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NASSAU, BAHAMAS – Historians say in many ways, the Burma Road Riots on June 1st, 1942, ignited the movement toward majority rule.
Agitated labourers, demanding equal pay, regardless of colour or nationality, turned to violent protests.
It all began at the site we now know as Lynden Pindling International Airport.
The next major turning point came in January 1958, with the general strike, which later led to the Trade Union and Industrial Conciliation Act and the creation of the Labour Department.
Those strikes also fueled another movement, the fight for women’s suffrage.
In 1957, Mary Ingraham and other women stood in protest, demanding the right to vote – a movement that built bridges across political lines.
By 1961, legislation was passed, and women voted for the first time on November 26th, 1962.
And as social winds shifted, political change followed.
In 1953, the Progressive Liberal Party was founded, rooted in earlier struggles.
Fast forward to april 27th, 1965, another defining moment.
Sir Lynden Pindling, the father of our nation, threw the speaker’s mace out of the house of assembly window in protest against unfair constituency boundary revisions by the governing United Bahamian Party (UBP).
All these events set the stage for majority rule.
After decades of struggle by freedom fighters, the tipping point came on January 10th, 1967.
In a hard fought election, the PLP won 18 of 38 seats. It was quite enough to take the reins, but with support from Labour Party candidate Randol Fawkes and independent Alvin Braynen, Lynden Pindling formed the first cabinet and ushered in majority rule.
15 days later he gave this interview.
Six years later, Pindling and his PLP achieved what once seemed impossible, securing The Bahamas’ independence from Britain and bringing an end to 300 years of colonial rule.
Since that defining moment, the country has held 10 general elections, with majority black participation shaping our democracy.
This progress stands on the shoulders of countless Bahamian men and women who fought relentlessly to build the future we now call our own.