WASHINGTON, DC – The contribution of members of the Caribbean diaspora to the United States will be highlighted as part of Black History Month, with the son of Jamaica’s national hero, Marcus Garvey, Dr. Julius Garvey – set to give the  keynote address at a Black History Month forum on February 28.

The forum will be hosted by The Jamaican Nationals Association (JNA) of the Washington, DC Metropolitan Area, headed by  President Dr. Elaine Knight and Vice President Rev. Dr. Noel Godfrey.

The forum which will be held by way of a  Zoom teleconference, beginning at 4:00 p.m., is being staged against the background that Caribbean nationals have influenced every facet of American society for generations.

Elaine Knight 400
President of the Jamaican Nationals Association of Washington DC. Dr. Elaine Knight

Their contributions include the performing and visual arts; music  with the contribution of reggae and rap which has its roots in Jamaica; popular culture; science, medicine, business, politics, and the culinary arts.

Worthy of note as well, without the success of the Haitian Revolution, the Louisiana Purchase of 1803, by which the United States doubled its landmass, may not have been consummated.

Jamaica’s ambassador to the United States, Audrey Marks will  deliver remarks. while, Dr. Karren Dunkley, Jamaica Diaspora Northeast USA Representative, will moderate the forum.

This event will recognize and raise awareness about the role Caribbean nationals have played in the history and development of the United States. According to the U.S. Census Bureau’s 2017 American Community Survey, the Caribbean diaspora is well-educated and an affluent demographic numbering close to 8 million people.

Commenting on essential contributions that the Caribbean Diaspora has made, Dr. Garvey, himself a surgeon, medical professor and activist, notes that his father “is considered one of the major pillars of the pan-African movement. He laid a foundation of African philosophy and organized the largest global organization of African peoples.”

Dr. Garvey, a recipient of Jamaica’s the Order of Jamaica (O.J.) – also announced that a bust of his world-famous father has been commissioned and will be installed at the African Union headquarters in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, on the anniversary of the elder Garvey’s 134th birthday – August 17, 2021. The Marcus Garvey Institute, Pan-African Technical Association Whirlwind Group, and National Association of Kawaida Organizations are serving as the committee overseeing this project.

The Caribbean-American Political Action Committee (C-PAC), Jamaican Association of Maryland (JAM), and the Montgomery County Executive’s Caribbean American Advisory Group will also collaborate with JNA on this critical forum.

Jamaican Nationals Association, Inc. (JNA)

A non-profit organization, the Jamaican Nationals Association, Inc. (JNA) has been in operation for more than 50 years. Its mission is to unite persons of Jamaican heritage and friends of Jamaica to maintain and promote Jamaican culture and heritage and provide educational and charitable support to persons of Jamaican heritage in the Washington, DC Metropolitan Area, other US-Jamaican communities, and in Jamaica.

The Jamaica Diaspora Northeast USA, Global Jamaica Diaspora Council, endorses the “Contributions of the Caribbean Diaspora to America” event.

The Jamaican Nationals Association, Inc. (JNA) has been in operation for more than 50 years. JNA is a non-profit organization whose mission is to unite persons of Jamaican heritage and friends of Jamaica to maintain and promote Jamaican culture and heritage and provide educational and charitable support to persons of Jamaican heritage in the Washington, DC Metropolitan Area, other US-Jamaican communities, and in Jamaica.