Inspired by the Walter Rodney’s How Europe Underdeveloped Africa, Beckles traces British exploitation and plunder of the Caribbean. From slavery, indentureship, and the continued economic plantation model, Beckles shows how Britain sustained a racist wealth-extraction colonial system in the Caribbean. He also documents the resistance of the colonized, from slavery to 1930s worker rebellions. Police, a tool of white supremacy, brutally repressed the masses. Yet the uprisings in the 1930s against the empire played a major role in dismantling the system. Beckles declares, “The West Indies, where the mighty empire began, had signaled to the world that a small axe could fell the mightiest tree. The British government was determined, with cloak-and-dagger diplomacy, to punish them for their audacity.” This punishment would come in the form of Britain halting social and economic advancement strategies in the region and denying its debt.
I recommend this book for its historical analysis because I believe looking to the past will help us address our current issues. Beckles is asking the right questions. I am just not satisfied with his reparation response. While I agree with Beckles highlighting Britain’s debt to the Caribbean, I don’t believe “only a reparation response can resolve this crisis.” Unlike Walter Rodney, Beckles does not address the capitalism system. We need more than capital funding, we need systemic change. We need a revolution. As Fanon says, we also need the European masses to “wake up” and pursue freedom and justice for all.