANNEDTHOUGHT.NET want to make it completely clear that we do not have any connection whatsoever with any political parties or organizations in Grenada, or in any other country for that matter. We do not aid, promote, assist, support, coordinate with, or provide any sort of services or advice to any party or organization in Grenada, nor to any of the other parties and organizations from other countries whose documents may be posted on this page. However, we do support the right of free speech, and the right of the people in both Grenada and internationally to read the views and publications of these and all other parties and organizations. And for this reason alone we are making copies of many of their documents available on this site.




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