At the heart of the Cay Hill Roundabout in St. Maarten stands a figure in motion — One-Tété Lohkay, captured mid-stride, carrying a bundle of sugarcane on her shoulder. But this is not just a statue. It is a story of resistance carved in bronze. A story of a woman who refused to be broken.
Lohkay was an enslaved young woman on St. Maarten, known not for submission, but for defiance. Time and time again, she attempted to escape the brutality of plantation life on the island. Each time she was captured, the punishment grew more severe — until one act of cruelty would define her name forever.