On the 50th anniversary of the 1970 Black Power Revolution, several afro Trinidadian groups remembered the day by revisiting buildings in the capital where protesters back then gathered.
On the 50th anniversary of the 1970 Black Power Revolution, several afro Trinidadian groups remembered the day by revisiting buildings in the capital where protesters back then gathered.
This is what Carnival in Trinidad is not: a big party. A parade. A festival. A chance to get drunk in the streets, wear barely-there costumes and dance until the blisters on your feet grow blisters of their own.
Fifty years ago, thousands of people took to the streets in 55 days of demonstration that would be known as the Black Power Revolution, led by Chief Servant Makandal Daaga (then Geddes Granger) of the National Joint Action Committee (NJAC).
Olympic medallist Usain Bolt has once again touched down for Trinidad and Tobago Carnival.
THE PANLAND steelpan manufacturing company rests inconspicuously among other commercial buildings on the Eastern Main Road, Laventille. But behind those walls some of the country's greatest pan tuners have plied their trade and the steelpans produced have journeyed across the world.
“Hero: Inspired by The Extraordinary Life and Times of Ulric Cross” — a feature film about an amazing man’s connections with World War II, African independence, the Black Power movement and international activism — will be screened Tuesday in Los Angeles at the opening night of the Pan African Film and Arts Festival.