Dudley Joseph ThompsonOJKC (19 January 1917 – 20 January 2012) was a JamaicanPan-Africanist, lawyer, politician and diplomat, who made a contribution to jurisprudence and politics in the Caribbean, Africa and elsewhere internationally.
After qualifying as a barrister at Gray's Inn, London, in 1950,[7] and doing tutelage with Dingle Foot, QC, Thompson went on to practise law in Africa – in Tanganyika and Kenya, where he became involved in the nationalist movements. He assembled the international legal team that defended Jomo Kenyatta in his trial after he had been arrested by the colonial government of Kenya in 1952 and subsequently charged with treason, accused of being an instigator of the Mau Mau rebellion. Later as President of Kenya, Kenyatta memorably placed his hand on Thompson sitting beside him and said: "This man saved my life."[8] In Tanzania, where he was a friend of Julius Nyerere, Thompson is remembered as a founder of the Tanganyika African National Union (TANU).
In 1955, he returned to Jamaica,[3] where he introduced the Office of the Ombudsman,[9] serving for many years, from 1962, as president of the Jamaica Bar Association.[10] He continued to educate people about furthering the links between Africa and the Caribbean, visiting schools to deliver inspirational addresses about the continent (Jamaica-born writer Lindsay Barrett was inspired to decide to live in Africa by one such visit that Thompson paid to his school, Clarendon College, in 1957).[11]
Shortly before his death, Thompson apologised for his role in the Green Bay Massacre, when members of the military ambushed young Jamaica Labour Party (JLP0 supporters, and shot them down in cold blood.[15]
Thompson represented Jamaica in many international forums, including the United Nations and the Organization of African Unity (OAU). In 1992 he was empanelled as a member of the Eminent Persons Group charged with implementing the movement for reparations for slavery to Africa and the African diaspora, under the auspices of the OAU.
Thompson was appointed Ambassador and High Commissioner to several African countries, including Nigeria, Ghana, Namibia and Sierra Leone, based in Nigeria until 1995.[16][17]
Thompson was a recipient of the Order of Jamaica, one of Jamaica's most prestigious decorations, for distinguished service in the field of International Affairs and his contribution to the legal developments in Jamaica.
He was awarded the Mico Old Students' Gold Medal – the most prestigious teacher's award.[19]
The African Union declared him a "first citizen" passport of the continent because of his work for Africa internationally.[20] The OAU had earlier awarded him a medal in recognition of his status as a "Legend of Africa".
In 2006, in Ghana he was honoured as a "Living Legend of Africa".[21]
^Andre, Irving W.; Gabriel J. Christian. "The Exemplary Life of Honourable Dudley Thompson". Jamaica 55. Retrieved 6 October 2024. Excerpt from For King & Country the Service and Sacrifice of the British West Indian Military (Pont Casse Press, 2009).
^ abcdLevens, R.G.C., ed. (1964). Merton College Register 1900–1964. Oxford: Basil Blackwell. p. 383.
^From Kingston to Kenya: the making of a pan-Africanist lawyer, by Dudley Thompson with Margaret Cezair Thompson. Foreword by Rex Nettleford. Dover, MA: The Majority Press, 1993.