By OSWALD T. BROWN
WASHINGTON, D.C., May 2, 2024 – Her Excellency Cynthia A. Pratt, Governor-General of The Bahamas, was presented with the Grand Cross of the Order of St Michael and St George (GCMG) at Buckingham Palace in London yesterday, reaffirming yet another remarkable achievement by a woman who overcame tremendous odds to establish a successful career in politics.
Indeed, as a young girl, poverty defined the environment in which Cynthia Moxey lived on West Street, but being poor did not put limitations on her natural ability in virtually all areas of sports. It was through sports that she would lay the foundation for the success she has attained and the ethical standards that govern her life.
No small amount of credit for this is due to the late Father Marcian Peters, a Roman Catholic priest, who was responsible for putting many young persons in The Bahamas – myself included – on the right road to becoming productive citizens of The Bahamas.
As the founder of St. Bernard’s Sporting Club, Father Marcian provided many wayward youths with an outlet to not only develop their sporting talent, but to improve their social graces and to establish a camaraderie with other youths who were from “better-off” or, in some cases, “well-to-do” families.
Among the club members, there were no social differences, and superbly gifted athletes like Cynthia Moxey were popular members of St. Bernard’s. She excelled in virtually every sport and attained “superstar” status in basketball and track and field and, in later years, was also a standout in softball, volleyball, netball, and cycling, among others.
Clearly, “Mother” Pratt’s rise to prominence in politics is a remarkable story that could be developed into a blockbuster movie. To be sure, five decades ago, no one would have anticipated that the gangling 12-year-old who was living in abject poverty at the time in an Over-The-Hill area just south of Meeting Street would have reached the heights she has attained in her 78 years on this earth.
I have recounted this story before in a previous column, but it is worth repeating. Back in 1999, The Nassau Guardian published an extraordinary story that provided some insights into how this immensely talented woman established the values that were the guiding principles for her sojourn in life.
A Canadian couple, on a visit to Nassau in 1999, recalled how impressed they were by the determination and work ethics of a young girl they encountered during their nightly stroll down Bay Street when they first visited The Bahamas on their honeymoon in 1958. Thirteen-year-old Cynthia Moxey, who at the time was assisting her mother in selling her wares at the straw market, left such an indelible impression on Daniel and Louise Bolduc that they made inquiries about her on subsequent visits to Nassau over the years.
As noted in The Guardian’s story in February of 1999, Bolduc said he and his wife concluded that the young girl would one day be successful in whatever she pursued because when they met her “she was putting in more of an effort in going the extra mile, which is the reason why people become successful.”
Bolduc said he was not surprised, therefore, when he asked a female Immigration officer on his arrival in Nassau, during his visit in February of 1999, if she knew Cynthia Moxey, and was told she was a Member of Parliament.
When asked by a Guardian reporter if he was surprised to find out that Moxey had become a Member of Parliament, Bolduc was quoted as saying: “No, because she belongs there, and maybe as Prime Minister, more than just a member of parliament.”
Of course, Mr. Bolduc’s speculation that “Mother” Pratt would one day be Prime Minister was off target, but she indeed was former PLP Prime Minister Perry Christie’s choice to serve as his Deputy Prime Minister when she was named to that position back in May of 2002.
Armed with a determination to succeed in life, in 1963, at the age of 18, Cynthia Moxey decided to pursue a career in nursing and began training to become a practical nurse. This was the profession through which she made a living for 17 years, during which time she changed her last name from Moxey to Pratt when she married the late Joseph Pratt, who was employed with the Bahamas Electricity Corporation for many years.
Cynthia Pratt subsequently decided that nursing was not what she wanted to do as a life-long profession and embarked on a career centred around her skills and knowledge of sports. She became a teacher and coach at C.C. Sweeting High School, but quickly realized that to advance up the ladder in this field, she had to further her education.
On entering St. Augustine College in Raleigh, North Carolina, she approached her studies with the same drive and dedication that had been hallmarks of her sporting life. The result was that she graduated in 1983 second in a class of 400-plus with a Bachelor of Arts degree in health and physical education and a minor in sociology.
She returned to C.C. Sweeting, where she remained until 1991. During this time, she helped to build a sports dynasty and used her status to assist many Bahamian youngsters to get a higher education in the United States through sports scholarships. In 1991, she moved on to the College of The Bahamas as assistant director of student activities.
Mother Pratt decided to enter the political arena in the 1997 general election because, as she said at the time, she felt that if given the opportunity, she could help open the doors to opportunities for the masses.
The rest, as they say, is history, but the final chapter may have not yet been written.
Indeed, “Mother” Pratt has published a book based on her life, which has received rave reviews, and her rise to prominence in politics clearly is a remarkable story that could be developed into a blockbuster movie.
NOTE: Oswald T. Brown is the Press Attache at The Bahamas Embassy in Washington, D.C.,