Members of the Tobago Performing Arts Company on stage, during the media launch at the Shaw Park Complex, Tobago. —Photo: THA INFORMATION DEPARTMENT All hands are currently on deck to ensure another successful staging of Tobago Carnival says Tobago House of Assembly (THA) councillor Tashia Burris.
Burris, Secretary of the Division of Tourism, Culture, Antiquities and Transportation on the sister isle, says all stakeholders inclusive of bandleaders, service providers, competition holders, pan and other cultural practitioners have been engaged with the goal of building on last year’s successful debut. Tobago will host its second full October Carnival celebration, entitled “Ritual, Revelry & Release”, from October 27 to 29. (Source: Sunday Express, September 24, 2023)
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Herman Gajadhar holding a photograph of his younger self The children attending Cunaripo Presbyterian Primary School in the 1930s had a rainy season problem. To get to classes meant walking many kilometres from the surrounding villages of Howson, Jaraysingh, Cheeyou, Nestor and Hassanali, places south of Sangre Grande that you may never have heard about. Back then, every road in these villages of rice and cocoa, coffee and tonka bean was a muddy mess. So the boys would wash their shoes at a well near the entrance to the hilltop school, while the girls cleaned theirs at a trough on the compound, before daring to step into the headmaster’s building. Infant Herman Gajadhar had no such problem. Because he owned no shoes. Gajadhar told us this story over a few beers at his home in Guaico, this week. He is now 95 years old, with a perfectly intact memory, and up to a week ago, was driving around Sangre Grande, slowly, and probably causing a traffic jam. Gajadhar was born into a family of 11 siblings, his parents, rice planters and cocoa farmers, living in the lowlands in Cunaripo. They were Hindus, one generation out of indentureship, but the Canadian Mission to the Indians (CMI) opened its school nearby, and education meant a chance to avoid a life as a lagoon or plantation labourer. Gajadhar said: “My father was a good gardener. My mother remained home to cook for us. But one thing, they made sure all of us went to that school. And in those days, the best job you could get was to be a teacher, or otherwise, it was working the riceland or with your father in the estate. But he made sure I got my education, so I didn’t have to do this all my life.” He did not squander the chance at school. Gajadhar was identified as a high performer and chosen for the pupil/teacher system where he assisted in teaching classes while supervised and monitored by the schoolmaster. He was 14 years old when he was paid his first salary of $12 a month. With it, he bought his first pair of shoes, the rubber-soled, canvas upper “washikong”. Gajadhar wrote yearly exams, which qualified him to attend the Naparima Teacher Training College in San Fernando, and by age 18 was an accredited teacher, working for a $20-a-month salary. His first assignment was a return to Cunaripo Primary School, before teaching stints at Fishing Pond, Sangre Chiquito and Plum Mitan Presbyterian schools. This was 1940s and ’50s Sangre Grande, and life was far different. The Trinidad Government Railway connected this East Trinidad town to Port of Spain, Siparia and Rio Claro, but you had your entertainment right here within bicycle distance. Your alcohol and lime was at Uncle Sam Bar. And there was the “theatre” of Samuel Juteram, the rags-to-riches owner of the Apollo Cinema, where Gajadhar went on a Friday to see the Indian films, and on a Sunday for the Hollywood movies, always in the “pit” where a seat cost 12 cents. Who needed the rest of the island, said Gajadhar, when you had your beaches, past the swamplands in Fishing Pond Village, or in Bande de L’Est where you could catch crab and make a cook at night, in the schoolyard on a weekend. Meeting place: Gajadhar’s liming spot in Sangre Grande—Uncle Sam Bar. And especially since you had liming partners like Isaiah James Boodhoo (1935-2004), who also started as a CMI pupil/teacher, but would go on to become one of the region’s critically acclaimed artists. Long before that, Boodhoo was the leading “girls man” in the town, with the gift of gab, good at cricket, cards and everything else. Gajadhar would be tamed in his 30s when he married a reverend’s daughter, Elodie, and settled down to father two sons, Trevor and Addison, and teach countless children at Guaico Primary School over a decade. He would qualify to teach at the secondary school level, and older people along the Atlantic Coast may remember him at schools in Rio Claro, Manzanilla and Guayaguayare where he taught the subject principles of business (POB). It also appears he employed these business principles because he started investing in real estate, taking loans and buying land cheap, and reselling when the price increased. Meanwhile, he became a respected elder at the Morton Memorial Presbyterian Church where his wife was secretary and singer. That school closed about ten years ago. In 2021, he gave a video-recorded interview where he told about his volleyball talents, wedding sermons, the need to bring back the church harvests and village councils, and how sometimes an entire train carriage was filled with Presbyterians going to Arima or San Fernando. After his retirement, Gajadhar opened a private secondary school in Sangre Grande where accounting, shorthand and typing were taught. His wife was a teacher, and he the principal. He also let us know that he wrote his own book, A Secretary’s Companion. flashback, 2001: Herman Gajadhar. —Photo: Morton Memorial Presbyterian Church Two years ago, Gajadhar’s wife died at age 86. One son is in Canada. The other settled in the home village of Cunaripo.
So Gajadhar now spends his time in a comfortable armchair, near a cabinet filled with sporting trophies, school and long-service awards, being visited by church friends and neighbours. On the wall across from him is a framed painting given to him by his friend Isaiah. He said: “I like to watch that picture. It brings back all the good memories.” (Source: Richard Charan, Sunday Express, September 21, 2023) Prof Clement Imbert Prof Clement Imbert, Prof John Agard, and Prof Pathmanathan Umaharan are the recipients of the Order of the Republic of Trinidad and Tobago, the nation’s highest award, for 2023. The ORTT may be awarded to anyone (citizen or non-citizen) who has rendered distinguished and outstanding service to TT. The list of awardees was released by President''s House on Saturday ahead of the award ceremony at President's House this evening. In its release on the National Awards, President’s House said Imbert is being honoured for innovation, steelpan technology, education and culture and the arts. “He currently serves at the UWI as University Professor (Emeritus) in mechanical /metallurgical engineering. As part of both the engineering and education fraternity, he was able to use his knowledge to assist in securing accreditation for the local engineering fraternity. “He has worked on several boards including UTT, the Caribbean Industrial Research Institute and the Accreditation Council of TT. “Prof Imbert has contributed significantly to the development of the steelpan. He is co-founder of the UWI Steelpan Development Centre and a member of the team that developed the G-Pan.” Agard is being recognised for environment/climate change and biodiversity protection. He is the executive director of the Global Institute for Climate-Smart and Resilient Development at UWI. “His research is widely recognised regionally and internationally, from natural resources management, water quality, marine and terrestrial ecology to the impact of climate change on natural and human systems. “Prof Agard served as co-chair to a group of independent scientists appointed by the UN Secretary-General to draft the second quadrennial Global Sustainable Development Report in 2023. His vision is that of a society which recognises other forms of wealth including biodiversity that exist beyond the limit of GDP.” Umaharan is being recognised for his services in the spheres of science/agricultural development. He is the director of the Cocoa Research Centre at the UWI. As director, Umaharan oversaw the conversion of the Cocoa Research Unit into a full-fledged campus centre. “His research projects resulted in genetic approaches to overcome losses associated with disease, and improving tolerance to climate change. This has led the way to the development of the first molecular breeding programme in cocoa, a global DNA fingerprinting service, a quality certification service & the improvement of cocoa quality. Through his efforts the UWI has now been named by the EU as the top cocoa research institution globally.” The Chaconia Medal may be awarded for long and meritorious service tending to promote national welfare or strengthen community spirit in TT. This year’s medals have been awarded to Dr Bruce Paddington, founder and co-owner of Banyan Productions TT, for media/film industry; medical practitioner specialising in child and adolescent psychiatry Dr Jacqueline Sharpe for medicine/psychiatry; Langston Roach, executive chairman of Langston Roach Industries Ltd, for business and community; and Sieunarine Persad Coosal, executive director of Coosal's Construction Company, for entrepreneurship/philanthropy. The Chaconia Medal, Silver, has been awarded to Exodus Steel Orchestra Leader Ainsworth Mohammed for contributions to culture and the arts/steelband management; Dr Calvin Inlalsingh (posthumously) for medicine/sports and philanthropy; management consultant Carlos Hee Houng for energy; former calypsonian Francine “Singing Francine” Edwards (posthumously) for culture and the arts; radio station owner/manager George Leacock for sports/media; Dr Radica Mahase for education, volunteerism and advocacy; Rishi Lakhan for culture and the arts; and Prof Surujpal Teelucksingh for medicine. The Humming Bird Medal may be awarded for loyal and devoted service in any field of human endeavour or for gallantry or other humane action to TT. Prof John Agard Recipients of the Hummingbird Medal, Gold, are former National Scout Commissioner Azamuddin Khan for community development; TT Cricket Board president Azim Bassarath for sports/cricket administration; businesswoman Carol Ann Birchwood-James for tourism; social worker Shihan Marva John-Logan for community development, activism and social work; tent owner/manager Reynold Howard for culture and the arts; retired lecturer Richard Escalante for education; retired musician Rukminee Holas Beepath for culture and education; curriculum officer/sports broadcaster Samuel Badree for sport and education; former OSHA TT chairman Wayne Gerrard Bertrand (posthumously) for energy and education. The Hummingbird Medal, Silver, is awarded to Ashton Ford for culture, community development and education; Carl Birjah for sport; Dr Daniel Parks, pastor, for faith-based community work and social services; gym manager Eric Mc Cree for community/youth and national development; businessman Harvey Borris for community service; Imam Imtiaz Ali (posthumously) for faith-based community work and social services; innovator Jim Phillip for culture and the arts; Kenson group founder Kenneth Ferguson for energy/national development; and Pastor Wilma Kelly for faith-based community work and social services. The Hummingbird Medal, Bronze, for gallantry went to 11-year-old Rachel Bhagwandeen (posthumously). Bhagwandeen died in 2022 while protecting her nine-year-old brother from a dog attack. The Public Service Medal of Merit may be awarded for outstanding and meritorious service to TT. The 2023 awardees of the Public Service Medal of Merit, Gold, are retired permanent secretary Anthony Bartholomew for public service; consultant Beverley Khan for public policy and development planning; retired public official Enid A Zephyrine for public service; former nurse Gwendolyn Loobie-Snaggs (posthumously) for public service/health sector; and Leslie Reuben Hoyte for public service/sport and physical education. The Silver medal awardees are retired Prison Service supervisor John Lopez for public service; and former principal Yasmin Rahaman Singh for public service. Full list of National Awardees 2023 The Order of the Republic of Trinidad and Tobago awardees: 1. Prof Clement Imbert, university professor (emeritus), mechanical/metallurgic engineer, UWI, in the spheres of innovation/steelpan technology, education and culture and the arts. As part of both the engineering and education fraternity, he was able to use his knowledge to assist in securing accreditation for the local engineering fraternity. He has worked on several boards including the University of Trinidad and Tobago, the Caribbean Industrial Research Institute and the Accreditation Council of TT. Imbert has contributed significantly to the development of the steelpan. He is co-founder of the UWI Steelpan Development Centre, and a member of the team that developed the G-Pan. 2. Prof John Agard, executive director, Global Institute for Climate-Smart and Resilient Development, UWI, in the spheres of environment/climate change and biodiversity protection. His research is widely recognised regionally and internationally, from natural resources management, water quality, marine and terrestrial ecology to the impact of climate change on natural and human systems. Agard served as co-chair to a group of independent scientists appointed by the UN Secretary-General to draft the second quadrennial Global Sustainable Development Report in 2023. His vision is that of a society which recognises other forms of wealth including biodiversity that exist beyond the limit of GDP. 3. Prof Dr Pathmanathan Umaharan, director of the Cocoa Research Centre of the UWI, St Augustine Campus, in the spheres of science/agricultural development. As director, Umaharan oversaw the conversion of the Cocoa Research Unit into a full-fledged campus centre. His research projects resulted in genetic approaches to overcome losses associated with disease, and improving tolerance to climate change. This has led the way to the development of the first molecular breeding programme in cocoa, a global DNA fingerprinting service, a quality certification service and the improvement of cocoa quality. Through his efforts the UWI has now been named by the European Union as the top cocoa research institution globally. Prof Pathmanathan Umaharan The Chaconia Medal for long and meritorious service tending to promote national welfare or strengthen community spirit.
The Chaconia Medal, Gold, awardees: 1. Dr Bruce Paddington, retired, in the spheres of media/film industry. Paddington is the founder and co-owner of Banyan Productions TT. Banyan is an award-winning pioneering media production and consultancy company, servicing the Caribbean and international markets in the areas of television documentaries, dramas and public awareness campaigns on cultural, social, and development issues. Paddington formed the Mucurapo Schools Community Project, providing audiovisual materials for Fatima College, Mucurapo Senior Comprehensive and Mucurapo Junior Secondary School. By using the production facilities of Banyan, he was able to produce video materials such as a series on Spanish language teaching. The project was so successful that it was absorbed into the television and audio-visual unit of the Ministry of Education. Paddington became the director and the unit produced several valuable programmes on authors such as Derek Walcott and George Lamming, along with groundbreaking recordings of interviews with vintage artists such as Growling Tiger. Paddington produced hundreds of educational audio-visual materials developing the history and literature surrounding cinema in the region, training aspiring filmmakers and providing a platform upon which they can have their work shown and developed through workshops and seminars at film festivals. 2. Dr Jacqueline Sharpe, medical practitioner, specialty- psychiatry child and adolescent psychiatry, in the spheres of medicine/psychiatry. Sharpe is currently a consultant child and adolescent psychiatrist, Ministry of Health and director of the Child Guidance Clinic. Sharpe has been a pioneer in providing psychiatric and psychological services to children and their families in TT. She established the Child Psychiatry Service and heads the only full-time child guidance clinic, providing evaluation and treatment for children and adolescents and their families. In addition to direct clinical services, she provides indirect service which includes liaison work with primary, secondary and special schools, children’s homes, the Family Court and the Student Support Services Division of the Ministry of Education. 3. Langston Roach, executive chairman, Langston Roach Industries Ltd, in the spheres of business and community. Roach is a past director of the TT Manufacturers’ Association (TTMA). As a director of the TTMA, Roach brought valuable insights and expertise to the organisation. He was always willing to share his knowledge and experience, acting as a mentor to many small to medium-size enterprises. Even as a current member, Roach continues to show his commitment to the TTMA and the wider community through his sponsorship of numerous events and initiatives. Roach has been described as consummate entrepreneur, philanthropist, mentor and patriot. 4. Sieunarine Persad Coosal, executive director, in the spheres of entrepreneurship/philanthropy. Coosal is the executive director of Coosal's Construction Company. He has successfully led his team to be recognised as one of the leading construction companies /contractors in TT. In his efforts to honour his corporate social responsibility, he continues to partner with communities, schools and learning institutions and by extension, facilitated ventures geared to assist in the development of the social fabric. To that end, he has collaborated with the mission of Habitat for Humanity and the Salvation Army. The Chaconia Medal, Silver, awardees: 1 Ainsworth Mohammed, retired, in the spheres of culture and the arts/steelband management. Mohammed, as the leader of Exodus Steel Orchestra since 1999, has led the band to success at national, regional and international Panorama and Music Festival competitions. The steelband has toured extensively to all continents of the globe "preaching" the gospel of pan. Mohammed has also established a junior school, Exocubs, for 100 students ranging in age from five-21. He has designed and singularly managed the upgrade of Exodus' Pan Theatre in 2021/22. Mohammed is among the longest-serving managers in the steelband movement and is often hailed in steelband circles as the best administrator in the industry. The band is known for its wholesome discipline and community spirit, but more than that, Mohammed has expanded his expertise to other steel orchestras in being a founding director of the International Steelband Foundation, which produces the Big 5 Steelband Concerts. 2. Dr Calvin Inalsingh (posthumously), doctor, in the spheres of medicine/sports and philanthropy. Inalsingh was a former president of the Princess Elizabeth Home. Under his stewardship, the home went from a facility that encompassed not just the medical and physical needs of the children but also their educational needs. Inalsingh was also a medical director and member of the Red Cross Society. He gave many years of voluntary service and used his influence in the community to encourage others to offer their service to those less fortunate. Inalsingh was an avid sportsperson and served as team doctor for the TT national team.at the Pan American games, the Commonwealth games, the Caribbean and Central American games and the 1984 Olympic games in Los Angeles. Inalsingh served as chairman of the TT Boxing Board of Control from 1993-1996 and as vice chairman of the medical advisory committee of the World Boxing Association. 3. Carlos Hee Houng, management consultant in the sphere of energy. Hee Houng joined the Economic Studies and Planning Unit of the Industrial Development Corporation in 1972 and between 1975-1978, served as the CEO of the Co-ordinating Task Force that had responsibility for activities related to development of the Point Lisas Industrial Estate. After the investment decision on the Fertrin project (1978), Hee Houng returned to energy-sector operations joining Fertrin, serving as the company’s project co-ordinating officer during the engineering and construction period. He was appointed as a government representative of Fertrin’s Technical Advisory Group (1978-1981), in which role he was able to promote the early recruitment of nationals to fill positions. 4. Francine Edwards, also known as Singing Francine, (posthumously), former calypsonian historian, in the spheres of culture and the arts. Edwards was well known in the calypso arena, where she was able to hold her own and gain prominence in a male-dominated field. Over her 51-year career Singing Francine used the medium of calypso to champion the female cause in the calypso arena, seeking to place women’s issues on the front burner through the medium of calypso. She was Calypso Queen in 1973, 1981 and 1983. Singing Francine also used her melodious voice to comment on other topical issues or to help her audience find a deeper meaning to life. Francine’s style was always to make her audiences listen to her lyrics above the melody. Even in her up-tempo calypsos such as Carnival Fever and Cool It Down, there was always a storyline, the very essence of the artform. 5. George Leacock, radio station owner/manager, in the spheres of sports/media. Leacock was tasked with setting up the first Division of Sport in Tobago. With limited resources, over a nine-year period, his achievements included the creation of elite athlete programmes at the division that led to the success of athletes across the island in national and international competitions. Leacock’s combined experiences as a player, coach, and administrator, with a special knack for event management, have led to a series of appointments to execute large sporting events on the island. These include the opening of the Dwight Yorke Stadium, the FIFA U-17 World Cup, and the Carifta games. The FIFA tournament received 39 of 40 possible points for event management. The Carifta games, which Tobago managed on six weeks' notice after the original hosts defaulted, are on record as the first in the history of the games to run to a time script. Leacock was the chairman of a task force to deliver the Tobago leg of the 2023 Commonwealth Youth Games which he achieved with resounding success. 6. Dr Radica Mahase, lecturer, in the spheres of education, volunteerism and advocacy. Mahase is distinguished as an educator and historian. She has published extensively in the field of history, specialising in Indian indentureship and culture of TT. She also co-authored a textbook on Caribbean history which is widely used throughout the Caribbean. Mahase has also created opportunities for autistic people through the establishment of Rahul’s Clubhouse, an autism centre in Gopaul Lands, Marabella. This is a one-of-a-kind centre: both autistic children and young adults can participate in sensory-oriented programmes tailored to their specific needs. Mahase founded an NGO solely based on the concept of volunteerism. She has focused on youth and so far, has trained approximately 350 youth volunteers between ten and 30 to work with autistic people. 7. Rishi Lakhan, retired, in the spheres of culture and the arts. In 1988, Lakhan was elected the first president of the St James Working Council and successfully organised the very first St James Children Carnival, now in its 35th year. That same year he designed and led the novel Christmas decorative street lighting across the Western Main Road in St James, which was adopted by communities across TT. In 1993, as councillor for the electoral district of St James East on the Port of Spain City Council, Lakhan was instrumental in the formation and establishment of the St James/Cocorite Hosay Association and successfully lobbied the Ministry of Community Development on behalf of the association. As a manager of his own retail business establishment in St James, in 1981, his mobilisation of the St James business community and his vibrant advocacy to call for the amendment to the ordinance for 24-hour shopping was successful and benefited the entire country. St James is now known as the city that does not sleep. 8. Prof Surujpal Teelucksingh, doctor, in the sphere of medicine. Teelucksingh has played a key role in the development of national and regional monographs on a variety of diseases including dengue, diabetes, obesity and malaria. Teelucksingh has received multiple accolades for his pioneering work and groundbreaking research in medical education locally with the introduction of the Objective Structured Clinical Examination in 1998. These examinations helped re-engineer the medical curriculum across the UWI campuses and have been used as a template by other institutions as a model and example of clinical excellence, quality and assurance. The Humming Bird Medal awardees. 1. Azamuddin Khan, retired, in the sphere of community development. Khan excelled in all levels of scout leadership training, completing three levels of scout leadership training, culminating in the award of his Wood Badge Beads, the highest level. Khan gave back his knowledge and experience to the youth of TT for a further 20 years by joining up with the National Training Team. Khan demonstrated resilience, durability, dedication and all the components of good management. Khan rose to the top of scouting to be National Scout Commissioner in charge of scouting in TT and held that portfolio for six years. 2. Azim Bassarath, TT Cricket Board president, vice president Cricket West Indies, in the spheres of sports/cricket administration. Bassarath has fostered and grown youth development cricket programmes at every age level. He has contributed to the expansion of women's cricket development, assisting in building girls’ participation at the various schools and national levels. He has reached out to rural communities by implementing cricket caravans to geographical areas such as Toco, Cedros and Tobago to unearth new talent. He has been successful in transforming the TT Cricket Board into a modern organisation by introducing up-to-date technology and cricket techniques. Under his tenure international players such as Keiron Pollard, Dwayne Bravo, Sunil Narine, Nicholas Pooran and Anisa Mohammed have come to the forefront. 3. Carol Ann Birchwood-James, businesswoman, in the sphere of tourism. Birchwood-James has spent 33 years in the tourism sector in Tobago. James was president of the Tobago Hotel and Tourism Association from 2007-2011 and vice president from August 2011 to March 2023. James was a member of the Tourism Development Company from 2011-2015, serving as a member of the finance committee and the marketing representative on the board. She also served as a member of the Tobago Standing Committee, established to increase visitor arrivals and to address the impact on Tobago’s tourism and its stakeholders. During her tenure the Tobago Hotel and Tourism Association started its own road shows to Trinidad. She was a fierce advocate for tourism stakeholders and her contribution was recognised by state agencies in Tobago. 4. Shihan Marva John-Logan, social worker, in the spheres of community development, activism and social work. John-Logan, also known as Sister Hanifah, is a social worker, mediator, youth and community advocate, martial arts practitioner and a social change agent. Her passion and devotion for people led to the birth of Ryu Dan Dojo Empowerment Centre in 2013. John-Logan has developed Ryu Dan’s Sports Plus Model, an innovative cognitive-behaviour modification approach that uses martial arts as a vehicle for change. She was very instrumental in establishing a platform for Muslim sisters called Sister Sister, which seeks to address everyday issues such as domestic violence, mental health, finances and education. She has also been providing female migrants and locals with entrepreneurial and soft skills training through her Support, Educate, Empower Women programme for the last six years. 5. Reynold Howard, retired, in the spheres of culture and the arts. As a tent manager/owner Howard provided opportunities for local composers and performers to present their work to local and international audiences. His purchase of Semp Record Pressing Plant in the 1980s significantly reduced the time and cost of record production for TT recording artistes. As a founding member of the Copyright Organisation of TT, Howard facilitated access of the nation's music creators to protection of their work and receipt of royalties due to them. Howard is a pioneer of parang soca, now an established genre of music. His recording and distribution of Daisy Voisin's Parang Queen introduced the world to the music of TT's greatest exponent of traditional parang music. 6. Richard Escalante, retired, in the sphere of education. Escalante taught public-sector officers at the Central Training Unit- Ministry of Public Administration from 19931998 and has given 30 years of service to the UWI St Augustine teaching E-Government and Public Information Systems at the undergrad and postgrad programmes. Since 2006, he has also taught E-Governance for Small Developing States at Cave Hill. He is the author of several peer-reviewed articles and six books on the history of media in the oil industry, telecommunications and socio-military history, all spheres of study which have not been written extensively about before. He is currently the 2018 recipient of a first-time author award from Nalis and is the consultant on the history of colonial radio. 7. Rukmine Holass Beepath, retired, in the spheres of culture and education. Beepath has been involved in music and culture for over six decades. As she became more involved in culture, she was called upon to assist in Maha Sabha Hindu schools across Trinidad in training students for the festival of Baal Vikaas Vihaar. She has dedicated her life to serving schools and communities across the nation. Beepath has published four books on Indo-Trinidadian religious celebrations, recordings of traditional music and songs, and was requested to teach these traditional songs to mandirs throughout Trinidad. For the 50th Independence Day celebrations, Beepath composed a special nation-building song which is still played at several venues when we celebrate independence. 8. Samuel Badree, curriculum officer/sports broadcaster, in the spheres of sport and education. Badree was a former Number 1-ranked T20 bowler in the world. He was a member of the West Indies World Cup-winning teams in 2012 and 2016. Badree was the assistant secretary to the West Indies Cricket Board from September 2010-2015. He was the players’ representative to the board and led workshops with players to prepare them for post-cricket life, money management and reintegration into society, communications and public relations. Badree is the chairman of Badree’s Academy of Sport Education and has been an educator for over two decades. He is the epitome of a role model and has demonstrated a commendable balance between sport and education and has excelled in both. 9. Wayne Bertrand (posthumously), retired former chairman, in the spheres of energy and education. Bertrand was a pillar of the energy industry for over 45 years, playing a pivotal role in shaping its direction, growth and success to sustainable development. As president of operations at the Petroleum Company of TT and its predecessor Trintoc, Bertrand was instrumental in implementing innovative business initiatives and collaborations regionally and internationally. Bertrand played a critical role in the development of the country's health, safety and environmental culture, as chairman of the Occupational Safety and Health Agency (OSHA). The Humming Bird Medal, Silver, awardees: 1. Ashton Ford, retired, in the spheres of culture, community development and education. Ford was the chairman of the Sport and Carnival Committee in Arima and presided over the expansion of the borough from one square mile to four, initiating major changes which contributed to the overall development of Arima. He was involved in the political sphere and served as parliamentary secretary in the Ministry of Works, Maintenance and Drainage and the Ministry of Public Utilities and Transport. Ford was also a journalist and worked with various media houses including the Guardian, Bomb and the Catholic News. He freelanced for radio stations and covered sports, culture, politics and crime. In 2004, he was assigned to the TT High Commission in London as public affairs, culture and tourism attaché, a position he held for six years, working closely with the high commissioner to promote TT in areas of trade, tourism and culture. 2.Carl Birjah, retired, in the sphere of sport. Birjah has spent most of his life in the sporting fraternity. He has worked as a sports master, secretary, public relations officer, vice chairman, vice president and president all tuned into furthering the interest of cricket in TT. As a member of the TT Cricket Board he held amongst other positions vice chairman of the South West Zone and secretary of the South West Zone. He has also served and continues to serve as cricket administrator in promoting the sport of cricket in South Trinidad, notably with the Penal Sports Association and the South Zone Cricket Council of the TT Cricket Board in a volunteer capacity. 3. Dr Daniel Parks, pastor, in the spheres of faith-based community work and social services. Parks is an ordained minister of the gospel and a prisons' chaplain. Parks has effected positive change in the lives of a countless number of people within society and behind prison walls, bringing newfound hope and restoration to those who were thought to be beyond redemption. He is the founder and president of the Prison Fellowship and has introduced a range of programmes and initiatives designed to support the spiritual and emotional well-being of prisoners. Parks works as a UN Ambassador for Peace, contributing to the ideology of protecting civilians, preventing conflict and reducing violence. 4. Eric Mc Cree, gym manager, in the spheres of community/youth and national development. McCree believes that his purpose is to promote fitness and wellness in our youth as he works personally with them to identify and maximise talent, academically and in athletics. McCree has been selected national coach seven times. He has successfully coached athletes who have successfully represented TT at least 55 times at various international games and mentored them to achieve academically. Many of the athletes under his guidance have succeeded at regional examinations. Even more noteworthy is the fact that McCree helped 21 of his athletes achieve academic scholarships. 5. Harvey Borris, businessman, in the sphere of community service. Borris has been championing national causes in mainstream and social media for the past 30 years. At present he hosts two programmes, The Hot Seat and I Love My Country. During his programmes he seeks to advocate for the development of a healthy lifestyle and the prevention of illnesses such as diabetes. He has established and resourced the Centre for Justice, an NGO through which people obtain social, educational, legal and/or financial aid and advice. Professionally Borris has served his community as councillor in the San Juan/Laventille Regional Corporation, as a diplomat attached to the TT consulate in Miami, US and an alderman in the Port of Spain City Corporation. 6. Imam Imtiaz Ali, (posthumously), prison chaplain, licensed marriage officer, religious instruction teacher, in the spheres of faith-based community work and social services. Ali was a prominent figure in the Muslim community. In his role as the imam of the Real Street ASJA Masjid since 2000, he was instrumental in promoting Islamic education and values, providing spiritual guidance and support to the Muslim community, and fostering interfaith dialogue and understanding. Through his leadership, the Real Street ASJA Masjid became a centre for community development and outreach programmes, including feeding the needy, providing disaster relief and supporting educational initiatives. Ali was also president of the San Juan Business Association and worked closely with local government officials and other stakeholders to secure funding for a number of infrastructure projects, including road repairs, sidewalk improvements and the installation of streetlights, laying the foundation for further economic growth and development. 7. Jim Phillip, retired, in the spheres of culture and the arts. Phillip innovated the steelpan-stand and the steelpan rack by making them collapsible. He innovated the tenor pan by replacing the original skirting with flat iron. He invented the pan balancer, the pan note measurer, the pan tuning stand and the nozzle squeezer. His work is exclusively produced in TT but has a cultural impact on the rest of the world. Some people describe his innovations as having come from a genius or a scientist. 8. Kenneth Ferguson, founder and chairman, Kenson Group, in the spheres of energy/national development. Ferguson found a place in the energy sector, having accepted a voluntary separation package from Amoco and founding Kenson Production Services Ltd, a contracting company specialising in providing operations and maintenance services to energy companies in TT. It is widely acknowledged as a leading service provider in the energy sector. To Ferguson’s mind it was critical for this workforce to be provided with every opportunity to gain the skills and certifications required to conduct their tasks with the strictest adherence to international best practices. From this, another respected entity arose: the Kenson School of Production Technology. 9. Pastor Wilma Kelly, minister of the gospel and licensed marriage officer in the spheres of faith-based community work and social services Kelly, as a prisons chaplain, has been able to effect positive change in the lives of many. The scope of Kelly's achievements encompasses her work as a pastoral counsellor, radio and television host, and founder of the Centre of Restoration and The Way of Holiness Ministry. The centre gives homeless people, alcoholics, drug addicts and former inmates a place to stay, as well as support and resources to help them rebuild their lives. As a prisons chaplain, Kelly has provided spiritual guidance, counselling and support to inmates, prison administrative and operational staff. She has successfully rehabilitated and reintegrated numerous prisoners back into society, demonstrating the transformative power of faith in the lives of those she has touched. The Humming Bird Medal, Bronze, awardees: 1. Rachel Bhagwandeen, (posthumously), former student, in the sphere of gallantry. Bhagwandeen was 11 and lived in Freeport with her parents and her three siblings. Not everyone is built with a protective mechanism that puts the life of others before themselves. It is often a testament to the type of upbringing you have had and an inner resolve to be of service to others. When Rachel and her brother were confronted by a vicious animal ,her first thought was to protect her brother and make the way clear for him to be safe while allowing herself to take the brunt of the vicious attack. Her brother survived but unfortunately she did not. For an 11-year-old to be so selfless certainly shows that she possessed a spark of the divine nurtured by her parents and leading to a place where it can only be remembered as wonderful, gracious and kind. The Public Service Medal of Merit, Gold, awardees: 1. Anthony Bartholomew, retired permanent secretary, in the sphere of public service. Bartholomew has an extensive public service career. His record includes permanent secretary in the Ministries of Planning, Housing and the Environment, Planning and Development, National Security, Public Utilities and the Environment and the Environment. After retiring from the public service, Bartholomew continued to serve. He has been a co-ordinator and adviser in the Ministry of Agriculture, Land and Marine Resources, a consultant for the Ministry of Finance, the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB) and currently to the Minister of Public Utilities. 2. Beverly Khan, consultant, in the spheres of public policy and development planning. Khan is an outstanding public servant, with 33 years of dedicated service to the government and people. Khan has served this country with distinction. She held various leadership positions, including that of deputy permanent secretary. She also served as TT counsellor in the Office of the Executive Director for the Caribbean Constituency at the IDB, Washington, DC. Khan has been an invaluable resource to the public service, especially to permanent secretaries who have relied heavily on her technical expertise. Moreover, she has mentored and inspired a generation of public officers, working with key stakeholders in the public and private sectors, and multilateral development banks in leveraging support for the country’s development. 3. Enid A Zephyrine, retired, in the sphere of public service. Zephyrine is an outstanding public official who began her career as a clerical officer in 1973, eventually becoming an auditor and budget analyst in the Ministry for Tobago Affairs, Central Administrative Services, Tobago, and Tobago House of Assembly. From 1990-2012 she served as budget analyst, financial analyst, assistant director and director, economic management, at the Ministry of Finance. After working with the World Bank in Washington, DC, for two years, Zephyrine, a consummate citizen willing to serve TT, returned to the public service in the Ministry of Finance from 2016 -2023 as the director, strategic management and execution. 4. Gwendolyn Loobie-Snaggs (posthumously), Former nurse, in the sphere of public service /health sector. Loobie-Snaggs’s employment in the service of TT began as a nurse, but she moved on to contribute in the decision-making process to further the cause of strengthening the population against the threats of diseases and viruses. In the early 1980s Loobie-Snaggs became involved with the Public Service Association (PSA) to address the needs of her colleagues. She became the nurses' representative at the PSA in 1985 and rose to first vice-president in 1993. Her service to the nurses of TT expanded to the Caribbean as she served on the executive of the Caribbean Nurses Organisation (CNO) from 2016 to her death in 2022. 5. Leslie Reuben Hoyte, retired, in the spheres of public service/sport and physical education. Hoyte has had a profound impact in the field of sports and physical education. The role for which he may perhaps be most well-known is as physical trainer to the TT National Under-20 team in the Fifth Youth World Cup in Portugal in 1991. This team included Dwight Yorke, Clayton Ince and Angus Eve, who would go on to become standouts at the senior level. Eve is the current coach of the national football team. Hoyte started as a teacher at the Couva Anglican Primary School in 1960, with subsequent appointments at Presentation College, San Fernando, Corinth Teachers’ College, the University of the Southern Caribbean, UTT and UWI (Open Campus) among others. He was also physical education and sport officer II at the Ministry of Sport, Culture, and Youth Affairs. Hoyte’s deepest and most profound impact, however, is unquestionably at the level of the individual, providing encouragement and inspiration to hundreds of young people. The Public Service Medal of Merit, Silver, awardees: 1.John Lopez, retired, in the sphere of public service. Lopez is an exceptional leader who has dedicated 35 years of his life to the TT Prison Service, rising to the rank of prison supervisor. He has contributed particularly in the area of prison healthcare services management. One of Lopez's earliest achievements was his involvement in the cadets at a junior level, where he later attained the rank of under officer. He went on to form the first cadet unit in Brazil Secondary School and also worked with students at El Dorado East Secondary School. One of Lopez's most notable contribution to the TT Prison Service was managing the Health Services Unit, which provided health care to inmates and prison staff. Through this position, he developed key stakeholder partnerships which allowed officers and inmates to receive additional healthcare services beyond the capacity of the Prison Service. 2. Yasmin Rahaman-Singh, former principal, in the sphere of public service. Rahaman-Singh was principal of ASJA. Girls' College, San Fernando from November 2007-April 2023 transforming the college into a first-choice institution and one of the top-performing schools in the country. Under her leadership, the college has developed a strong emphasis on morals, values, school-building and nation-building. The school community has come to appreciate, understand and exemplify the motto led by Rahaman-Singh, “Let's root for each other and watch each other grow.” Rahaman-Singh's vision and philosophy was always to create a cadre of 21st-century citizens, future leaders and mothers who would be exemplars to society. (Source: Newsday, September 24, 2023) By the late Angelo Bissessarsingh. The first organized cricket club in the island was formed in the late 1870s by a group of English colonial officers and planters. The Sovereign Cricket club membership eventually formed what was the genesis of the still-existing Queen’s Park Cricket Club (QPCC) in 1891. Five years later, the QPCC acquired the lease on lands which were to become the Queen’s Park Oval which is today one of the best cricketing arenas in the Caribbean. The ethnic composition of the QPCC came under fire in the 1890s. This was an era characterized by anti-colonial sentiments and heightened by the presence of several influential and vocal coloured men who spoke out against old and racially biased stratification of colonial society. One of these agitators in particular, Edgar Maresse-Smith, was pivotal in having Lebrun Constantine accepted into the QPCC as its first non-white member. Lebrun Constantine was born in Maraval , a district barely a mile outside Trinidad’s capital city of Port-of-Spain on a cocoa plantation where his parents were workers. He worked on a cocoa estate as well in his youth and played cricket in matches held at the Queen’s Park Savannah in Port-of-Spain where he quickly established a reputation for being a good batsman. At that time Cricket in Trinidad had not as yet taken on an organized front although one of the most distinguished icons of the game was born in the island. Lebrun made history as well as being a regular on the Trinidad cricket team from as early as 1893-94. Inter-colonial cricket matches between Trinidad, Barbados and Jamaica were then popular and Lebrun was a player in almost every meet after 1899. The first three tournaments were fielded with all-white teams. In 1894, Robert Slade made the first tour of the West Indies with an English cricket team, followed two years later by a team under Arthur Priestly. In the latter tour, the English side came up against an all-West Indian contingent that included Lebrun Constantine and lost. In 1900, R.S.A Warner (brother of Sir Pelham Warner) led the first West Indian touring team to England. Although not accorded first class status, the West Indians played well. Once again, the lineup included Lebrun Constantine as a batsman and wicket keeper. His batting averages were second in the West Indies team, being 30 for 610. During this tour as well, Constantine made history by becoming the first West Indian to score a century (113 runs) against an English team. In 1906 another tour to England took place of which he was a member. This time he managed to be third in the batting averages. Of his performance in the 1906 tour, the following commentary was given; "another of the brigade who proved himself very strong on the left side and can bat with power. He fields in the slips and can bowl right arm medium pace if required". Aside from his prowess as a batsman and wicket keeper, Lebrun was also a fielder of note with his energy and accuracy coming in for high praise. Lebrun Constantine’s last match of his professional career was in a 1923 inter-colonial match against Barbados. This was a landmark event since also in the batting lineup was Lebrun’s son – Learie Nicholas Constantine (21 September 1901 – 1 July 1971) - who rose to become one of the greatest cricketers in history and was later knighted and in 1969 became the first black peer in the House of Lords as Baron Constantine of Maraval in Trinidad and the County Palatine in Lancaster. Another son, Elias (22 May 1912 – 22 May 2003) also became a cricketer of renown, and who played for the West Indies in test matches in the 1930s. Despite his pioneering career he was largely low-profile in his own homeland. Whilst touring with the first West Indian teams, he supported himself as a coachman in the employ of Madame Poleska de Boissiere. Lebrun occasionally made public statements on cricket in the local press but remained mostly private until he died in 1942. (Source: Angelo Bissessarsingh's Vitrual Museum of Trinidad & Tobago, September 21, 2023) My Navel String Buried Here!!!!!
By K Michael Kangalee The term 'meh navel-string buried here,” derives from past widespread cultural practice of burying the navel-string (umbilical cord) of a new-born usually under a banana (fig) tree. This ritual can be traced back to cultural practices of indigenous people and it symbolizes the planting of roots for their child in the land and in the community, thus reaffirming the child's cultural connections to the land of their birth. In many African cultures the umbilical cord is usually buried under a tree as a symbolic act of ongoing life. Other cultures throughout the world also share this ritual. I wonder if mothers in T&T still bury the navel-strings of their new-born babies in tree roots ? Do you know where your navel string is buried? One of our members Michael Kangalee who is 81 years shares his memory of the spot where his navel string is buried and the home he grew up in. The original fig tree where my navel string was buried in 1942 was cut down after bearing , however other suckers have grown-up in the same spot near to where I lived as a child . As such although today I am over 80 years , I know the exact spot where my navel string is buried since a fig patch still exists even today. When and how my Nana and Nani acquired the piece of land to build our humble home [the last piece of land where the Tacarigua river flows under the Eastern Main Road ], is unknown - -it could well have been the property of the maternal great grandparents Bhairo and Lachmin, who most likely emerged from their Indentureship Labours around 1895, or thereabouts. See those the two "fig" trees in the centre left in the attached photo my mother told me in 1955, that my "navel-string"{or is it umbilical cord?} was buried there in 1943 by my Nani. The "baby fig" tree there now in 2019 [ see colour photo ], has to be "an offspring of the original 1942 fig tree". I have eaten curry green fig talkarie picked from a tree in this patch in 2017. Seems to me that for the past 80 years and more, that spot on the family-land was always reserved for "fig trees"... and you will notice the land slowing gently to the Tacarigua river.... and you also see the Northern range in the background. Growing up as a little boy I could clearly visualize the tapia house we lived in that was built about 4 feet off the ground. [I cannot really remember whether this was a "leepayed" area or not?] –my family had a place to call home and the kids a place to play; rain or sun and that all that mattered. I remembered our humble dwelling having an open gallery; a Living Room/ Dining Room, and a bedroom[Basdeo Mamoo/Tanti Dolly], then down the steps to the outside kitchen[ communal cooking by the good mom and the two aunts];next to the gallery was a bedroom[the Nani] then another bedroom {Mom and Dad}. The next bedroom belonged to Puchee Mamoo and Tanti Laikoo, and Mamoo Shun and the baby brother stayed in the next bedroom.We children, about six , at that time, slept on blankets and bags, on the Living Room floor. Rasool, Gillan, and Baing and Motilal Mamoos had their own homes, by this time[1949], and sometime after 1950, only Nani and Basdeo Mamoo and his family remained at that house. There were about six concrete steps at the front and an equal number at the rear, which led to the outside kitchen, a galvanised structure, with a double- chulha, a home-made table and storage area/utensils for dry goods . An oil drum was acquired and converted to an oven { with heat at the bottom and top}; occasionally bread and sponge cake emerged and I could even in 2023, recall the pre-1950 smell of freshly-baking rum cake at Christmas - -either by Tanti Dolly or Tanti Laikoo. There was a chicken run at the rear, so eggs were available. I do not believe that pork and beef were ever served in our home. I do recall however, my Nani teaching me to "leepay - -{my Nani would insist that I keep my finger nails on my left hand very short}, and her fastidiousness about a clean yard, especially when she was arranging Hindu prayers {never a grain of grass was to be found on the yard}. The photo above was taken some time between 1963 and 1973 and shows a "fig tree" in some prominence; I am easily persuaded that that "fig tree" was a sucker which came from the original fig tree where my navel string was planted in 1942. (Source: Angelo Bissessarsingh's Virtual Museum of Trinidad and Tobago, August 9, 2023) Researched by Patricia Bissessar
Once upon a time, hundreds of thousand years ago prehistoric giant animals roamed the island of Trinidad: ground sloths 20 feet tall, giant armadillos as big as automobiles and Mastodons ( larger than elephants). If it were not for the fossils and skeletal remains of these prehistoric animals found buried in tar pits in south Trinidad many would not believe this to be true. During early excavations in Trinidad paleontologists, (scientists who specializes in the study of life forms that existed in previous geologic periods) unearthed fossils belonging to gigantic mastodons, and other giant mammals that were trapped in the tar pits . According to Earth Magazine tar pits are deceptively dangerous place for as little as four centimetres of tar could be enough to ensnare a large animal. Once stuck in a tar seep, animals would eventually sink into the tar. In the book SUCCESSION OF MAMMALIAN FAUNAS ON TRINIDAD, WEST INDIES, A study conducted by ELIZABETH SCHWARZ WING 1962 there are documented reports of fossil finds of armadillos the size of cars , remains of ground sloths 20 feet tall and skeletal remains of other ancient mammals. According to Wing ( 1962) many of the fossil finds, indicating the existence of these prehistoric mammals in Trinidad were made by Dr. H. G. Kugler in the course of his career as oil geologist for Texaco Trinidad, Inc. In 1922, he discovered a vertebrate-fossil of Megatherium (Megatherium is an extinct genus of ground sloths endemic to South America that lived from the Early Pliocene through the end of the Pleistocene )remains in a stratum of oil sands while making a test pit at Apex (Trinidad) Oilfields, Inc. near Fyzabad. A carbon- date of greater than 3000 years has been determined from wood associated with at a depth of 12 feet at Trinidad's most important fossil locality at Forest Reserve. Wing ( 1962 ) also reports that a similar deposit near-by at the Forest Reserve of Texaco Trinidad, Inc. was found in 1957 when the site was being cleared for oil well Number IO6O. It was in this site an almost complete skeleton of a Glyptodon was excavated, and shipped along with some fragments to the American Museum of Natural History.The Glyptodon was essentially a dinosaur-sized armadillo, with a huge, round, armored carapace, stubby, turtle-like legs, and a blunt head on a short neck. Wing ( 1962) in her study further postulates that Geological studies revealed that Sea levels were lower during the last Ice Age and Trinidad was connected to mainland South America . As such when the llanos extended into Trinidad there was opportunity for the spread of these giant creatures into Trinidad from South America. These are the clues that tell us that prehistoric animals once roamed the island of Trinidad. These fossil discoveries and other archaeological finds in Trinidad and Tobago provide historians and scientists with rich data of what life was like thousand of years ago in Trinidad. Source: Virtual Museum of T&T, August 15, 2023) By the time of Columbus’ arrival to the region at the end of the 15th century, the Kalinagos were the main residents of Tobago. The Kalinago, who were named “Island Caribs” by the Europeans, are believed to have migrated from the Orinoco River area in South America around 1200 AD. Some say that the Kalinago called the island of Tobago “Urupaina,” (meaning “snail” in the Kali’na language) because they thought Tobago’s landscape resembled a large snail. The Europeans also gave Tobago several names, including Christopher Columbus, who called Tobago “Belaforme” in his writing because “from a distance it seemed beautiful.” From as early as 1511, Spanish records show Tobago recorded under the name “Tabaco,” referencing the tobacco leaves that were grown and smoked by the indigenous inhabitants of the island. The name also appears as “Tabago” in Dutch and French records. This photo showing a 1665 Dutch Map of “Tabago”, is courtesy of the National Archives of the Netherlands. References: Boomert, Arie. The Indigenous Peoples of Trinidad and Tobago: from the First Settlers until Today. Sidestone Press, 2016 Reid, Basil. “The Journal of Caribbean History: Volume 38, Issue 2.” University of the West Indies Press, 2 Mar. 2020. (Source: The National Archives of Trinidad and Tobago, September 13, 2023) Samantha Faucher, Caribbean Airlines station manager in St Lucia, collects the award for the airline at the World Travel Awards. (Photo by: Andrea De Silva) Caribbean Airlines has been voted the region's Leading Airline Brand at the World Travel Awards.
CAL, which suffered financial and reputational damage due to a pilot sickout last weekend that caused delays on its domestic and international routes, won the award at Saturday night's gala ceremony for the 30th World Travel Awards. Held at Sandals Grand Saint Lucian, the ceremony saw awards being given out to destinations and properties across the Caribbean and Latin America. The red carpet evening marked the opening leg of the WTA’s landmark 30th anniversary Grand Tour 2023 – a global search for the finest travel and tourism organisations. InterCaribbean, which has come under fire from various governments for its poor service, won the award for Best Cabin Crew. Bahamasair won the award for Leading Caribbean Airline. In the airport category, Jamaica's Sangster Airport was voted the Caribbean's Leading Airport while Club Mobay, located in Sangster was voted the Best Airport Lounge. (Source: The Loop, August 27, 2023) Trinidadian-Canadian director Ian Harnarine says he is looking forward to screening his film "Doubles" at the Trinidad and Tobago Film Festival (TTFF) in September.
The feature film is based on Harnarine's short film "Double with Slight Pepper" which won the Jury Prize for Best Short Film at the Toronto International Film Festival, and the Genie Award for Best Live Action Short Drama. The original short film, "Doubles with Slight Pepper," was executive produced by famed US director and producer Spike Lee. The feature film, which explores the changing relationship between a father and a son, is set to open at the 18th TTFF at Queen's Hall on 20 September at 6:30 pm. “It has been my dream to screen this film for a Trinidadian audience where we filmed, but also where the heart of this project lies. I hope that this will spotlight the talent of everyone involved in this production, especially the actors," Harnarine stated in a media release. Harnarine, who was born in Canada to parents from Trinidad, said that the film was conceived during the experience of his father's terminal illness. "In the latter days of his life, he became a person that was completely different from the man that I knew. It was like meeting a stranger for the first time. I began to wonder what it would have been like to have never known a Father until his final days," the director stated. The film is set in Trinidad and in Harnarine's hometown of Toronto, with the story set around a Trinidadian street vendor who must travel to Toronto to visit his estranged, dying father. "I also wanted to challenge the clichés of the standard immigrant story, by having a character that has failed in his new country and returned home," Harnarine said. "Even though our culture boasts a distinctive food, language, and music, it is my hope that the emotions of the film resonate with a universal audience. Above all, the movie is a tribute to my Father, who passed away before he could see it," he added. The feature film "Doubles" features Trinidad actors Errol Sitahal as well as Patti-Anne Ali Penelope Spencer and Sanjiv Boodhu in the lead role. Boodhu, a Trinidad-based attorney-at-law became an actor at age six, tutored by his father, the vertebral actor Kenneth Boodhu, and the Strolling Players Theatre Company. He played a supporting role in the short film and plays the lead role in the feature "Doubles." Boodhu said that the feature places Trinidad and Tobago on the global stage for theatre, cinema, and the arts. He added that he feels privileged to have represented the country in the project. The actors and filmmakers will walk the red carpet at the 18th T&T Film Festival at Queen's Hall in Port-of-Spain on 20 September. The event will include a performance by Olatunji Yearwood and features a gourmet movie menu. The film was financed through Telefilm Canada's Talent to Watch program and received grants from the Canadian Council for the Arts, and the Ontario Arts Council. Harnarine worked alongside Trinidadian-Canadian producer Mark Sirju. (Source: The Loop, September 7, 2023) |
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