Elsie Harry – From National Youth Parliament to Strengthening a Lasting Reparations Movement
St. Kitts and Nevis – 13 February 2026: “I don’t think people simply do not care about reparations; they haven’t been given enough information to truly understand how reparations
Elsie’s formative years were spent in the Federation of St. Kitts and Nevis since migrating from Guyana at age 6. As a teen, she served as a youth parliamentarian and has since advocated on issues affecting livelihoods, rooting her advocacy in nation-building.
The Youngest Person in the Room
Elsie was invited to her first reparations meeting after returning to Guyana as an undergraduate student. Amidst a table of persons aged 50 to 70 years old, she recalled being told, “You’re the young person in the room, so you have to recruit young people for the movement” and she adopted it as a mandate.
For Elsie, grounding the conversation remains critical.
“As an Urban and Rural Planner, I observe how land is used, and you can see how colonialism shaped every aspect of our society,” shared Elsie. In St. Kitts and Nevis, those legacies are visible in the land itself, where for centuries sugar cultivation shaped land use to serve colonial extraction rather than local needs. “When the sugar industry closed in 2005, it felt like our society was scrambling to deal with this major shift in the country’s developmental
For weeks Elsie engaged with reparations stakeholders, including Chairperson of the National Reparations Committee, Carla Astaphan, and community members as part of her work with The Repair Campaign. She brought that work into the open through her first two events — one in St. Kitts on February 7 and another in Nevis on February 10. “The aim of these events was simply to have a conversation on reparations,” Elsie noted. “I wanted people to understand what reparations is, what work has already been done, and how they can participate as individuals.”