The St. Augustine Campus Community announces the appointment of Trinidad and Tobago born Dr Rhonda McEwen has been appointed president and vice-chancellor of Victoria University in the University of Toronto.
According to this release, Dr Rhonda McEwen begins her 5-year tenure on July 1, 2022. Details follow in this press release from the UWI: The St. Augustine Campus Community is celebrating the achievement of a daughter of the soil and an Honours graduate of their campus. Trinidad and Tobago born Dr Rhonda McEwen has been appointed president and vice-chancellor of Victoria University in the University of Toronto. She will be the 14th president and vice-chancellor of one of Canada’s oldest universities when her 5-year tenure begins on July 1, 2022. She completed her Bachelor of Science degree, with First Class Honours, in sociology and management at The University of West Indies, St. Augustine (UWI)and went on to obtain an MBA in IT from City, University of London, England; an MSc in Telecommunications from the University of Colorado; and a PhD in Information from University of Toronto. “Graduates of The University of the West Indies can be found across the world and at the highest levels in academia and the professions. Dr McEwen’s success at our Campus foretold the great things to come. On behalf of the St. Augustine Campus, I congratulate her on the latest in her many successes”, said Pro Vice-Chancellor and Principal Professor Brian Copeland. Dr. McEwen is Canada Research Chair in Tactile Interfaces, Communication and Cognition and a Professor of Emerging Media & Communication. She is currently Vice-Principal Academic and Dean at the University of Toronto Mississauga, and a faculty member at the Institute of Communication, Culture, Information, and Technology. Her particular areas of focus are Human-Machine Communication; Cognitive Effects of Media; Tactile Interfaces; Tablet Communication; Cognitive Informatics; Device Mediation; and Virtual Reality. (Source: T&T Guardian, April 12, 2022)
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On Christmas Eve 2011, William Edwards died at the San Fernando General Hospital, three days after falling ill. He was 87 years old and had outlived his wife, only child and every sibling. Edwards, who lived alone in his final years, was considered by some as a recluse, so his passing was unknown to many in his village of Brothers, Tabaquite.
Only a small circle of family and friends attended the funeral at Belgroves Crematorium to send him off. But a peculiar thing happened in the weeks following his passing. As news began trickling through the village that he had died, memories stirred, and “Eddie” was alive again in the mind’s eye of those who remember him. There he was, leaning out the open window of a locomotive, sounding the steam whistle, calling out to neighbours as his engine pulled the carriages carrying people, produce and cargo along the train line linking Rio Claro to the rest of the island. It turns out that Edwards, who found employment as a boilerman at Trinidad Government Railway (TGR) on June 30, 1942, had worked his way up to being an engine driver. He was in charge of one of the engines that travelled a system extending between Port of Spain and as far as Siparia, Sangre Grande and Princes Town. By the time his employer made him redundant and sent engine driver Eddie home on October 25, 1966, he was a man with a skill no one needed. He would later find employment as a wardsman at the same hospital where he would die. Last train For the citizens who used the line between Jerningham Junction and the stops in Longdenville, Todd’s Road, Caparo, Brasso, Tabaquite, Brothers, San Pedro and Rio Claro, Eddie would always be remembered as the man who drove the train to Rio Claro the last day it ever carried passengers—August 30, 1965 (the same day of the celebrated “Last Train to San Fernando” from Port of Spain). The Express spent several days following the path of the railway out of Rio Claro to discover that two generations after the end of the rail, many still have vivid memories and unresolved complaints. Some blame the economic and infrastructural decline over the decades on the State’s decision to replace the railway with buses. People wanted to know why no one had thought to preserve the TGR buildings, signal boxes, road crossings and platforms. The people of Dades Trace where a TGR building still exists, asked why no one had maintained the impressive homes of the station masters—Coudray, Villafana, McAllister, Mitchell, Superville, McIntosh—who were of significant social standing. Like clockwork Does anyone know how important this rail line was back then, asked villager Lucy Ashby. She said that back then, it was either the train or having to foot it out of her village of cocoa plantation workers. Now, the only evidence of its existence, said Ashby, were the concrete and steel bridge crossings too difficult for scrap dealers to steal. Her sister, Angela Charles, who paid four cents to travel by train into Rio Claro to see Carnival in the ’50s, said she often wondered what would have become of her life if the train, which allowed travel into the capital, had continued operating. Khairoon Shah, who was 88 years old when we spoke with her, said as a newlywed, she was walking the kilometre or so to Brothers Station as far back as 1942 to catch the train to visit her family in Libertville. “That engine was loud and you knew it was coming from the long trail of black smoke from the chimney. One headed up to Rio Claro for 9 a.m., passing back at 11 o’clock. Another went up at 2 p.m. and back down at four. And the train was always there on the exact time, bringing people and mail, bread, ice, carrying back cocoa and coffee and sugar cane. So you had to be there or you lose out,” she said. Shah said on the final day the passenger train rolled, “Edwards was the one who drove it from Jerningham. They gave a free ride and we rode all day and in the night.” Her son, Khairoon Shah, said he, too, as a teenager, understood something big and sad was happening that day when the seven cent fare from Brothers Station to Rio Claro was waived. “They never should have scrapped it. The village felt connected then. When it stopped running, it killed this area,” he said. Photographic memory As a result of a series of fortunate events, one of the most substantial Trinidad Government Railway buildings outside of Port of Spain still exists where the Brothers Station stood. The family of the ticketmaster remained occupants of the building when the train service ended, and on January 13, 1975, it was acquired by Stephen Subero, himself a lifetime worker with the railway. The building, likely used by the stationmaster, comprises a living area, three bedrooms and a detached kitchen, which prevented the entire house from going up in flames in the event of a fire there. The outhouse is also still there, along with two concrete cisterns to supply the property, locomotive and passengers of the time. Subero, who raised ten children in that building, recalled when the carriages pulled up and villagers came with their bull and donkey-drawn carts to collect the items they had purchased from “town”. “Let nobody fool you, nothing about the rail was easy. My father (Henry Ayers) had the job of checking the line (all 13 or so kilometres) from here to Rio Claro before 6 a.m. to make sure no big tree fall across. Only when he say so, the train would run,” he said. Despite a hard life, Subero said he recognised early that the building in which he made a life was different. “People from all over Trinidad have come here to ask questions about the train and take photographs. I never had photos because back then it was survival. I walked barefoot for the first 36 years of my life. But these people who come here want to learn about the railway. They amazed this place still here. So as long as I am alive, I will take care of it,” he said. Subero, who can trace his family back to Venezuela, then declared that he was the former bandleader of the Naya Sangeet Orchestra of Brothers Road, and sang for us an Indian classical composition. The Express found some of Eddie’s relatives in Pleasantville, San Fernando. They remembered a proud man with a photographic memory. He was also a stick fighter, cricketer, had a passport but never left Trinidad, and got a driver’s permit but never owned a car. What he loved most, they said, was telling stories about his time as a railway man and was disappointing that his knowledge and name never became part of the public record. Now they are. (Source: Daily Express, Feb 16, 2022) • Note: Richard Charan can be contacted at [email protected]. Congrats
to TIMOTHY WATKINS (Baron) for getting a street after his name where he was born .. Well deserved Dana Reyes and Tyrese Clement have been awarded Fullerton-Long Caribbean scholarships by the Institute and Faculty of Actuaries (IFoA) Foundation.
Both are third-year students of the actuarial sciences programme at the Department of Mathematics and Statistics, Faculty of Science and Technology, at the UWI St Augustine Campus. The pair were selected from a list of UWI’s most gifted and highest performing actuarial students. They each won scholarships worth US$2,150. The Fullerton-Long Caribbean Scholarship was set up by UK-based senior actuaries of Jamaican heritage, Andrew Long and Norbert Fullerton. Both are ambassadors of the IFoA Foundation and UWI alumni, The IFoA Foundation is the dedicated charitable arm of the IFoA. The foundation works with the global actuarial community to meet its philanthropic objectives for positive societal impact. Earlier this academic year, the foundation took the opportunity to launch a fund supporting the most gifted and highest-performing young actuaries studying at UWI. IFoA's chair of trustees Kartina Tahir Thomson said, "The IFoA Foundation is delighted to work alongside Norbert and Andrew on the IFoA Foundation Fullerton-Long Scholarship Award. The scholarship award aims to support Caribbean students in their academic career. Not only would the students benefit financially, they would also benefit from the opportunity the award brings. "Thanks to the scholarship award, we will have an even more diverse workforce and membership in the actuarial profession. The addition of other supporters’ contributions to the fund going forward will mean that we are able to offer this highly coveted scholarship to even more promising students from the region." In 2021 the Fullerton-Long Scholarship was initiated for the UWI Mona actuarial programme, offering two awards of USD$2,150 each. This year it has partnered with the IFoA Foundation and secured extra funding to expand the programme to St Augustine. Stokeley Smart, senior lecturer and co-ordinator of the BSc in actuarial science, said, “The IFoA Foundation Fullerton-Long Caribbean Scholarship and, in particular, Mr Fullerton and Mr Long, represent the very core of the UWI’s values. These sons of the region and UWI alumni are exemplary global leaders in their field and are eager to give back to UWI and contribute to the development of the region.” Those eligible for the new IFoA Foundation Fullerton-Long Caribbean Scholarship must be: Caribbean Community (Caricom) citizens Students registered at UWI full time for a BSc degree with a major in mathematics or actuarial science At Level II or III of their studies Strong academic performance, with a minimum average GPA 3.3 in their previous year’s UWI exams Strong leadership and teamwork skills Demonstrable involvement in their local community and an outstanding character Students committed to joining an actuarial professional body. (Source: Newsday, January 5, 2022) Memories of calypsonian Kenny J (Kenwrick Joseph) and grief flooded social media following his death.
Kenny J spent what was one of his favourite times of the year, Christmas, at the Augustus Long Hospital, Pointe-a-Pierre, fighting for his life. After a two-week battle with Covid-19, which saw him being treated in the intensive care unit, Kenny J succumbed to the dreaded virus that has claimed close to 3,000 lives in Trinidad and Tobago. His daughter, Jesselle Joseph, yesterday confirmed that her father was fully vaccinated. He was 69 years old. Kenny J was featured recently in a public service announcement video series spearheaded by promoter Randy Glasgow and produced by the National Lotteries Control Board (NLCB). The series comprised short video clips in which artistes and other popular personalities encouraged members of the general public to get vaccinated. Playing his guitar, Kenny J sang, “Doh hesitate, just vaccinate. Yuh want to go in the mall, yuh want tings get back normal. Yuh want to see Kenny sing…” Prior to falling ill, Kenny J performed at several Christmas events, including a WACK FM Christmas special and the Parang with Rome concert, where he reminded audiences to get vaccinated and to always be careful. Honey-dipped voice A retired police officer, Kenny J won the National Police Services Calypso Monarch title in 1987. From there he began to perform professionally and in 1990 he placed second in the National Calypso Monarch final having sung, “Addicted To Sweet Soca” and “Leave She Alone”. Kenny J possessed a honey-dipped voice just like Baron and Sugar Aloes, which made him a hit with both men and women. His quiet manner and infectious smile endeared him to his fellow calypsonians who considered him the consummate gentleman. Kenny J tried his hand at soca parang in 1993, releasing “The Paint Brush,” a well-crafted double entendre that became an instant hit. The song became synonymous with Kenny J and the Christmas season, through the years becoming an evergreen classic. He would enjoy the same level of success with two other soca parang releases during the 1990s, “Alexander” and “Hush Yuh Mout,” which guaranteed Kenny J work during the Christmas season for over two decades. True cultural icon Kenny J died one day after the calypso fraternity lost Clifton Ryan, the Mighty Bomber, who was 93.\ Speaking briefly with the Express yesterday, president of the Police Service Social and Welfare Association Insp Gideon Dickson extended his condolences to the family of the former policeman. “We were deeply saddened upon hearing the news today. We would like to extend our deepest condolences to the family, friends, and retired colleagues of Mr Kenny J. His legacy will certainly live on in his music. May his soul rest in eternal peace,” Dickson said. Minister of Tourism, Culture and the Arts Randall Mitchell paid tribute to both men in a social media post: “My deepest condolences to the families of Mighty Bomber and Kenny J. Thank you for the contribution you made to enhancing our music and for taking Trinidad and Tobago internationally. May you both rest in peace. Folded hands.” And National Carnival Commission (NCC) chairman and calypsonian Winston “Gypsy” Peters, in a Facebook post yesterday, extended “condolences to the family of Kenwrick ‘Kenny J’ Joseph, the fraternity will surely miss you. Rest In Peace!” Opposition Leader Kamla Persad-Bissessar extended condolences, stating: “Rest in Peace to a true cultural icon Kenny J. Condolences to all his loved ones during this time of mourning.” (Source: Trinidad Express, Jan 2, 2022) After its closure to the public almost two years ago, the Asa Wright Nature Centre (AWNC) plans to reopen its doors in 2022 with a new partner, HADCO Limited.
An official statement issued by Professor Judith Gobin, Chair of the AWNC Board, notes that the Centre’s successfully separated its conservation operations from the ecolodge, paving the way for a new era at Asa Wright “In September, the Asa Wright Nature Centre (AWNC) invited proposals for the operation of the ecolodge at its internationally renowned Spring Hill Estate. The separation of the operation of the ecolodge business will allow the Centre to refocus on its core mission of conservation, education and scientific research,” the release explained. “In response to the call for proposals, the Centre received a number of proposals from various corporate entities. After a rigorous evaluation and approval process, the Chair on behalf of the Trustees of the Board of the AWNC and the members of the Board are pleased to announce that HADCO Limited emerged as the successful proposer,” it added. HADCO Limited started in 1992 and “HADCO” has since become a household name in Trinidad and Tobago. While the HADCO Group of Companies is well known for its food and beverage services, within the last five years the group has diversified its business to include two recycling companies. The HADCO Group is now seeking to diversify its business even further, into the ecotourism market. “The ecolodge at the Asa Wright Nature Centre will be the flagship property of its ecotourism business. AWNC and HADCO will collaborate to transform the operations of the ecolodge at Spring Hill Estate to attain international green certification in sustainable operations,” the statement from the Board revealed. It added: “Over the next few weeks, the Centre and HADCO will engage in negotiations on the terms of its concession for the operation of the ecolodge. The Centre and HADCO look forward to welcoming our old and new friends and supporters to the Asa Wright Nature Centre and the Ecolodge at Spring Hill Estate in 2022.” In addition, while the doors of the Centre were closed, it continued its’ conservation work, and the Board believes this important legacy will be preserved for future generations in light of the new partnership. “The proposed partnership is one step on the path to creating an immersive experience where present and future generations can learn and understand the value of our natural landscape, flora and fauna, The Centre looks forward to sharing some of its ongoing projects and work through its social media platforms in the near future.” ( Source: CNC3 Dec 20, 2021) When Noel Durity appeared on the Shark Tank in 2019, he danced his way into the pockets of billionaire investors Mark Cuban and Daymond John.
The "sharks", while amused with Durity’s moves, realised his invention, the Twist It Up comb, was no laughing matter. With their joint investment of US$225,000 in Durity’s invention, the billionaire businessmen, together with the young entrepreneur, are cornering the lucrative market for black natural hair. The Twist It Up Comb is designed to create twists on natural hair similar to the popular sponges. Shaped like a miniature tennis racket, the comb fits snugly in your hand, is portable, and, most importantly, easy to clean. Durity, who was born in San Fernando, Trinidad, and migrated to the United States at the age of five, told Loop News that Twist It Up was born out of necessity. Durity, thanks to his cousin’s suggestion, used a tennis racket to twist his hair. He tried using a curl sponge but had to throw it away every 10 days. “I was doing real estate and mortgages and I did very well and I started travelling and as I started to travel I needed something to do my hair and I was travelling with a tennis racket and as you know it can’t fit in a suitcase so my mum gave me a very small travel racket which fit in my carry on. I lost it in Brazil and I went on a mission to find a way to shrink this racket and it became my personal mission,” he said. He came up with a shrunken version of the racket in 2016 and showed it to his barber who immediately advised him to make it a business. “I didn’t want to because it is for African Americans, African Americans with hair, African Americans with hair that want to wear their hair a certain way. I wasn’t going to leave a six-figure business, I felt like it was super-nichey,” he said. When his barber got fined US$250 for re-using a curl sponge, Durity realised there was a sanitary aspect to his product that made it marketable. He started doing hair shows and barbers bought his product. “Once I started noticing I could sell it, it became a business,” he said. Durity went on Shark Tank as a personal challenge. He said he had a manufacturing problem that he needed to solve but he just thought it was cool to be on the show. He auditioned three times but was successful on his fourth try because one of the co-producers had used the comb and liked the product. For Durity, the mentorship he receives from Cuban and John is more valuable than their investment. “I can’t put into words how to describe when I get a compliment from Mark or Daymond,” said Durity It’s about the effort Looking at his life and his successes to date, Durity said he doesn’t think that he is anyone special. What sets him apart from others is his understanding that his efforts to get where he wants to go matters. “I think the difference between me and anyone else is that I cannot control if I win or lose that is in God’s hands, whatever will happen, will happen. What I can control is the effort. Win or lose, I can control the effort. This goes with anything, relationship, business, life,” he said. For Durity, knowing from a young age the quality of life he wanted to live and what it would require, he put his effort into achieving that goal. “I understood that having a wife and having a child would be expensive, period. So before I had a wife and I had a child I saved for them. I knew I would be married one day and I knew I would have a child one day. I spent eight years preparing to give my wife a dream life before I actually met my wife. I felt I had that fiduciary responsibility, I could control the effort,” said Durity, who recently got engaged. “There are a lot of people that are 20 or 21 who want to buy Fendi, who want to buy Jordans, who want to look nice, want to buy the Gucci belt, want to go out and party and do all these things. That’s fine. But what’s worse than looking back on your life with regret. When you are 40 and you go damn, I wish I didn’t spend that much money in my 20s, I wish when I had more energy, I wish I worked harder.” Growing up in Corona, California, Durity experienced what he described as good times and very good times as his family’s fortunes fluctuated. The very good times stuck with him and he knew to maintain that, he had to understand money. As a child, he learned to work for what he wanted. His father, Julian, an entrepreneur from Mon Chagrin Street in San Fernando, instilled in him that whatever he wanted, he had to work for it. He ran lemonade stands, washed cars, and sold candy door to door. When he reached his early 20s, he dropped out of college because he didn’t feel it was for him. He started waiting tables at a restaurant and hatched out a plan to make money. Durity came up with a three-year plan to save $100,000 while serving tables. He got three serving jobs, living off one and saving from the other two. Achieving his goal gave him the courage to go after anything he set his mind on. “My why was my future family. My why was that I saw the ups and downs my mum and dad went through. I looked around and I saw that there are three types of men in this world: the man who worked too much but gave his family everything they needed financially but wasn’t there with his time, then there was the man that gave the time for the most important events but couldn’t give his family what hey wanted financially because he didn’t put in the work and there was the select few that had both and I wanted to be like them,” he said. Durity sought advice from people who had money and learned that everyone who had the life he wanted, did not work for money. “They had a way to create. They all owned businesses and had multiple sources of income,” he said. He learned from his own research that owning a business, getting into real estate and investing, were the ways people earned residual income. Durity started in real estate and today owns two companies. He has also invested in about six companies in different sectors. Asked what advice he would give to young, aspiring Caribbean entrepreneurs, Durity said the internet solves all your problems not only by providing educational resources but with opportunities to make money through things like drop shipping. He said taking stock of bad financial habits is also crucial to managing your money as well as reading books such as Rich Dad, Poor Dad, Think and Grow Rich, the Science of Getting Rich, and the Art of Selling. Durity would love to get his Twist It Up comb into the Caribbean but for now, is focused on the US market. He said prior to the pandemic he visited Trinidad regularly and looks forward to returning again soon. Source: The Loop, October 11, 2021 Ajamu Crosby has made a habit out of solving problems.
Whether in the classroom or out, the 23-year-old university graduate and Beetham resident believes that hard work and the right attitude are the solutions to any difficulty and is determined to help others realise their potential. Crosby made headlines in 2017 when he won an additional scholarship in the natural science category after earning top marks in the Caribbean Advanced Proficiency Examinations (CAPE). Speaking with Sunday Newsday at his 17th D Street, Beetham Gardens, home on Tuesday, Crosby, spoke about his journey through secondary school, the importance of good role-models and his hope for his community. Crosby graduated from The University of the West Indies (UWI), St Augustine, last year with an undergraduate degree in mechanical engineering. While he admits there are few scholarship winners from Beetham Gardens, he isn’t a stereotype and hoped the national community could one day see Beetham residents as a community like any other. In the gallery of his family’s home the importance of education is noticeable with a bookshelf stacked with textbooks – past exam papers occupying half the space – and a white board on the wall. Crosby attended primary and secondary school in Tunapuna at the request of his mother who wanted him to be close to where she worked at the time. After scoring high marks in CSEC, he went on to attend Hillview College for CAPE, where he was exposed to different cultures and experiences. “There was a lot of competition because the students were brilliant so that was one of the reasons why I went to Hillview for form six. “What was interesting attending Hillview was the cultural differences. Being introduced to a lot of the Hindu and Muslim religious customs from the other students, I felt I got a more diverse sense of TT’s cultural diaspora.” While, he said, the new environment was refreshing, this would be the first time Crosby saw the perceptions of others towards Beetham residents noting that he sometimes felt excluded by other students. While he was not deterred by this, it was something he thought about. “There were situations where I felt a little unwelcome, just some students saying certain things. I don’t want to throw dirt on anyone but it had instances where I didn’t feel welcome but the teachers were very welcoming. “When I attended Tunapuna Secondary before Hillview I didn’t really say where I lived because let’s be honest there is a stigma in the community, I didn’t want to just be known as ‘the guy from the Beetham’, but when I found success it made it more amazing that I came from an area like this and still achieved success in academics, because being from the Beetham Gardens it’s kind of rare.” Despite this, Crosby said he was strengthened by his mother, Juliana, who encouraged him to continue working hard towards his dreams. Both mother and son supported each other as while Crosby studied for CAPE, his mother studied for her degree in psychology at the University of the Southern Caribbean. Crosby’s mother said she always did her best to encourage her son to appreciate the value of education while working through difficult times. “He was quite supportive of me because when I went into my first semester of the programme, oh my God, I threw my hands up in the air and he was there. “He said, ‘Mummy don’t worry we will study together,’ and he helped me too because mathematics was a subject I am really weak in and he’s a mathematician. “I got through, I passed the mathematics class. We fed off of each others strength. One of the things I always told him growing up is to reach one, you have to teach one.” Eventually Crosby earned high enough grades to be awarded an additional scholarship. This allowed him to study anywhere in the Caribbean. Crosby said while he originally wanted to be an astronomer, he developed an interest for physics and the application of mathematics in the real world while studying for CAPE and chose to remain in Trinidad, enrolling in UWI’s mechanical engineering programme. Being the first of his siblings to attend university was a major achievement, but that meant Crosby had to adjust to the pace of work and general university life with little guidance on what was expected of him. “The university experience was different from secondary school because it’s such a big campus you can get lost in it, so it wasn’t as focused. “The most difficult parts in UWI was always finding that drive and being consistent in your effort because there were parts where you would fall off with the work and getting tired of it, and it’s just so much to be doing all the time and coming from CAPE where I put out 100 per cent to try and win a scholarship and then heading straight into a three-year programme which is even more work. That was the toughest part.” Despite the challenges of the coursework, Crosby’s interest in engineering grew, leading him into the field of renewable energy, even focusing his final year project on the energy analysis of a steam power plant, using the now decommissioned Powergen power plant in Port of Spain as a reference. He took this passion with him to the Ministry of Energy and Energy Industries department of renewable energy where he worked as an intern last year before graduating. Crosby said while passion and interest were important in the fields of applied science, just as important were issues of funding. Citing the allocation of $6.9 billion to education and training for the 2022 budget, Crosby said he hoped some of these resources could be directed to funding more innovative, cutting edge ideas to push the field forward. “In engineering we really don’t have a lot of research. We don’t really promote developing new ideas or concepts among our graduates, it’s all about going and doing things like maintenance and upkeep and falling in line with the process. “There isn’t really any innovation. I want to see funding in innovation, if a student has an idea let’s give him a scholarship or a grant to fund that idea to see how far it can go. “Things like renewable energy. I’ve seen some final year projects in UWI that blew my mind, I’ve seen solar-powered fridges, solar-powered go-carts, that money should go into those ideas.” Crosby now works at the Ministry of Works and Transport in the mechanical services division and is also working on a book detailing his journey from Beetham through UWI and hopes it would be the first step towards changing the perception of his community, as he feels Beetham’s residents are merely glanced at but not seen by the national community. He says part of the difficulties in getting young people in his community motivated to do their best has to do with the lack of positive role-models, something he wants to be. “You don’t typically look around here and say, ‘Hey my neighbour is a doctor or my other neighbour is an engineer,’ it’s hard for children in the community to see that. That’s why I like to accomplish things like that so someone from the Beetham can look at me and realise that it’s very possible. “The intention of the book is to open the eyes of children from Tunapuna, Westmoorings, San Fernando. “When you hear the name Beetham don’t think of that person as a bad person. I want to relay to these people what it’s like without reinforcing some stereotype and bridge a gap between different communities. “I want to really integrate the community into the rest of society and not just be this thing we stare at and are scared of. I know there are bad elements but there are also good elements and they deserve the attention too.” Even with good examples available, the difficulties of trying to maintain good grades in less-than-ideal conditions have not been lost on him. Recalling having to study while using bits of tissue as earplugs to drown out loud music from a nearby house, Crosby says discipline and hard work were sometimes the only solutions to problems. “Life isn’t perfect. Sometimes there will be people with more resources than you but that shouldn’t deter you from doing your best. “If you work hard enough, long enough you will get there.” Crosby says he understands that while all students may not have the same interests as him, he believed they all had the capacity to achieve their goals and more, once they were prepared to work hard and stay focused. Facing hard work head on and not giving up the fight has been a part of Crosby’s life, reflected even in his name Ajamu – Yoruba in origin – which means, “Boy who fights for what he wants.” Source: Newsday, October 17, 2021 |
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