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Nicolette Bethel

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Nicolette Bethel is a Bahamian teacher, writer and anthropologist. She was the Director of Culture in The Bahamas, and is now a full-time lecturer in Social sciences at the College of the Bahamas.

Life

She studied at Trinity College in the University of Toronto and at Corpus Christi College, Cambridge, where she got a PhD in Social Anthropology in 2000.

While she has published several poems and short stories, and co-written and co-produced several plays for theatres of the Bahamas, she is arguably best known as an expert for Junkanoo, a Bahamian festival at Christmas.

She is also the editor and expander of her father's book on the festival: E. Clement Bethel; Junkanoo: Festival of The Bahamas (Macmillan Caribbean 1992, ISBN 0-333-55469-8).

"We The People" and Bethel's Patriotism

First established on November 16, 2010, "We The People" is a non-profit organization led by Ed Fields and a group of people from the Bahamas commonly known as the "First Thirty". The main incentive of this organization is to create positive change and improvement in the Bahamas. Becoming a member of "We The People" is simple as it is "open to students, academia, business professionals, retired public officials, other institutions and associations, the general public, and anyone who loves The Bahamas". Nicolette Bethel's love for the Bahamas and patriotism made "We The People" an appealing way for her to help support and create change in her country.

Bethel is a part of "We The People's" "First Thirty". Her strong belief in the idea that the Bahamians can work together to create a major change without the help of external powers drove her to join and be a main contributor, and leader, for "We The People. Bethel firmly believes that due to the size of the Bahamas, creating change can be achieved "in the blink of an eye". Along with the other twenty-nine members comprising the "First Thirty", Bethel aims to eradicate all the negative aspects of life in the Bahamas in order to create a stable and harmonious living society.

References

  1. http://www.bahamas.gov.bs/bahamasweb2/home.nsf/vContentW/Cultural+Affairs+Dept.--Welcome--Culture+Nicolette+Bethel+Welcome+Message!Opendocument
  2. http://bahamapundit.typepad.com/bahama_pundit/2004/12/nicolette_bethe.html
  3. http://nicobethel.net/nico-at-home/resume.html
  4. ^ "We The People – About Us". We The People – Home. Retrieved April 1, 2013.
  5. ^ "We The People – The First 30 -NICOLETTE BETHEL". We The People – Home. Retrieved April 1, 2013. Cite error: The named reference "Nicolette Bethel" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
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