Island(er)s at the Helm team pays visit to Commissioner


SABA–On Tuesday, April 5, Saba Commissioner for Culture Rolando Wilson welcomed a team of
scientific researchers working at the Saba Heritage Center to discuss the potential impact of research
findings.
The Saba Heritage Center currently hosts several team members of the Island(er)s at the Helm
research program, which focusses on social adaptation to climatic challenges in the (Dutch)
Caribbean. The transdisciplinary project is supported by the Netherlands Organization for Scientific
Research (NWO) in collaboration with the University of St. Martin (USM) and various institutions and
stakeholders across the Kingdom and the wider Caribbean. During the coming five years, the
Caribbean-European team include anthropologists, archaeologists, ethnobotanists, climatologists,
engineers, and human rights scholars and political scientists. They hope to engage in co-creative
research with government agencies, NGOs and first and foremost with local communities to develop
sustainable and inclusive solutions for the challenges that the island(er)s face in the context of
climate change.
The visiting team looks into the island’s deep past when Saba’s first inhabitants settled the areas of
Plum Piece, Old Booby Hill, Black Rock and Fort Bay Ridge around 3,800 years ago, and the ensuing
centuries when the island became more populated. The researchers laid out the questions they seek
to answer to Commissioner Wilson: what did the island’s climate look like over time? How did the
first settlers on the island adapt and respond to the devastating hurricanes and extreme droughts?
How where their houses built and how did they take care of their water? What did the first
inhabitants of Saba eat and what were they planting? What knowledge can we obtain from the past
and the present to become well equipped for the challenges of the future?
The Saba Heritage Center seeks to document and archive the island’s unique heritage and preserve
the Saban stories for generations to come. It houses all archaeological findings from the island which
are curated by the Saba Archaeological Center (SABRC). Commissioner Wilson expressed the
importance of Saba’s cultural heritage and its safeguarding and protection for future generations.
“Saba’s culture merits to be a top priority and should be taken care of,” Wilson stated.
On Thursday, April 7 at 5.30pm, researchers will present their initial findings to the public in an event
sponsored by the Heritage Center. For more information, please visit Saba Heritage Presentations by
Island(er)s at the Helm team. https://www.kitlv.nl/islanders-at-the-helm/
Island(er)s at the Helm will also hold a public meeting at USM on St. Martin on the evening of
Tuesday, April 12 at the university’s lecture hall with some of the same scientists who will be carrying
out research activities on the neighboring island.