UK philanthropist donates US$500,000 to UWI Global Giving as personal reparation  

UK philanthropist, Bridget Freeman has bequeathed her properties worth US$500,000 to The UWI, through its Global Giving fund, and reserved her grand piano for The UWI, Cave Hill Campus.

It was a series about the Atlantic slave trade on the BBC that shocked Bridget Freeman.  Up until then, she knew almost nothing about the plight of free Africans who boarded ships and were taken throughout the world and sold into slavery.

“I was horrified and it touched me and I thought dear God, this is not right” she said.

Mrs Freeman, an accomplished musician, was born in the United Kingdom of Irish background, and adopted at the end of World War II by a couple in their 40s.  She has lived in the UK for most of her life.  However, some of her relatives left the UK for the Caribbean. One such, was her mother’s brother, Billy Hopkins.  As the story goes, ‘Uncle Billy’, the last Master of the King’s Music in Ireland, became a priest and migrated to Barbados where he married Marion, a local Barbadian woman whose family were plantation and slave owners—another revelation that horrified Bridget Freeman.

Married twice, first to Barry Marshall and then to Bernard Freeman, Mrs Freeman has remained close to her former sister-in-law, Reverend Sylvia McLarnon. Together with the advice of Reverend McLarnon and Bernard Freeman, her late husband, Mrs Freeman made a bold and remarkable decision about her legacy.

“My late husband said: ‘you’ve got to do the right thing’.  There was always a feeling of what do I do with all I have? The young people in the family are doing alright and they don’t need a step-up” said Mrs Freeman.  Further research led her to The University of the West Indies (The UWI) and its Executive Director of Institutional Advancement, Mrs Elizabeth Buchanan Hind.

Mrs Buchanan Hind is also Chair of UWI Global Giving—the regional university’s annual crowdfunding campaign which was established in 2016. Each year the campaign kicks off on August 1, which in many Caribbean territories is the observance of Emancipation Day, marking the freedom of enslaved Africans who were victims of the transatlantic slave trade. While The UWI honours and pays tribute to that past, it recognises that education is one of the most critical means to freedom and propelling regional development. Under the theme “Emancipate, Educate, Donate,” UWI Global Giving is grounded in The UWI’s vision to facilitate an ‘access revolution’ for higher education in the Caribbean, calling on the support of regional and international alumni, partners, the diaspora and friends to give. Over the past five years, this giving campaign has become part of The UWI’s culture. However, the 2021 campaign has even greater significance with a focus on funding scholarships and bursaries for students who are in difficult social circumstances because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Through her generosity, Bridget Freeman has bequeathed her properties worth half a million US dollars (US$500,000) to The UWI, through its Global Giving campaign, and noted that her grand piano is being kept in tune for the Cave Hill Campus as a contribution to the University’s new Faculty of Culture, Creative and Performing Arts.

Vice-Chancellor of The UWI, Professor Sir Hilary Beckles said the University community welcomes Mrs Freeman’s generous endowment, describing it as “an honourable demonstration of personal reparation and moral leadership on behalf of her family”.  He added that her commitment to turning her awareness into action is deeply appreciated and will go a long way to providing freedom and fulfilment through the gift of education for many Caribbean students.

Now in her late 70s, Bridget Freeman’s care, research and warm conscience has led her to becoming an unlikely philanthropist and accepting The UWI’s invitation to get involved as a co-patron of Global Giving 2021. “It is about reparation” she said. “We owe it. Once you see the ships of the slave trade, the giving back just seems so obvious”.

Throughout August and September, persons interested in giving to The UWI are invited to visit www.uwi.edu/giving. Those seeking more information, or who wish to make an alternative contribution to UWI Global Giving can contact the Institutional Advancement Division in the Office of the Vice-Chancellor at 876-977-0052 or email [email protected].

Follow, like and share the 2021 UWI Global Giving campaign on social media at the hashtags #GivetoUWI #UWIGlobalGiving and #UWIGG2021.

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3 Comments

  1. Thank you
    August 25, 2021

    Thank you Mrs Freeman for responding to God’s call when you learned about the atrocities of slavery. Your example might help others to respond in a similar way.
    To those entrusted with these funds, I certainly hope that this gift will be used prudently and for the intended purpose.

  2. Toto
    August 24, 2021

    She can do with her money whatever she likes, is her money, but I wonder who actually receives that money.

  3. Reparations like Jews
    August 24, 2021

    Oh we’ve been educating our people and their people about this deliberate BLACKOUTs of history for many years. Not to be negative, but ..just observe how many Black people who also have no idea, are cocked and ready to stop her, by the thumbs-down and negative comments.
    “The young people in the family are doing alright and they don’t need a step-up” said Mrs Freeman. Acknowledging how bloated the descendants of enslavers are today all while their countries continue to extract Africa’s wealth with impunity, all while many people in Africa, and of African descent continue to dig into garbage heaps with flies on them.
    People, we are trying to educate you about the blackouts of our history. At her age she had no idea at all. The blackout continues in the U.S today with laws being passed to forbid teaching history of our enslavement, as it’s too savage to even tell the kids. :twisted:
    That’s why many are saying WAKE UP!

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