Maurice Bishop – A Tribute, October 2025

GRENADA
 
MAURICE BISHOP

A GREAT LEADER

May 29th 1944 – October 19th 1983

Maurice Rupert Bishop, born in Aruba on 29 May 1944 to Grenadian parents, was a visionary world leader and revolutionary who dedicated his life to social justice, equality, and national development.

After returning to Grenada as a child, he excelled academically and later studied law in the United Kingdom, where he became deeply involved in the global movements for decolonisation and human rights.

In 1979, Bishop led the New Jewel Movement (NJM: Joint Endeavour for Welfare, Education and Liberation) to power through a popular revolution that ended years of corruption and dictatorship under the Eric Gairy regime. As Prime Minister of the People’s Revolutionary Government, he inspired Grenada through his focus on education, health care, housing, and the empowerment of ordinary citizens. These were not empty slogans but real achievements — the tangible results of a people united under his leadership and vision, accomplishments that the United States government has since tried to erase from history.

His leadership brought international recognition to Grenada as a beacon of self-reliance and progressive transformation in the Caribbean and beyond. Bishop’s charisma, compassion for the poor, and belief in collective advancement made him beloved at home and respected throughout the world.

Though huge mistakes were made by the leadership of the Revolution and his life was tragically cut short on 19 October 1983, his legacy endures as that of a principled and courageous leader who dreamed of a fairer, freer, and more just society for all Grenadians.

That tragedy was deepened when, soon after his death, the United States invaded Grenada to bring the Revolution to an end. Even more painful is that his body, taken by the invading forces, was never returned to his family, comrades or the people he so dearly served.

The call to recover his remains, and the remains of those who fell with him, remains unanswered — a stain on the conscience of the United States. Yet that call will continue to echo across generations, until Maurice Bishop and his comrades are finally laid to rest in the soil of their beloved homeland.

The US knows this, and also knows that the Revolution lives on in the hearts of the Grenadian people — especially those born since 1983. They will do everything to divert attention away from its achievements.

We say: Do not be diverted — tell your children, and tell everyone, about the Revo’.