In the decades following Dominica’s independence, few institutions have shaped the country’s national identity and collective consciousness as profoundly as the Frontline Cooperative Bookstore. More than just a retail space for books, it emerged as a movement for mental liberation, cultural pride, cooperative development, and Pan-African solidarity—led by a visionary Dominican activist named Edmund A. “Eddie” “Izzar” Toulon, whose legacy continues to resonate across the island long after his passing and the bookstore’s closure.
Born in Roseau in 1960 to a family rooted in public service and discipline, Toulon cut his teeth politically during his years studying and working in London from the 1970s to early 1980s. Immersed in West London’s vibrant world of Black British activism, Caribbean migrant organizing, Pan-Africanist thought, and working-class resistance, he developed a core belief: education and cultural identity are the most powerful tools for marginalized communities to claim empowerment. Working as a social worker in North Paddington connected him directly to the struggles of working-class Caribbean and African families, while his time as lead vocalist for the band Samaritans reinforced his understanding that music and liberation are inseparable.
When Toulon returned to his native Dominica in 1981, he gathered with fellow activists Sonny Felix, Alvin Bertnard, and Gabriel Christian to turn his vision into action. The group drew inspiration from Cadre Number One (also known as the Sisserou Youth Movement), the Roseau branch of the Popular Independence Committee led by Rosie Douglas, which was rooted in the broad currents of Dominican nationalism, anti-colonial thought, Black consciousness, and socialist development that swept the Caribbean in the decades before and after independence. For the founding generation, political independence alone was not enough: without mental liberation, Dominica would remain trapped in neocolonial dependency, racial insecurity, and foreign economic control. A people disconnected from their own history, they argued, could never shape their own future. So they built Frontline as a people’s university, a school without walls, and a hub for national awakening, opening its doors in Roseau in 1982 with the motto “Knowledge Conquers All.”
From its humble beginnings—starting with just two tea chests of donated books in a small rented basement space—Frontline grew into one of Dominica’s most influential cultural institutions. Located on Queen Mary Street in Roseau, it intentionally stocked Afro-Caribbean, African, Indigenous, Third World, and local Dominican literature that was largely unavailable from mainstream booksellers. It centered stories of African and Kalinago heritage, maroon resistance to enslavement, and anti-colonial struggle, rejecting the colonial narratives that had long taught Dominicans to devalue their own culture and prioritize foreign approval. Operating on cooperative principles rather than pure profit motive, it expanded far beyond a bookstore, evolving into a cultural center, music outlet, photographic studio, printing shop, and publishing house that created local jobs, trained young workers, and promoted local Dominican writers.
One of Frontline’s most enduring contributions was *Rampart* magazine, a radical cultural platform named for its mission to defend resistance and break colonial barriers. Through three editions, *Rampart* gave a voice to Dominican poets, essayists, artists, and thinkers, publishing work that challenged colonial myths (including critical essays debunking the celebration of Christopher Columbus), centering women’s roles in national development, and affirming solidarity with anti-apartheid movements in southern Africa. Every poem and essay was a deliberate act of consciousness-raising, designed to free Dominicans from the inferiority complexes imposed by colonial rule and prove that the island had its own unique history, heroes, and creative genius worth celebrating.
Under Toulon’s leadership, Frontline also embraced popular culture as a core part of its nation-building project. It promoted major concerts featuring top regional and international Caribbean artists, from Gregory Isaacs and Burning Spear to Chalkdust, turning the events into cultural gatherings that connected Dominica to the wider African diaspora. It launched the “Caribbean Heroes” silk-screen project to celebrate regional icons, documented national history and community life through its photography service, and organized the 1988 “Vwa Dominik” tour to London, bringing Dominican performers to West Indian migrant communities for a powerful act of diaspora connection to mark the country’s tenth independence anniversary. Frontline also proved the power of cooperative economics: it grew from its small rented space to own its own facility, housing a bookstore, darkroom, printshop, and research library, contributed to national scholarship funds and school charities, and showed that collective, community-led effort could build lasting institutions that served the public good.
After decades leading Frontline, Toulon carried his commitment to community and culture into wider public service. In 1992, he was elected the first Mayor of the Canefield Urban Council, serving two consecutive terms and also leading the national local government authority, all while chairing the National Education Trust Fund. In 1997, he became the first Executive Director of the newly created Dominica Festivals Commission, where he realized his long-held vision of culture as national infrastructure: he organized and built the World Creole Music Festival, which grew into Dominica’s flagship cultural event and major tourist attraction, putting the island’s Creole identity, music, and heritage on the global map.
Tragically, Toulon died suddenly from a fatal asthma attack in 2001 at just 41 years old, shocking the entire nation. Thousands of Dominicans lined the streets of Roseau to pay their respects, and his friend Gabriel J. Christian famously eulogized him as a fallen giant Gommier tree: a large, shade-giving native tree that had sheltered generations of young writers, artists, activists, and citizens, nourishing a movement of cultural pride and national service.
After Toulon’s death, Frontline struggled on for another nine years, held together by the valiant efforts of supporters including Harold Sealey and Zenith Jean-Jacques, before closing its doors in 2010 after 29 years of operation. But its legacy, and Toulon’s, did not die with the bookstore. Toulon left behind enduring institutions: Rampart magazine, the World Creole Music Festival, the model of cooperative community development, and a blueprint for cultural leadership that proves small nations can stand tall through embracing their own identity.
Decades later, the core lesson of Frontline and Eddie Toulon remains clear: a nation is not built only by roads, buildings, budgets, and elections. It is built first in the minds of its people, in their imagination, their shared history, their books, their songs, their cooperative efforts, and their pride in the heritage of their ancestors. It is a lesson summed up in the bookstore’s enduring motto, which still resonates with undiminished power across Dominica today: Knowledge Conquers All.