And Who Is Fred Smith, Qc?
Tribune 242 Editorial:
|  | 
| Mr. Fred Smith, QC | 
Loftus
 Roker, then Immigration minister in the Pindling government, was 
notorious for his Haitian round-ups. In the cartoon, “Cowboy Roker” is 
drawn with a pistol at his side and a bandolier around his waist. He 
holds a telephone to his right ear as he shouts the “pick him up orders”
 while reading a letter from Amnesty International complaining that 
“Smith say yinna is mistreatin’ Haitians.”
In fact, in Mr Roker’s day, five Immigration officers  did “invade” Fred Smith’s law office in Freeport to check on his status.
Recently,
 Mr Smith, in describing himself, said that he became a Bahamian citizen
 in 1973, which seemed to confirm the opinion of those who dismissed him
 as just a “paper Bahamian”. Rather than confirming him as a “paper 
Bahamian”, it confirmed the ignorance of many Bahamians, who today 
consider themselves the “true, true Bahamians”, forgetting that each and
 every one of us came to these islands in different centuries either by 
boat or by plane. Not one of us is indigenous to the Bahamas. Therefore,
 there is not one among us — regardless of race – who can claim original
 ownership of these islands, although a PLP Minister once took leave of 
his senses and declared from a public platform that “God gave this 
country to the PLP”.
In
 fact, if gaining Bahamian citizenship in 1973 is what created a “paper 
Bahamian”, then we are all “paper Bahamians” because it was in that year
 that we ceased being citizens of Great Britain and her colonies, and 
became citizens of the Commonwealth of the Bahamas. This is what Mr 
Smith meant when he said he became a Bahamian citizen in 1973. In fact, 
that applies to all of us who claim to have been born in these islands.
On
 Friday night, a demonstration was arranged on Bay Street, among the 
demonstrators was a black Bahamian, wearing a white shirt on which was 
imprinted the image of a Klu Klux clansman carrying a burning cross with
 the words - BACON-KKK. In our photograph this Bahamian carries a large 
placard declaring that Fred Smith is a “Haitian Infidel!”
Now
 let’s examine this Fred Smith, “Haitian infidel”, and discover why he 
is such a passionate human rights advocate, and why many Bahamians are 
trying to disown him as fully one of them.
In
 fact, Fred Smith is more of a Bahamian than any one of us, because on 
his Bahamian father’s side he can trace his roots to an original 
Cherokee Indian who was one of the few to survive the Spanish purge 
after Columbus discovered these islands in 1492. A photograph of his 
great great grandmother shows a very beautiful Cherokee woman.
Fred
 Smith’s family has been in the Bahamas at least since 1648 – a year 
after King Charles 1 of England in the 23rd year of his reign granted to
 the company of Adventurers for plantation and cultivation the island of
 Eleuthera and “all the surrounding islands known as the Bahamas”.
Mr
 Smith’s family arrived in ships filled with Puritans and others seeking
 religious freedom from England. The indigenous population of Eleuthera 
was almost entirely decimated in the wake of the Spanish discovery. 
However, of the few who were left was a man whose last name was Sims — 
eventually the family added another “m” to turn the name into Simms. 
This first Sims was Fred Smith’s great, great, great, great, great, 
great, great grandfather. One hundred and fifty years later, his 
descendant William Simms had a daughter named Arabella Simms. She was 
Fred Smith’s great, great grandmother.
As
 the family grew and spread, they acquired such additional branches to 
the Simms tree as Smith, Knowles, Cartwright, Deal and Bowe. They were 
born in various islands, among them Exuma, Long Island, Eleuthera and 
New Providence.
Fred
 Smith’s father, born in Nicholls Town, Andros, was Frederick (Freddie) 
Charles Smith, Freddie’s older brother was Wilfred (Pemmy), who had a 
crawfish import-export business on Prince George Wharf, and their only 
sister, Mrs Mary Doris Stevenson, was an accomplished interior 
decorator, who operated “Interiors”.
Mary Doris’ husband, Carl, operated a venetian blind company in Twynam Avenue.
Among
 Mr Smith’s cousins still in Nassau are Lester and Leonard Smith. He 
even has second cousins in the PLP camp – former PLP MPs George and 
Philip Smith.
Fred
 Smith’s father, Freddie, operated a mailboat between Nassau and Gonaive
 Haiti, where he traded with Izaac Richards (Arabic name Ghiscian), and 
befriended his daughter, Julia Richards. Julia was born in Madaba, 
Jordan, the Christian capital for Middle East Catholics. Her father was a
 Bedoin and her mother Armenian. They married.
They
 had four children — Norma, Gladys, Joyce and after a few years Fred 
Smith, QC. The four children were born in Port-au-Prince and registered 
with the British consulate as citizens of Great Britain and her 
colonies. They became Bahamian citizens — as did all of us — on July 10,
 1973. Although they lived in Haiti, they were frequent visitors to 
their home and family in Nassau.
But
 at an early age, Fred knew what discrimination and round-ups meant. He 
was eight years old when his father was summarily put on a plane and 
deported to The Bahamas by the dictatorial “Papa Doc” Duvalier and his 
evil Tonton Macoute. The Tonton Macoute was a paramilitary force 
answerable only to Papa Doc. They were authorised to commit systematic 
violence and human rights abuses to suppress political opposition. They 
were created after a failed coup d’état against Papa Doc in 1958.
“I
 recall us living in terror,” said Fred, “whispering at night clustered 
around candlelight so that the housekeepers could not hear us, frequent 
roadblocks during the day. Our home being invaded and torn apart by 
Tonton Macoutes and the Gendarme. My mother being seized and spirited 
away and disappearing in some dictatorial prison system where she could 
not be found for three days.”
He
 recalls his father hiding his mother and sisters in the mountains, 
while he and his father were barricaded in his father’s bedroom with 
“all sorts of shotguns and hunting guns while in the background they 
were tearing our house apart”.
The
 family returned to their home in the Bahamas in the 1960s, and 
established Eddie’s Department Store. Young Fred went to school at St 
Thomas More,  Xavier’s, St Augustine’s and then off to school in 
England, eventually studying law and being called to the English Bar.
Not
 only is he a noted lawyer, but he is a fierce human rights activist, 
who having had his own experience, understands the plight of Haitians 
being rounded up in The Bahamas. 
Mr
 Smith recognises that this country has a Haitian crisis that has to be 
solved. But he is determined to see that it is solved with humanity.
And
 to answer the question: Who is Fred Smith? He is a true Bahamian 
descended from the original stock, whose family has suffered human 
rights violations. He is now dedicated to making certain that those 
abuses are not continued in the Bahamas. He is also determined to see 
that the rights of Haitians are not abused during the exercise of 
determining their citizenship. And if abused, he will face the 
government in court on their behalf. 
December 08, 2014
