Donor helps 61 St Dominic’s RC pupils with books

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

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Pupils and parents of of children attending the St Dominic’s RC Primary School, in backgroud, witness the donation of school supplies by Denise Grant, second from left, to a pupil on Saturday. At left is Sterling Jacob quality assurance and vicariate manager of the Roman Catholic School Board and school principal Nathalie Faria, right. – SUREASH CHOLAI

Over 60 pupils of the St Dominic’s RC Primary School in Morvant on Saturday received gifts of school books, stationery, uniforms, schoolbags and other items to help their parents off-set the costs of the new school term in September.

Donor Denise Grant, a former student of the school, who works as a nurse at Jackson Memorial Hospital in Miami, said she planned to donate more and credited her co-workers for helping raise funds for the philanthropic venture.

Grant, who has been residing the US for 23 years, said she grew up in Mon Repos, Morvant and during her years at the school she had been a recipient of hand-me-downs which helped her to get through primary school.

Now, she said, it is her turn to give back. She had previously donated items to various other charities including orphanages. The mother of five commended the school’s principal, Nathalie Faria, for going above and beyond to make the event possible and for being “on board 110 per cent.” Grant said she intends to launch a school donation drive annually to help deserving children.

Several parents of children ranging from First Year to Standard Five and some pupils were at the event where 48 children received stationery packages, 13 got textbooks and stationery and two got the full kit including uniforms.

Faria said all of the recipients were needy cases and she was grateful for the intervention which will go a long way.

Sterling Jacob, quality assurance and vicariate manager of the RC School Board, urged the parents to ensure the children used the gifts to the best of their ability to advance their education and thanked Grant for her generosity.

The school, located at Tapana Street, has a population of 309 pupils, 15 teachers, including the principal, and five auxiliary staff including the security guards and cleaners.

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Brian Bernard Memorial Lecture Tackles Bullying – St. Lucia Times News

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: St. Lucia Times News

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Twenty-one beneficiaries from the National Community Foundation’s scholarship programme benefitted from a four-hour-long workshop last Friday (August 12) that addressed the worrisome act of bullying.

Held in the Saint Lucia Workers’ Credit Union Limited building on Bourbon Street, Castries, the workshop aimed to equip students with the knowledge they need to recognize, prevent and react to bullying.

Bullying is unwanted, aggressive behaviour among school-aged children that involves a real or perceived power imbalance. The behavior is repeated, or has the potential to be repeated, over time. Both children who are bullied and who bully others may have serious, lasting problems.

The workshop was facilitated by Janine Palm, of the Serieux Foundation, which promotes awareness in young people regarding identity, dreams and aspirations with education, social media safety, positive relationships, and leadership-mentoring programmes. The Serieux Foundation also provides sustainability for the community and parents.

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Palm engaged the students in interactive group activities that allowed them to learn about each other, compliment each other, and presented scenarios in which they were expected to make positive choices.

“I understand that many young people don’t get an opportunity to hear any type of positive language, not even in schools or at home,” said Palm at the conclusion of the exercise. “So what better way to implement this than within a session targeting issues around what is actually going on in young people’s lives?”

According to Palm, bullying ties in to many social issues in a society. Therefore, she urges parents and teachers to recognize the signs of bullying to prevent its long-term damage in children.

“Your child being isolated and not going outside is one of the signs,” she said. “Your child not socializing or coming home saying they have no friends. Or when you drop them off or pick them up at school, you notice they’re often by themselves. Parents need to observe their children and listen effectively to them when they speak. Talk to your children and have an open relationship with them so they can be open and honest with you.”

She added: “Check your child’s social media because a lot of bullying happens online. If your child has WhatsApp or Instagram, get access to it. Go through their messages, check their pages, read the comments…You have to be observant. You have to be a FBI agent when you’ve got a child. This is the era of social media, so you can’t mess about.”

Her advice to children feeling bullied: “Tell a teacher. If your teacher does nothing about it, speak to the school’s guidance counselor, speak to your parents, and speak to someone in your community. Find a youth worker in your community or your social transformation officer. Get in contact with an organization that you feel can make a difference, including the national suicide helpline.”

Sasha Polius, Youth Worker in the Ministry of Youth Development and Sports, was also a co-facilitator at Friday’s session. She said the exercise was timely and well needed by the youngsters.

Sasha Polius, Youth Worker in the Ministry of Youth Development and Sports, engages the students in a group activity.

“I think we targeted the right age group because early intervention is always good,” said Polius. “Today was a good example of the practical use of early intervention. I think there was an impact made on the children by the activity.”

Polius said many people don’t really understand how detrimental bullying is, neither do they understand the magnitude of bullying that many children face.

“It’s so prevalent in all schools,” she said. “Some people think that it’s a small thing. Bullying is sometimes masked as joking around, so people who are being bullied often think it’s just joking around, and don’t take it seriously until they start feeling the consequences of being bullied.”

According to Polius, the most common forms of bullying children face are verbal abuse and cyber-bullying. In some cases of physical abuse, she said, children go home with injuries. As such, addressing the detrimental practice of bullying requires serious intervention.

“It’s something that we need to start tackling head-on and more aggressively by going to schools and trying to educate our young people on the importance of being kind to each other and what bullying can lead to,” Polius said.

SOURCE: National Community Foundation. Headline photo: Workshop facilitator, Janine Palm, far left, engages students during a group activity session.

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The Game Explains Why He Refused To Pay NBA YoungBoy $200K For Verse

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Urban Islandz

The Game says he refused to pay YoungBoy Never Broke Again $200K for a verse on his new album.

The Baton Rouge rapper was originally featured on The Game’s latest album, Drillmatic, but the multi-platinum selling artist’s verse was removed because the Los Angeles rapper did not want to pay the enormous fee for the feature.

The Game is an established artist, but he is not as popular in the present time compared to NBA YoungBoy’s selling point, which has hundreds of RIAA certified Gold and Platinum records, and he is also the second most streamed artist for 2022 with four billion and counting streams behind Drake.

In a statement on Instagram, the Documentary rapper said, “I ain’t never paid for a verse in my life n***a, 200k for a 16 [crying laughing emojis] never & a day blood.”

The Game/Instagram

The Game’s manager, Wack 100, revealed on Friday that NBA YoungBoy’s feature was too high for the rapper, and he was taken off of the album.

NBA YoungBoy was initially announced to be on Game’s 10th studio album Drillmatic: Heart vs Mind on the track “O.P.P.” ‘The Last Slimeto’ rapper was conspicuously absent from the album after its release, and the track “O.P.P” was removed completely.

On Clubhouse, Wack 100 disclosed the reason for the rapper being axed was the feature price.

“Sometimes when it comes down to a situation that I had to make an executive decision about. In YoungBoy’s defense, YoungBoy charges n*****s 300,000 a verse. That’s what he charge. He gave us a hell of deal [150K]. But that situation would have cut into marketing overall,” YoungBoy said.

He added that there were no hard feelings towards YoungBoy as the decision was purely business.

“So I had to make the executive decision to pay the tab he sent me, which was a respectable, great tab. It was love. But that tab would have cut into that, that and that … nothing against YoungBoy, he didn’t disrespect us.”

Wack 100 also disclosed that there were other decisions he had to make to stick to the marketing budget for the project, especially as ten songs and six samples were on the project.

Along with “O.P.P,” the Game also lost out on having Nipsey Hussle on the track “World Tours” after the late rapper’s estate, at the last minute, blocked the Compton rapper from using Nipsey’s verse. The Game reportedly received a cease-and-desist letter from the artist’s estate lawyer.

Meanwhile, ‘Drillmatic’ entered the charts at No. 10 this week and sold 24,959 album equivalent units.

The Game has previously said this is the album of his career and has even boasted this would be the album of the year despite it being the lowest-selling album of his career.

“I can honestly say nothing rap related will be able to stand next to this in 2022,” Game said in a lengthy message posted on his Instagram.

In the meantime, NBA YoungBoy’s ‘The Last Slimeto’ debuted at No. 2 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart last week. The rapper barely missed out by 400 streams to be beaten by Bad Bunny for the top spot. YoungBoy secured 108,000 album-equivalent unit sales, with 103,500 of that amount coming from streaming-equivalent album units.

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