Top Ten Greatest Jamaicans – #9 William Knibb – Unacknowledged National Hero?
When the white English missionary William Knibb was posthumously awarded the Order of Merit in 1988, Devon Dick wrote
‘No other person of his era demonstrated such faith in the prowess of the black people.
For Knibb’s work as Liberator of the slaves;
For his work in laying the foundation of Nationhood;
For his support of black people and things indigenous;
For his display of great courage against tremendous odds;
For being an inspiration then and now.’
Knibb came to Jamaica in 1824 and grew into slavery’s most uncompromising enemy.
‘The cursed blast of slavery has, like a pestilence, withered almost every moral bloom. I know not how any person can feel a union with such a monster, such a child of hell. I feel a burning hatred against it and look upon it as one of the most odious monsters that ever disgraced the earth.’
He made enemies among slave owners, and was placed under armed guard during the 1831 Sam Sharpe Rebellion. The ‘Colonial Church Union’ burnt down his Falmouth chapel, plotted to murder him, and stoned his home. Under siege, the Baptists sent Knibb to Britain to report first hand the situation in Jamaica.
‘The anti-slavery feeling in Britain was not then widely diffused or intense. Knibb changed this by travelling six thousand miles in five months, attending 154 public services and addressing 200,000 people throughout Scotland, Ireland and England. No one else did a tenth of his work.’ [Dick]
The Baptist Missionary Society relied upon the goodwill of planters, and so did not openly support the emancipation movement, instructing missionaries not to interfere in civil affairs. Knibb’s speech at their public Annual Meeting on June 21, 1832 changed their stance.
‘I call upon children, by the cries of the infant slaves who I saw flogged… I call upon parents, by the blood streaming back of Catherine Williams , who… preferred a dungeon to the surrender of her honour. I call upon Christians by the lacerated back of William Black… whose back, a month after flogging, was not healed. I call upon you all, by the sympathies of Jesus’.
At this point, Mr Dyer, Secretary of the Society, pulled his tail coat by way of admonition. But Knibb continued:
‘Whatever may be the consequence, I will speak. At the risk of my connexion with the Society, and of all I hold dear, I will avow this… Lord, open the eyes of Christians in England, to see the evil of slavery and to banish it from the earth.’
There was thunderous applause, and Dyer himself proposed a public meeting as the next round in the struggle.
On August 15, 1832, in front of 3,000 Londoners, Knibb held up iron slave shackles and hurled them deafeningly to the floor:
‘All I ask is, that my African brother may stand in the same family of man; that my African sister shall, while she clasps her tender infant to her breast, be allowed to call it her own; that they both shall be allowed to bow their knees in prayer to that God who has made of one blood all nations as one flesh.’
Knibb’s unassailably authentic reports did more than any other source to convince Britons that slavery must be speedily abolished. Less than two years later, on August 1, 1834, it was theoretically terminated by Parliament. But slaves were supposed to endure a further six year ‘apprenticeship’ before gaining full freedom. Planters abused this provision, but the protests of Knibb and others prompted Parliament to bring forward full emancipation from to August 1, 1838.
In 1839, Knibb founded the weekly newspaper the Baptist Herald and Friend of Africa, giving freed slaves their own voice. He adopted James Phillipo’s ‘free village’ system, and helped raise money to purchase thousands of acres that enabled former slaves to own their own property. He also founded schools and organised teacher training.
On August 1, 1839 — 124 years before Martin Luther King’s ‘I have a dream’ speech — Knibb declared:
‘The same God who made the white made the black man. The same blood that runs in the white man’s veins, flows in yours. It is not the complexion of the skin, but the complexion of character that makes the great difference between one man and another.’ (These words were inscribed on a plaque in the Falmouth Baptist Chapel)
Knibb was the first to see the electoral possibilities of grassroot political organisation, encouraging Baptist church members to endorse pro-slave candidates in the pre-abolition 1830s. When the franchise was broadened in 1840, he organised the black and coloured electorate to challenge the church establishment, creating a new awareness among common Jamaicans of their rights and latent electoral power.
When Knibb died of fever in November 1845, 8,000 mourners attended his funeral.
Adapted from Jamaica Fi Real: Beauty, Vibes and Culture
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I love this article because it’s spreading important stories that so often go unheard! Everyone needs to hear about these heros because we all need to be reminded how love, equality, and social justice are the keys to national well being! Keep up the amazing work!
So Michael the great Philanderer displaced Hugh Lawson Shearer who was Jamaica’s first BLACK Prime Minister..one would think along with Union accomplishments and His political successes he would Qualify over MM..
Edward Seaga is my no.10 he is Jamaicas most vilified personality, that truth be told has contributed more to the building up of this island than anybody else. He champion the heart trust skill training program, he instituted the free zone , he started to cultural awareness program in Jamaica, he aided in the development of our music industry, he was one of Jamaica finest minister of finance and prime minister , after the devastation of Gilbert he build back Jamaica in short order, it was under his leadership that this country experience economical growth of five percent and more,… Read more »
I like this Article. Is it in order of their contribution, or is it simply listing who the author deems to be the top 10 greatest. Probably the latter because it would be like difficult to say who was the greatest, given that they each had to teal with different sets of circumstances at different time periods. That being said, I would love for the author to expand and just make a list of great Jamaicans since we have waaaay more than 10.
I like this Article. Is it in order of their contribution, or is it simply listing who the author deems to be the top 10 greatest. Probably the latter because it would be like difficult to say who was the greatest, given that they each had to teal with different sets of circumstances at different time periods. That being said, I would love for the author to expand and just make a list of great Jamaicans since we have waaaay more than 10.
Edward Seaga is my no.10 he is Jamaicas most vilified personality, that truth be told has contributed more to the building up of this island than anybody else. He champion the heart trust skill training program, he instituted the free zone , he started to cultural awareness program in Jamaica, he aided in the development of our music industry, he was one of Jamaica finest minister of finance and prime minister , after the devastation of Gilbert he build back Jamaica in short order, it was under his leadership that this country experience economical growth of five percent and more,… Read more »
So Michael the great Philanderer displaced Hugh Lawson Shearer who was Jamaica’s first BLACK Prime Minister..one would think along with Union accomplishments and His political successes he would Qualify over MM..
I love this article because it’s spreading important stories that so often go unheard! Everyone needs to hear about these heros because we all need to be reminded how love, equality, and social justice are the keys to national well being! Keep up the amazing work!
I love this article because it is the history of my family. I discovered this year that William Knibb is my Great Great Great Grandfather. My family history is more amazing than I thought and I’m Year 11 in College right now in Canada because I worked hard to learn more about my family and married a woman named Ms. Williams. I finally found out one person in my family did something right. Thank you William Knibb as I am also continuing the work you started in Canada. Jamaica will become Republic of Jamaica as it is not a free… Read more »