I am posting this very late after publication but it still has value.
Jean
Published in the Jamaica Observer 3 Jan 2022
Jean Lowrie-Chin
Archbishop Tutu - photo from Africa Report
What will we write on this
clean sheet of 2022? Let us look to the lives of two beloved figures who we
lost recently for inspiration: Archbishop Desmond Tutu and actor and comedian
Betty White. They loved, they laughed and they never stopped working.
My brag is that my sister Frances met and spoke with
Archbishop Tutu when he visited her late boss Bishop Walker of the Episcopalian
Diocese of Washington. She enthused, “Bishop Tutu could be the best stand-up
comedian in the world” after he left them in stitches at the meeting. So here
was a man who did not take himself very seriously, but took the pain of
apartheid into his heart and helped to heal his beloved South Africa. At his
funeral over the weekend, South African Prime Minister Cyril Ramaphosa said,
“He was our moral compass … he was the conscience of South Africa.” The beloved
Archbishop requested “the cheapest coffin possible” and asked that his ashes be
planted at the root of a tree. Because, of course, he knew that his mortal
condition would be giving way to immortal glory to which no funereal trimmings could
compare.
At 87, Betty White co-starred as Grandma Annie in ‘The
Proposal’ and at 88 was host of the legendary Saturday Night Live (SNL),
cracking jokes with style and aplomb. SNL alum Seth Myers posted on social
media: “RIP Betty White, the only SNL host I ever saw get a standing ovation at
the after party. A party at which she ordered a vodka and a hotdog and stayed
till the bitter end.” She was the antithesis of the airhead Rose Nylund she played
to the hilt in ‘The Golden Girls,’ celebrating ageing with humour.
You get energy from these great humans. We have
excellent examples right here in Jamaica: the late Gordon ‘Butch’ Stewart, Karl
Hendrickson and Audrey Stewart-Hinchcliffe. None of these three had anything
much of an inheritance. They built their businesses from the ground up and used
every failure to create their next success. That indefatigable patriot
Stewart-Hinchcliffe declared when she received the CCRP Living Legacy Award
last November, “I am a young 82: retirement is not on my agenda!”
You get energy from stories of pain and persistence,
like that of Richard Williams, the father of Venus and Serena Williams. The
movie ‘King Richard’ starring Will Smith shows the dedication of a father who
would not quit on his dream for his daughters. In their humble household,
education remained number one as he insisted that his children should have
straight ‘A’s and be multi-lingual to stay in the game of tennis. And so, his
daughter Serena wowed the French press when she answered their questions in
their language after winning the French Open.
You get energy from working hard but happy. “Have
fun,” Richard Williams told his daughters as they headed into their games. Williams
wrote on a piece of cardboard that he hung on the fence of the tennis court:
‘If you fail to plan, you plan to fail.’
During our Advent Crusade, our Pastor, Dr Howard
Thompson, used the symbols of gift-wrapping to challenge us to offer up
ourselves in the New Year. That offering was up to us, he said but we must
resolve to make it. Now that is something to consider in a country where there
is great mourning for those who passed from Covid and other illnesses, from
traffic crashes and most tragic of all, from murder. Even if we have nothing
material to give, we can make a call to listen with love and understanding. We
can turn off our devices and giving special attention to the children and
elderly in our families.
None of us is planning to fail in 2022 but are we
doing what our friend Gordon Swaby keeps reminding us to do: “Ignore the noise.
Focus and execute.” We need to listen to this young man – whose EduFocal has
helped tens of thousands of Jamaican students and posted recently, “1/EduFocal x Transport Authority x BCIC
Driver Training platform officially launched. Come January 10, 2022 we will be
onboarding more than 10,000 public passenger vehicle drivers on our platform
(phase 1). More than 2 years of work went into this. Very happy about today!”
As Mandela said, “It
always seems impossible until it is done.” Go for it in 2022!
Growth despite Covid
Dr Nigel Clarke - photo from Loop Jamaica
Recent Statin findings
are that our Jamaican economy grew by 5.8 percent in the quarter ending
September 2021, compared to the previous year. Minister of Finance and Planning
Dr Nigel Clarke noted, “The services component of our economy, which accounts
for approximately 75 percent of economic output, grew by 7.1 percent in
aggregate.” Hotels and restaurants enjoyed a whopping 114.6 percent increase.
We have to be grateful
to the members of the Economic Programme Oversight Committee (EPOC), chaired by
Keith Duncan who was also recently re-elected President of the PSOJ. This man
is passionate about his country’s development, dedicating his time and his own
resources to ensure full disclosure on the status of main drivers of our
economy.
Duncan noted this growth and spoke with optimism at last month’s EPOC press
briefing. However, his warning of the arrival of the Omicron variant is now
coming to pass: “With the inevitable arrival of the Omicron variant of the virus … we
could see the anticipated fourth wave of COVID-19 impact. Efforts to contain
the spread locally and internationally could see restrictions on economic
activities in the domestic and international markets, which could lead to a
slowdown in travel and disruptions in production and distribution.”
People who are not vaccinated are not only playing with their own lives,
but also with the future of our country.
Back to school
Education Minister Fayval Williams says her Ministry has passed over 800
infant, primary and secondary schools for safe re-opening. Please teachers and
parents, our children need to get back to school. One lady who lives in the
inner city told me they are “running wild” in the lanes. She said there is a
seven-year-old smoking ganja on her lane and that he has absolutely no
supervision.
Both UNICEF Jamaica has conducted studies showing extreme learning loss
among Jamaican children, and has called on the authorities to reopen schools in
an open letter supported by other stakeholders, the Business Process Industry
Association of Jamaica (BPIAJ), Jamaica Association of Principals of Secondary
Schools (JAPSS), Jamaica Chamber of Commerce (JCC), Jamaica Employers
Federation (JEF), Jamaica Manufacturers and Exporters Association (JMEA),
Jamaica Youth Advocacy Network (JYAN) and National Parent-Teacher Association
of Jamaica (NPTAJ).
“Jamaica’s children have lost an estimated 1.3 billion in-class hours over 19 months of physical school closures. The learning loss is staggering. The most vulnerable children who struggle to access remote education have been hit the hardest,” noted the letter dated October 2021.
It continues: “We call on the
government to urgently ensure the safe face-to-face re-opening of Jamaica’s
schools and to remove any barriers that stand in the way, including
vaccination targets for schools. .... This has been done elsewhere, and we
can do it too.”
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