When connectivity becomes culture: Bermuda, showcase of an assertive island identity

CTO Air Connectivity Summit

At first glance, a summit on air connectivity seems to be a strictly technical affair: routes, capacity, infrastructure, growth strategies. However, in Bermuda, the CTO Air Connectivity Summit demonstrated that an event dedicated to aviation can also become a genuine cultural and tourist showcase. In the island territories of the wider region, mobility is never just economic. It is profoundly human, based on identity and culture.

Connecting territories, bringing cultures closer together

Discussions at the CTO Air Connectivity Summit focused on the challenges of intra-regional connectivity and the need to strengthen links within the region. But behind these technical issues lies a broader reality: better connecting the region also means facilitating the flow of ideas, artists, entrepreneurs, talent and visitors.

Air connectivity thus becomes an indirect lever for boosting culture and tourism. It is a prerequisite for :

  • – the development of multi-destination tourism
  • – organizing regional events
  • – mobility for young people and creators
  • – international visibility of island heritages

In a region rich in tradition and creativity, each new air route is also a bridge between identities.

CTO Air Connectivity Summit
CTO Air Connectivity Summit
CTO Air Connectivity Summit

An opening rooted in Bermudian identity

The CTO Air Connectivity Summit opened with the playing of the national anthem, a solemn moment affirming the institutional anchorage of the host territory.

Between several panels, a youth choir took part, offering an interlude marked by commitment and transmission. In a summit devoted to the future of regional connectivity, the presence of young people was not insignificant: it was a reminder that economic development is part of the continuity of generations.

CTO Air Connectivity Summit
CTO Air Connectivity Summit

The closing ceremony of the CTO Air Connectivity Summit featured a traditional performance by the Gombeys. This is an emblematic expression of Bermudian heritage. This tradition combines percussive music, rhythmic dance and distinctive costumes adorned with bangs, feathers and colorful masks. Inherited from African and British influences, it embodies a strong cultural identity.

These moments transformed a strategic summit into a territorial experience.

CTO Air Connectivity Summit
CTO Air Connectivity Summit
CTO Air Connectivity Summit

Culture and attractiveness: a natural alliance

In a context of increasing global tourism competition, destinations can no longer limit themselves to promoting their landscapes. They must assert their uniqueness.

In Bermuda, culture is an active part of the experience. It’s expressed in music, traditions, youthfulness – and even dress codes.

The famous Bermuda shorts are a recognized form of professional attire in the archipelago. Worn with jacket and tie in institutional and business environments, they illustrate an elegant adaptation to the island’s climate while asserting a distinctive identity. Tradition and modernity coexist naturally, including in diplomatic and business environments.

This coherence between culture, protocol and the economic environment plays a key role in the region’s positioning as a tourist destination.

CTO Air Connectivity Summit
Duncan Beveridge ( Bermuda Tourism Authority)

A growing regional dynamic

Beyond the technical discussions, the CTO Air Connectivity Summit highlighted an essential reality: connectivity is a strategic tool, but it is also a vector of cultural influence. In the Caribbean region, air development cannot be dissociated from the identity of the territories it serves.

Linking destinations also means :

  • – strengthening cultural exchanges
  • – enhancing local heritage
  • – boosting tourist appeal
  • – building a more integrated regional vision

In Bermuda, the balance between economic strategy and cultural affirmation offered an inspiring example.

The CTO Air Connectivity Summit didn’t just talk about air routes and infrastructure. It showed that an economic event can become a space for cultural representation, where a territory welcomes visitors, asserts its identity and projects its image. In a region where tourism and culture are intimately linked, connectivity is more than just passenger flows. It becomes a bridge between territories, generations and imaginations, and this is perhaps where its true richness lies.

CTO Air Connectivity Summit
CTO Air Connectivity Summit

The CTO Air Connectivity Summit is a regional summit organized by the Caribbean Tourism Organization (CTO), dedicated to air connectivity issues, route development strategies and cooperation between island territories.

The CTO Air Connectivity Summit aims to strengthen intra-regional connectivity, support multi-destination tourism and facilitate economic, cultural and institutional exchanges between island territories.

In Bermuda, the CTO Air Connectivity Summit incorporated strong cultural elements, including a performance by the Gombeys and the participation of a youth choir, illustrating the link between connectivity, territorial identity and tourist appeal.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

More articles from RK

Marcus Garvey
HISTORY & HERITAGE
Tolotra

Jamaica – Marcus Garvey, Jamaican hero of international renown

Marcus Garvey remains one of the most influential figures to emerge from the Caribbean. Born in Jamaica at the end of the 19th century, he transformed a local experience into a political and cultural project of international scope. At a time when black populations faced deeply rooted systems of exclusion, Marcus Garvey proposed a structured vision based on dignity, organization and autonomy. Recognized today as a national hero in Jamaica, he is much more than a historical symbol. His story helps us understand how the Caribbean helped shape major intellectual and political movements on a global scale. His name continues to circulate in contemporary debates on identity, memory and the development of societies born out of colonial history. From Jamaican origins to the formation of a committed conscience He was born on August 17, 1887 in St. Ann’s Bay, Jamaica, into a modest family. Very early on, he developed a

Read More »
BlueSeas Festival
EVENT MANAGEMENT
Tolotra

BlueSeas Festival: in Curaçao, Pietermaai becomes the epicenter of Caribbean blues in 2026

From April 2 to 4, 2026, Curaçao hosts another edition of the BlueSeas Festival a musical event that is gradually establishing itself as one of the most unique cultural events in the Caribbean. Free, open and rooted in the urban space, the festival goes far beyond simple musical programming to become a genuine territorial experience. Right from the opening night, Thursday April 2 at Kura Hulanda Village, the mood is set: the blues settle into a heritage setting, before taking full possession of the Pietermaai district on April 3 and 4. This two-stage format structures an immersive experience in which music, architecture and local life are seamlessly interwoven. A free festival that transforms the city into an open-air stage The BlueSeas Festival is based on the principle of offering free concerts in public spaces. This choice is not insignificant. It widens access to live music, while creating direct interaction between

Read More »
Le vodou : Haïti au cœur d’une candidature patrimoniale majeure avec le Bénin
COOPERATION
Tolotra

Vodou: Haiti at the heart of a major heritage bid with Benin

The vodou is entering a new phase in its international history. The joint candidacy of Haiti and Benin for inscription on the Representative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity places centuries of memory, transmission and creation at the heart of a global heritage debate. The deadline set by UNESCO for applications to be examined in 2027, and submitted before March 31, 2026, places this initiative within a precise and structured institutional calendar, but the stakes go far beyond the administrative procedure. For the Caribbean, and Haiti in particular, this candidacy is no mere cultural formality. It’s about recognizing a living heritage, often misunderstood, sometimes caricatured, but deeply rooted in the country’s social, artistic and spiritual history. Vodou is not a fixed folklore; it is a cultural matrix, a way of organizing the link between generations, communities and the sacred. To place it within an international heritage dynamic is

Read More »

conTACT RK

we'd love to have your feedback on your experience so far

Join The List

Join our Richès Karayib community!  Sign up for our newsletter.

Want To Maximize Your Business Presence On Riches Karayib?

Complete the form to start the application