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Jacmel Girls Get Pep Talk

Image: Social Planning Officer, Tara Emmanuel, teaching the girls ways to develop and maintain high self-esteem. [PHOTO: Stan Bishop]

CLOSE to two dozen girls from Jacmel are now the wiser about how to deal with the social ills that might confront them and have a lasting impact on their lives.

On Tuesday evening, the twelve members of the Gerontology Class at Sir Arthur Lewis Community College (SALCC) held an interactive motivational session with the youngsters at the Jacmel Community Centre aimed at keeping them out of harm’s way.

Image: Social Planning Officer, Tara Emmanuel, teaching the girls ways to develop and maintain high self-esteem.  [PHOTO: Stan Bishop]
Social Planning Officer, Tara Emmanuel, teaching the girls ways to develop and maintain high self-esteem. [PHOTO: Stan Bishop]
By definition, gerontology is the study of the social, cultural, psychological, cognitive and biological aspects of aging.

Group member, Natasha Chicot, said that with so many young people falling prey to a wide range of societal dangers, the class came up with the idea for the project — dubbed “Tet-a-Tet with Lucia’s Children” – to create awareness.

“We came to the community to empower young girls between ages 12 and 19,” Chicot told The VOICE. “We held discussions with them on self-esteem, self-empowerment, drug abuse, peer pressure and conflict resolution.”

While the exercise was not a mandatory part of their course, Chicot said the class saw it fitting to reach out to the girls given the pervasive social ills that have the propensity to have a negative impact on their holistic development.

Short motivational talks were given by Pastor Theodore Jaria, Director of Stewardship at the St. Lucia Mission of Seventh-Day Adventists; Drs. Jacqueline Bird and Stephen King, Directors of Rise St. Lucia Inc.; Charmaine Hippolyte, Director of the Substance Abuse Advisory Secretariat; Tara Emmanuel, Social Planning Officer, and Dominic Fedee, MP for Anse la Raye/Canaries.

Chicot, a Project Officer at the National Community Foundation (NCF), which sponsored many of the gift hampers for the girls, said the class intends to conduct similar exercises in other communities and also plans to target boys. Such exercises, she said, dovetails with one of NCF’s main focus areas — youth-at-risk.

“We hope that whatever knowledge that was shared would be used by the girls to better themselves and their peers. I think that would be a good start to dealing with some of the social ills in society,” Chicot explained.

During the session, the girls were encouraged to ask questions and participation in Q&A exercises for which they were rewarded with prizes. They also got a rare treat from calypsonian, Lady Leen, who led them in singing Ras Shorty I’s “Watch Out My Children”, a song that speaks about drug abuse.

Stan Bishop began his career in journalism in March 2008 writing freelance for The VOICE newspaper for six weeks before being hired as a part-time journalist there when one of the company’s journalists was overseas on assignment.

Although he was initially told that the job would last only two weeks, he was able to demonstrate such high quality work that the company offered him a permanent job before that fortnight was over. Read full bio...

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