2026 Junior Junkanoo Parade
Downtown Bay St.
The Public Procurement Act of The Bahamas represents foundational legislation designed to govern how public funds are spent on goods, services, and works across all sectors of government. Its purpose is to ensure that government procurement is conducted transparently, competitively, responsibly, and in a manner that delivers value for taxpayers while supporting broader policy goals. Although initially enacted in 2021, the Act has been revised and replaced with newer versions (notably the Public Procurement Act, 2023) to address implementation issues and incorporate policy priorities such as support for small businesses and economic diversification.
To honour Majority Rule Day 2026, we remember Rev. Dr. Hervis Bain Jr. the designer of the Bahamian National Coat of Arms.
Hervis Leamonde Bain Jr., affectionately known as “Junior” or “Steeps,” was born February 5, 1942, in Nassau to musical parents Hervis Sr. and Helenor Bain. Growing up in Toote Shop Corner off East Street, he was raised in a home filled with family, friends, and music. Read more>>
Majority Rule Day, celebrated annually on January 10th, is one of the most significant national holidays in The Bahamas. It commemorates a transformative moment in the nation’s history when the political landscape shifted to reflect the majority will of the Bahamian people, marking the start of a new era of equality, democracy, and self-determination. Read more>>
When we vote in The Bahamas there is a number on a counterfoil attached to each voter's ballot. Can this be used to tell who a citizen voted for?
Short answer: No
Under Bahamian law and standard electoral procedure, the counterfoil number cannot be used to tell who a citizen voted for.
Here’s the full explanation:
Tucked into the lush, gentle hills of Cat Island in the central Bahamas is a place that at first glance seems out of time and place: a tiny stone monastery perched atop the highest point in the entire nation. This quiet, evocative site is known simply as The Hermitage, and it crowns Mount Alvernia — formerly known locally as Como Hill — rising to 206 feet (63 meters) above sea level. Though modest in stature by global standards, it holds outsized significance as a cultural, architectural, and spiritual landmark for the Bahamas. The Islands of The Bahamas
These works explore how movement is shaped by space—architectural, natural, urban, or imagined. The camera becomes a choreographic partner, revealing new relationships between body, site, and time. Here, dance film is less about documentation and more about spatial dialogue and cinematic composition.
Showcasing:
Dis Connection by Carlito Catalano (8 minutes 40 seconds)
Movements in Transition by Sudhir Ambasana and Sayli Kulkarni (8 minutes)
The Whispers of the Cage by Vaishnavi Dhore (12 minutes 28 seconds)
Ceremony of the Crows by Nikolina Nikoleski and Priyasha Bhardwaj (3 minutes 55 seconds)
Mangalore – The Sky and the Sea by Luke Sydney (4 minutes)
Apavarga by Sairam Kannan (4 minutes 13 seconds)
The fusion of fascism—a far-right, ultranationalist political ideology—and theocracy—a system of government in which deity-guided laws and clerical authority prevail—creates a singular and devastatingly potent form of governance. While classical fascism often treats religion as a tool for state utility (or an "ersatz" competitor), a Fascist Theocracy elevates religious dogma to the status of state law, viewing the nation not just as a political unit, but as a divine instrument.
This essay explores the ideological pillars, historical manifestations, and the chilling mechanisms of control inherent in the hybrid of the cross and the fasces.