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Turtles show their faces on Church StreetSaturday, October 13, 2018
The Bermuda Post Office has marked the 50th anniversary of the Bermuda Turtle Project with a series of postal panels featuring special stamps.
Mandu can see clearly again after surgery
Tuesday, October 09, 2018
Last month ophthalmic surgeon, Dr. Leonard Teye-Botchway, operated on the Bermuda Aquarium, Museum and Zoo’s Parma Wallaby, Mandu, removing his luxated lens that was causing fluid build-up and dangerous pressure to form in his eye.
Reid, Dowling, Hill, Godfrey Awarded Scholarships
Wednesday, September 19, 2018
The Bermuda Zoological Society has selected the recipients of the Steinhoff/BZS scholarship and, for the first time, the Pye Scholarship, with Amber Reid, Ryan Dowling, Archer Hill and Jessica Godfrey all being awarded scholarships.
Oldest seal at BAMZ dies aged 35
Thursday, August 30, 2018
The oldest harbour seal at the Bermuda Aquarium, Museum and Zoo has died at the age of 35.
‘Bermuda Adventure’ continues
Tuesday, August 07, 2018
A pilot programme of community celebration, organised by the group Imagine Bermuda, marked a success at the Bermuda Aquarium, Museum and Zoo.
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Latest News
All the latest updates and news from the Bermuda Aquarium, Museum, and Zoo, one of Bermuda's leading visitor attractions!
Jonathan Bell
Published Jun 29, 2017 at 8:00 am (Updated Jun 29, 2017 at 10:15 am)
Celebrating togetherness: from left, Martha Dismont of Family Centre;
Bermuda Aquarium student volunteers Staesha Pitcher and CaVon Raynor,
and Imagine Bermuda founder Glenn Fubler (Photograph supplied)
A celebration of the progressive spirit that toppled a bastion of segregation is to be marked this Sunday, the 58th anniversary of the close of the Theatre Boycott.
The community action group Imagine Bermuda is hosting a family walk around Flatts, including a stop at the home of Edouard and Roslyn Williams, where members of the Progressive Group gathered in secret to plan their watershed stand against the island’s segregated cinemas.
“This is an important period in Bermuda and the world generally, and with everything that’s going on, we need to benefit from and reflect upon these elements of our foundations,” said Glenn Fubler, founder of Imagine Bermuda.
“While forging a shared vision, they came up with the idea of the Theatre Boycott, capturing imaginations across the island, sparking a community-wide collaboration. Within two short weeks of spontaneous, peaceful campaigning, a significantly opened Bermuda was born on July 2, 1959.”
The walk begins at the Whitney Institute at 5.30pm, and will include honoured guests Charles Marshall and Dennis Wainwright, who Mr Fubler called “two elders who have demonstrated that productive mindset in both Flatts and Bermuda in general”.
The walk will also commemorate Flatts history with links to the pioneer radio inventor Reginald Fessenden, and the Bermuda Aquarium, Museum and Zoo, where members of the Progressive Group parked their cars before their meetings to evade notice.
At around 6.15pm, the walk will end at the Aquarium, where BAMZ and the Bermuda Zoological Society are to host a reception with light refreshments, and entertainment including Gene Steede, pianist Willard Burch, and the Russian School of Dance.
Young volunteers will take part, and Mr Fubler said their civic-minded spirit “speaks to what happened in the Boycott”.
He said: “That same community spirit that renewed Bermuda in 1959 can today leverage island sports clubs busy developing young people.
“The aim is to share stories, nurturing a healthy sense of self, and foster connections for future efforts that promote in young people an understanding of the potential of the mindset to remain ‘busy being born’.”