Cultivating the Guyanese society calls for a keen sense of where we’re at, and where we could be as a nation. We must see, feel, and know the society’s heartbeats. We must understand what Guyanese face in their daily effort to make a living.
This may sound quite easy, and many of us would say we know the society well. But encountering the public spaces, rubbing shoulders with cane-cutters, labourers, market vendors, minibus drivers, conductors and touts, and teachers, nurses and other public service employees, reveals a society