Welcome to Caribbean Net News                                Archives & Site Search:



Back To Today's News

US donates US$79,000 to church restoration in Bequia, St Vincent and the Grenadines

Published on Wednesday, October 28, 2009 Email To Friend    Print Version


Chargé d’Affaires D Brent Hardt joins Louise Mitchell Joseph and members of
St Mary’s outside the church after the service

BRIDGETOWN, Barbados -- The St Mary’s Anglican Church Restoration Trust on the island of Bequia, part of St Vincent and the Grenadines, has made significant progress in realizing its goal of restoring the historic place of worship with the help of the United States government.

On Sunday October 25, United States Chargé d’Affaires at the Embassy of the United States of America to Barbados and the Eastern Caribbean D Brent Hardt presented a grant to the Trust for US$79,000. The presentation took place right after a lively Sunday morning worship service.
The money will be used to replace the roof of the church, one of the most challenging aspects of the restoration work.

“I would like to congratulate the St Mary’s Restoration Committee and Trust for its foresight and dedication to this project. The Trust’s labor of love, which began back in 2008 when it applied to the US Embassy for support, is today bearing fruit,” Chargé Hardt told the packed congregation.

He added that as the United States Governments’ senior representative to this region he was “pleased and honored to make the presentation. “Occasions such as this reinforce what is at the heart of our diplomatic mission to this region -- the enduring ties between our people. It also shines a light on our shared values of respect for religious freedom, for democracy, and human rights. And, it allows us to celebrate the cultural diversity of our Hemisphere and the importance we both place on respecting and embracing the strands of history and culture that are woven together in the Caribbean and the United States.”

He said the Embassy welcomed the opportunity to partner with the St Mary’s Restoration Committee and Trust in restoring the historic treasure in Bequia for the enjoyment of people of Bequia as well as the many visitors to the island.

United States Chargé d’Affaires D Brent Hardt and his wife Sasha at Sunday’s Service
Chargé Hardt noted that the Ambassador’s Fund for Cultural Preservation, under which the grant was given, was an eight year initiative under which the United States Congress appropriated $3 million dollars each year to fund cultural preservation projects.

“The Eastern Caribbean is of course a region rich in cultural heritage, and so it is not surprising that a number of projects in this region -- and in St Vincent in particular -- have benefitted from such grants in recent years. In 2002 a grant of US$14,430 was made to St Vincent for a project which permitted the preservation, cataloging and display of pre-Columbian ceramics and petro glyphs. In 2006, a subsequent grant of US$14,950 was provided to create a storage space for these objects at the former Carnegie Library building in Kingstown. Ambassador’s Fund grants have also been made to restore the Old Mill Cultural Center in Dominica (US$29,445) as well as for the enhancement of the Duquesne Bay site in Grenada (US$10,000),” he noted.

Archdeacon Charles Adams in thanking the Chargé for the generous donation noted that “every household in Bequia is touched by the kindness of the United States of America.” He noted that the island was inextricable linked to the US with many citizens of Bequia serving in the many branches of the US military or studying at US institutions.

“This is a proud moment for me to say God Bless and guide the President of the United States of America and his family,” Archdeacon Adams declared.

Leading member of the St Mary’s Restoration Trust Louise Mitchell Joseph in thanking the US for the grant noted that when the committee applied for the grant they never imagined they would have received the amount they requested.

“With this grant you are allowing us to reclaim a piece of our history. Thanks to you and the hardworking people across America for making this gift possible,” she added.

St Mary’s Church, a principal place of worship on Bequia was constructed in 1829 by British settlers to the island. It replaced a much older structure which was destroyed by a hurricane.
 
Reads : 679