Saturday, March 21, 2026
Friday, March 20, 2026
The Bahamas National Youth Choir Annual Concert
The Bahamas National Youth Choir Annual Concert
We listened. You loved the energy and the pride, but you were tired of the same old songs. So during the closure, we went back to the lab.
Art in Bloom Returns to The Bahamas This Saturday
Art in Bloom Returns to The Bahamas This Saturday
The “Art in Bloom” festival is set to transform the lush grounds of the Leon Levy Native Plant Preserve in Eleuthera, Bahamas, into a vibrant gallery of culture and color this Saturday, March 21. Originally known as “Art in the Park,” this annual spring fundraiser is hosted by The Bahamas National Trust and serves as a premier showcase for the island’s unique intersection of natural beauty and human creativity. Visitors can expect to wander through 25 acres of indigenous flora while discovering a diverse array of works from local painters, sculptors, and craftspeople.
Thursday, March 19, 2026
The Shadow of the Silk Cotton Tree
The Shadow of the Silk Cotton Tree
Part I: The Arrival of the Red Dust
The island of Andros does not welcome visitors; it merely tolerates them. It is a land of "blue holes"—bottomless limestone pits that breathe with the tides—and "coppice" forests so thick that a man can vanish ten feet from the road. To the locals, it is a place where the veil between the living and the spirit world is worn thin by the salt spray and the constant whispering of the casuarina trees.
Father Elias Cox arrived on the mail boat from Nassau during the hottest July in fifty years. He was a man of the cloth, but also a man of the soil, born in the Family Islands and educated in the cold cathedrals of England. He had returned to find his childhood home gripped by a sickness that the doctors in the capital couldn't name.
"It isn't a fever, Father," whispered Old Ma’ Tilda, the village midwife, as Elias sat in her small wooden shack in Staniard Creek. "It’s a draining. They wake up pale as the sand on the sandbanks, with a thirst that water can't quench, and eyes that see things in the corners of the room."
Elias looked at the girl lying on the cot—Tilda’s granddaughter, Seraphina. Her skin was a translucent grey. On her neck, hidden just beneath the jawline, were two small, puckered marks. They weren't clean punctures. They looked like they had been made by something with teeth designed for tearing, yet they were sealed with a strange, dark resin.
"Obeah," Elias muttered, the word tasting like copper in his mouth.
"Worse," Tilda replied, clutching her wooden cross. "They call them the Bolom. But these aren't just spirits. They walk. They have shadows. And they serve the man in the Silk Cotton Grove."
Calling All Artisans in Grand Bahama!
Calling All Artisans in Grand Bahama!
The Ministry for Grand Bahama is inviting artisans to express interest in participating in a curated showcase designed to highlight local talent and support creative entrepreneurs. Whether you specialize in painting, crafts, sculpture, or other handmade creations, your work deserves to be seen.
Applications are available at the Ministry for Grand Bahama or BAIC
Deadline: March 26, 2026
For more information: (242) 350-8571 or (242) 352-8525
Don’t miss this chance to be part of a growing creative community and turn your passion into opportunity!
Wednesday, March 18, 2026
BHRA - SPRING NATIONALS 2026
SPRING NATIONALS
Sports Centre Road
Gates open @ 2PM
Testing & Qualifying @ 3PM – 4PM
Event starts @ 4:30PM
Admission: $10 (Kids 12 & under FREE)
Food - Drinks - Vibes
Everything you need for a full day of SPEED & ACTION
Living on the Edge
Living on the Edge
The precipice is narrow, and the drop is vastly deep,
Yet millions walk the jagged line before they go to sleep.
We dance upon the border where the safety starts to fade,
Ignoring every warning that the cautious mind has made.
From the pulse of reckless engines to the lure of easy gold,
Here is the tale of modern risks, a story often told.
The Rush of the Machine
The needle hits the hundred mark, the asphalt is a blur,
A symphony of pistons and a high-octane purr.
We weave between the lanes of steel, a needle through a cloth,
Attracted to the headlights like a frantic, frenzied moth.
No belt can hold the ego when the spirit wants to fly,
But gravity is patient underneath the midnight sky.
One patch of oil, one lapse of sight, one phone screen’s glowing light,
Can turn a morning commute into an everlasting night.
The Gamble of the Gut
We feast on salt and sugar, on the fats that slow the beat,
And treat the temple of the soul like trash upon the street.
The heart, a steady drummer, starts to skip a heavy pace,
While we ignore the lines of grey appearing on the face.
"I’ll start the change tomorrow," is the anthem of the weak,
As we climb the greasy mountain toward a hollow, plastic peak.
To live upon the edge of health is a slow and silent fall,
Until the body breaks beneath the weight of it all.
March 21 2026: Short Tales 2023 Book Launch
Books will be on sale for $20. Some of the authors will be on hand to sign!
Then join us in the Winston V. Saunders Theatre at 8 PM for the second and final public performance of Ian Strachan’s Gun Boys Rhapsody, revived for a new generation, and part of the UNESCO International Fund for Cultural Diversity project, Professionalizing the Theatre Industry in The Bahamas!
Tuesday, March 17, 2026
IB Visual Arts Exhibition – St. Andrews International School
This year’s exhibition explores the theme “The Beauty of the Collective Unconscious,” showcasing powerful and thought-provoking works that reflect identity, culture, nature, dreams, and the shared human experience.
The Path to Prosperity: A Global Analysis of Development and the Bahamian Context
The Path to Prosperity: A Global Analysis of Development and the Bahamian Context
Introduction
The terminology used to categorize nations—"First World" and "Third World"—is among the most recognized yet misunderstood concepts in modern geopolitics. While these labels are often used today as shorthand for "wealthy" and "poor," their origins were rooted not in economics, but in the tense political landscape of the Cold War. In the twenty-first century, as the global economy becomes increasingly interconnected and technological, these rigid classifications are often challenged by the reality of "middle-income" and "emerging" economies. The Commonwealth of The Bahamas stands as a primary example of this complexity: a nation with high per capita income and a stable democracy, yet one that still grapples with the structural vulnerabilities typical of developing states. This essay explores the definitions of these tiers of development, assesses the current standing of The Bahamas, and outlines the strategic imperatives necessary for the nation to solidify its status as a fully developed, "First World" power.
Monday, March 16, 2026
The Silent Struggle: Understanding Depression in Children and Adolescents
The Silent Struggle: Understanding Depression in Children and Adolescents
Depression is often mischaracterized as a "grown-up" problem—a byproduct of bills, career stress, or mid-life crises. However, for millions of children and teenagers, depression is a visceral, daily reality that shapes their development and determines their outlook on life. Unlike adults, who may have the vocabulary or agency to seek help, young people often navigate this darkness while tethered to systems—family, school, and peer groups—that may not understand or acknowledge their pain. The intersection of developmental vulnerability and social invalidation creates a uniquely challenging environment for youth, making it one of the most critical public health issues of the modern era.
7th Annual Long Island Mutton Festival
7th Annual Long Island Mutton Festival
Sunday, March 15, 2026
Blessed Bahamas
Blessed Bahamas
I. The Spiritual Spark
Where the Great Bahama Bank meets the deep,
And the secrets of the ancient corals sleep,
A spirit moves upon the liquid glass,
Watching the seasons and the centuries pass.
The Lucayan ghosts in the limestone caves
Still hum to the rhythm of the turquoise waves,
While the steeple bells in the Sunday sun
Proclaim that the work of the Soul is done.
In the hush of the pine barrens, tall and still,
One feels the touch of a higher Will.
It is written in the salt of the morning spray,
In the fiery end of a tropical day.
To the believer, the islands are more than sand,
They are the print of a Creator’s hand—
A sanctuary where the weary may find
A sabbath for the heart and a balm for the mind.
Bahamas Virtual School
Bahamas Virtual School
Self-paced, student-centered instruction provides a rigorous academic school curriculum and vocational programs.
Online courses are the primary means of instruction for our students.
Visit Bahamas Virtual School
Saturday, March 14, 2026
Back To Da Park
Back To Da Park
All Eleuthera Junior Junkanoo Parade 2026 - TODAY
All Eleuthera Junior Junkanoo Parade 2026
Seeking Intelligence: Past Present and Future of AI
Explore the fascinating history of AI and our enduring fascination with thinking machines. This video dives into the concept of artificial intelligence, showing how humans have envisioned intelligent machines for centuries, long before today's technology. From ancient ideas to future tech, see how the dream of AI has evolved.
From the visionary work of Alan Turing to the cutting-edge breakthroughs of OpenAI and DeepMind, Seeking Intelligence explores the astonishing evolution of artificial intelligence. This gripping documentary journeys through the past, present, and speculative future of AI—unpacking how machine learning, AGI, and surveillance tech are reshaping our world.
With expert insights from leading voices like Sam Altman, Tristan Harris, and Eric Schmidt, the film dives into the moral dilemmas, legal gray areas, and global power dynamics behind AI’s rise. Is AI the key to human advancement—or our undoing?
Friday, March 13, 2026
Thursday, March 12, 2026
Starting a National Lottery in The Bahamas: Possibility, Promise, and Controversy
Starting a National Lottery in The Bahamas: Possibility, Promise, and Controversy
Introduction
The idea of a national lottery in The Bahamas has been debated for decades. On the surface, it appears simple: citizens buy tickets, winners receive prizes, and the government receives revenue that can fund public services. Many countries use lotteries to support education, infrastructure, sports, and social programs.
However, in The Bahamas the issue is far more complex. Gambling has long been politically, culturally, and religiously sensitive. Casinos exist for tourists, but historically Bahamian citizens were prohibited from participating in most forms of legal gambling. At the same time, underground gambling systems known as “numbers houses” or “web shops” became widespread and deeply embedded in the local economy.
The country even held a national referendum in 2013 asking citizens whether web shops should be legalized and whether a national lottery should be created. Both proposals were rejected by voters.
Because of this history, any discussion about starting a lottery must consider legal, economic, political, moral, and social factors. The question is not simply whether a lottery could exist. The deeper question is whether it should.
This essay examines whether starting a national lottery in The Bahamas is feasible, how it could work, whether it should go to referendum, and the potential benefits and risks for the country.
A National Lottery for The Bahamas: A Policy Proposal for Parliament
A National Lottery for The Bahamas
A Policy Proposal for Parliament
Executive Summary
The Bahamas faces persistent fiscal pressures. Public debt remains high, infrastructure needs are significant, and the country faces increasing financial vulnerability due to climate change, hurricane recovery costs, and economic volatility tied to tourism.
At the same time, gambling activity already exists widely across the country through numbers games, web shop betting, and foreign lottery wagering. A large portion of this activity occurs outside direct public benefit.
This proposal outlines how The Bahamas could establish a National Lottery System that is transparent, regulated, and designed to generate revenue for public programs while minimizing social harm.
The proposal addresses five major questions:
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Whether a national lottery is feasible
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How it should be structured and regulated
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How revenues should be collected and distributed
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How to manage social risks and moral concerns
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Whether such a policy should be approved through referendum
The central argument is that if gambling activity already exists within the country, a properly regulated national lottery could convert that activity into a structured public revenue system while maintaining strong protections for society.
However, because of the social and religious sensitivities surrounding gambling in The Bahamas, the proposal recommends that implementation occur only after a national referendum supported by a clear legislative framework.
Dare to Experience The Woman in Black?
The Woman in Black
This chilling stage production is coming to Regency Theatre in Grand Bahama and you do not want to miss it!
The
Woman in Black is a haunting ghost story filled with suspense, mystery,
and spine-tingling moments. Follow Arthur Kipps as he recounts a
terrifying tale from his past, one that refuses to stay buried.
March 13 & 14 – 8PM | March 15 – 4PM
Sandilands Rehabilitation Centre Art Exhibition and Auction
Wednesday, March 11, 2026
The Black Crab Syndrome: AI Explanation
The Black Crab Syndrome: AI Explanation
Question to AI: Here in The Bahamas we have a term called "The Black Crab Syndrome". From what you can gather tell me and explain to me what is "The Black Crab Syndrome".
Reply from AI: In the Bahamian context, "Black Crab Syndrome" is a powerful social metaphor used to describe a specific type of horizontal hostility or "tall poppy syndrome" within a community.
The term draws a direct parallel to the behavior of land crabs kept in a pen. If a single crab tries to climb out to escape, the other crabs below will reach up and pull it back down to the bottom, ensuring that if one doesn't make it, none of them do.
Cuban Pewee: 'Nature's Least Scary Tyrant'
Cyndi Lauper Live at Atlantis!
Cyndi Lauper Live at Atlantis!
Cyndi Lauper brings her Girls Just Wanna Have Fun Farewell Tour to Atlantis Paradise Island on Saturday, June 20, 2026.
Enjoy a night of legendary hits and unforgettable energy under the stars on Casuarina Beach.
Tuesday, March 10, 2026
Green Turtle Cay Reef Ball
Don’t forget to RSVP today!
Friends of the Environment is bringing our annual Reef Ball to Green Turtle Cay on Friday, March 20th, and we’d love for you to join us for an evening of fun and philanthropy.
Your support helps us continue vital environmental education and conservation programs that inspire the next generation to protect the beautiful land and sea we all call home.
Spots are filling up, so be sure to secure your place today!
If you can’t attend but would like to support the event as a sponsor, we would be grateful for your help in preserving Abaco’s natural environment.
RSVP today or reach out for more information. We hope to see you there!
For tickets visit: www.friendsoftheenvironment.org/gtc
Don’t Jump To Conclusions
Don’t Jump To Conclusions
In a town where whispers traveled fast
And guesses often grew and passed,
A simple glance, a careless view
Could shape a tale that none once knew.
A shadow stretched across a wall,
And someone swore they saw it fall.
Another said, “It surely ran!”
And soon the rumor filled the span.
For minds can rush where facts walk slow,
And claim they surely must all know.
But truth is quiet, calm, and still,
And waits beyond the hurried will.
A moment’s pause, a careful eye
Can save a hundred false replies.
Yet many leap with hurried tongue
Before the truth has yet begun.
A boy once passed the market square
With muddy shoes and tousled hair.
A broken jar lay on the street,
With shards scattered at his feet.
A woman gasped, “He dropped the load!
I saw him walking down this road!”
Another nodded, quick to say,
“He’s always reckless anyway.”
Freeport Fashion Week is back! - March 20 & 21st
Tickets are now available at:
The Grand Bahama Port Authority Headquarters
Secure your seat, support young creatives, and witness the future of fashion on display.
Co-Founder and Inheritor: Sir Charles Hayward (1892–1983) and His Son Sir “Union” Jack Hayward (1923–2015)
By The Bahamianologist |
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