Police investigating unnatural death of 72-year-old man Loop Barbados

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Barbados News

Police are investigating the unnatural death of an elderly man.

He is Simion Carlisle Legall, 72 years, of Spring Farm, St Thomas.

On Thursday, November 10, around 6:30 pm, the deceased was discovered at his St Thomas residence, by a family member, lying motionless on his bed.

The Barbados Police Service is appealing to anyone who can provide any information pertaining to this incident to kindly call the Criminal Investigation Department (Northern Division) at 419-1737 or 419-1730, Police Emergency 211, Crime Stoppers at 1800-TIPS (8477) or the nearest Police Station.

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Public Health Dept confirms “no outbreak of dengue in Cayman Brac” Loop Cayman Islands

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Cayman Compass

On Wednesday, November 9, 2022, the Public Health Department, Customs and Border Control (CBC) and the Mosquito Research and Control Unit (MRCU) offered clarity on questions originating in the community relating to the emergence of dengue in Cayman Brac.

According to the government agencies, there has been no outbreak of dengue in Cayman Brac, nor has there been any community transmission of the disease on any of the three islands to date this year.

However, they did confirm that, recently, an individual did test positive for the illness and is receiving the appropriate care. The Public Health Department has ascertained that the individual contracted the virus prior to arriving in the Cayman Islands.

“Dengue is spread through the bite of an infected Aedes species mosquito, namely Aedes aegypti and Aedes Albopictus” explains Dr Eryka Simmons, Acting Medical Officer of Health. “The Dengue virus cannot be spread directly from person to person,” she added.

A person infected with dengue fever can infect other mosquitoes, which is why the MRCU is actively monitoring the situation and taking the necessary steps to minimize the possibility of community transmission.

“Earlier this year the MRCU increased our operations in the Sister Islands so as to cover more ground more often,” explains Acting Director, Mr. John Smith.

We are working closely with the Public Health Department and other relevant agencies to do our part in mitigating the risk posed by the mosquito population. This has meant a multi-faceted response that includes the use of Adulticid Spraying, Thermo Fogging, and utilizing barrier treatments in key locations throughout Cayman Brac.

He added.

“There is no cause for concern,” explains Chief Medical Officer, Dr Nick Gent. “We are monitoring the incident and will keep everyone abreast of the situation. The prevention of any, and all mosquito borne illnesses is an important public health objective. Everyone can play their part in reducing their risk from mosquito borne illnesses.”

Key steps in the prevention of dengue and other mosquito borne illnesses include:

Using mosquito bite repellent containing at least 50% DEETWearing long-sleeved shirts and long pants when possible, and certainly during peak hours Remove standing water sources such as tyres, buckets and other containers around the home and places of business where mosquitoes could lay eggs Use screens where possible Kill mosquitos inside your homeReport potential breeding sites to the Mosquito Research and Control Unit (MRCU).

The MRCU’s Service Request Form allows residents to report potential breeding sites, as well as request a property inspection and report a mosquito biting problem, among other things. For more information log on to mrcu.ky or 949-2557.

(Source: www.cbc.gov.ky)

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GraceKennedy profit down by one-quarter Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

The profit at GraceKennedy Limited (GK) declined by 25 per cent to $1.7 billion in its September 2022 quarter, even though revenue ticked higher.

CEO Don Wehby said that the group continues to operate in an increasingly challenging macroeconomic environment characterised by rising inflation globally, an inconsistent supply chain, increasing interest rates and distribution costs.

“In addition, ongoing global geopolitical tensions and conflicts continue to impact food prices and our supply channels. These challenges have led to margins being compressed,” said Wehby.

He cited high global inflation, the disposable income of remittance customers in the sending markets as factors that impacted its remittance business.

The group focused on its nine-month results, which are down at a lesser amount or 8.1 per cent totalling $5.2 billion.

Wehby said the group recorded “strong top-line growth”, realising revenues of $107.4 billion, an increase of 12.2 per cent or $11.7 billion a year earlier.

Operating profit across the business segments was mixed, with overall profit before other income down 9.4 per cent decline compared to the prior year.

Profit before tax (PBT) was also down 9.4 per cent.

In response, GK said it has redoubled its cost containment efforts and implemented strategies to grow revenues and profits sustainably. Notwithstanding the headwinds, GraceKennedy said it remains cautiously optimistic about the future and expects to end the year with a positive fourth quarter.

The GraceKennedy Financial Group also delivered a mixed performance. GK’s banking and investment segment performed well, while GraceKennedy Money Services reported a decline in revenues and gross profit, primarily due to current trends in Jamaica’s remittance market.

GK’s Insurance segment showed robust revenue growth; however, profits declined marginally due to lower-than-projected returns on investment income and higher-than-anticipated claims costs related to inflation.

“We have implemented initiatives to stimulate growth in remittances, which we are confident will produce a positive outcome. The advancement of our digital transformation agenda is critical in this regard, so I am happy to report that our GK ONE mobile app now offers customers the ability to receive remittances as well as pay bills,” Wehby said.

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$26.7 million in scholarship funding for UWI Mona students Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

The University of the West Indies (The UWI), Mona Campus hosted seven members of the American Foundation of the University of the West Indies (AFUWI) Board of Trustees on their recent visit to Jamaica in October.

The visit culminated in a donation of more than $26 million in scholarships for UWI Mona students.

The New York-based Foundation is a charitable organisation recognised for its work in fundraising, its transformational leadership and advocacy and facilitation of higher education among nationals in the Caribbean region.

The Foundation, over the past 10 years, has provided more than 500 tuition scholarships to students across the Caribbean.

AFUWI has also facilitated the donation of more than $7.5 million in goods and brokered multiple relationships with other institutions.

The delegation benefitted from a series of presentations from key members of the senior management team including the Deans of the Faculties. The delegation also led student engagement activities where they made presentations to student groupings from the Faculties of Social Sciences and Medical Sciences in town-hall-style events at the Mona School of Business and Management and the Hugh Wynter Fertility Management Unit.

The events were an opportunity for the board members to share information on their respective professions as well as their wealth of experience reserves thus providing useful insights for students prospecting such professions.

The team comprising professionals in the areas of business/entrepreneurship; investment and finance; auditing; accounting; higher education; medicine (OBGYN); human resources/talent management among others, shared their opinions on practices and policies related to work experience in a developed market like the US.

In addressing the AFUWI Team, Pro Vice-Chancellor and Principal of the Mona Campus, Professor Dale Webber thanked the delegation for visiting the campus and for engaging the students.

He highlighted the fact that the university continues to explore opportunities for collaboration with institutions of higher learning in the US in the form of exchange programmes and other educational opportunities such as international scholarships.

The AFUWI, he said, “has always supported our mission and vision to be a global University rooted in the Caribbean and this includes improving access for our students. The AFUWI has an important role to play in creating the appropriate environment for us to get more support for our students regionally and throughout the diaspora. To achieve this, they have sought to align the needs of the university with their strategic objectives and by extension their mission – and for this we are grateful.”

Speaking to the strategic objectives of AFUWI, board member, Dr Hazel Carter said “one of the main goals is to align our mission, and our vision with the needs of The UWI. Very often foundations may have their own particular goals and might not be in sync with the organisations who seek funding. We see ourselves as part of the university, and we are also the representative of the university in North America. One of our main goals is to ensure that students can continue their work at the university, so scholarships are one of the major things that we do.

“Coming from this visit this time around we need to go back and do a little more soul-searching in terms of ways we can assist the university more. The main thing is to ensure that what we do, is what you would like us to do and to create more of a presence for the university, not just in New York, but North America,” Dr Carter said.

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IT Manager says Myers ordered him to leave server, documents behind during bomb threat

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: INews Guyana
Former Deputy Chief Election Officer of the Guyana Elections Commission (GECOM), Roxanne Myers.

Taking the stand on Thursday during the Commission of Inquiry into the 2020 elections was GECOM’s Information Technology (IT) Manager, Aneal Giddings, who in charge of the Tabulation Centre, where the CEO’s copies of SOPs were being digitalised after being verified with certified copies from the various ROs across the country.

Giddings recalled that on March 5, 2020 at about 10:45h, he and his staff in the Tabulation Centre, which is separate from the area where the District Four votes were being reconciled, were informed that there was a bomb threat to the building and that they should evacuate.

The manager said they immediately complied with the exception of his deputy, who remained to back-up the data they had compiled thus far on a flash drive after which he also left.

While they were outside the building at a muster point, Giddings said he received a call from the then Deputy Chief Elections Officer (DCEO), Roxanne Myers, asking if he processed a back-up and to handover the flash drive.

The manager noted that while the DCEO’s request was abnormal, he complied and handover the flash drive, which has been missing since.

He went onto recall that while they were still outside, he made a decision to return to the building to power off the server and remove it from facility for its protection. This, he explained, is in keeping with protocols outlined in GECOM’s IT Division Disaster Recovery Plan, which allows for the removal of servers from premises in certain situations.

He told the commission that a bomb threat was an appropriate situation to apply that protocol.

However, Gidding related that while in the process of removing the device, the DCEO entered the tabulation centre and after he informed her of what he was doing, Myers ordered him to leave the server in its place and evacuate the building.

“I removed it nonetheless… She was there and I think she witnessed me walking out with it… She was adamant. I think she repeated her instructions “Leave it! Leave it!” but I did not respond after that,” the witness recalled.

That server contained data on tabulation process that was ongoing. Giddings said Myers did not indicate why she wanted him to leave the server and that he had no time to enquire given the emergency of the situation.

The IT Manager said he then secured the server in his vehicle in the parking lot at Ashmin’s before returning to muster point opposite the building.

Shortly after, he received a call from the DCEO, who instructed him to return the server and power it back on.

“I enquired whether the building was clear of the threat. She repeated her instruction…No response [from her on whether the building was safe]. The instruction was repeated and then the call ended… I did not comply,” Gidding testified.

He went onto say that after sometime, he observed persons re-entering the building and went to enquire if it was clear of threat but was confronted by DCEO, who again hurled instructions at him to return the server.

At that point, Giddings said he saw the GECOM Chair, Ret’d Justice Claudette Singh, and sought her guidance. He said the Chair indicated that he should return to the building with the server and his staff, which he did.

The server was powered back up and while they were preparing to resume the tabulation process, the DCEO entered the room and announced that the process be halted since there was a breach of procedures.

“She informed the staff that there was a breach of protocol against the instructions of the Secretariat and that the server was removed from the facility, and the process will therefore be halted,” Giddings said.

He added that Myers then instructed the staff to go home, which they complied with except for himself and his deputy.

“After I observed the state of the centre – we would have had Statements of Poll… in various areas of the centre – and I don’t think that I could have simply walked out knowing that those documents were signed for my staff under my command and were not signed out to where it was intended to go. So, I felt the need to stick around and organize and categorize and secure those documents inclusive of the equipment and the data, the server so that I could leave the place in a state where I had no more involvement, and I was safe in my mind that these things were secured because these were Statements of Poll and data from statements of poll…[they were of] national and critical importance,” informed the Commission.

With regards to the server, Giddings explained that he placed masking tape around it and placed markings on it in such a way that it would be detected if someone were to tamper with the device.

But while in the process of doing his, another call was received from the DCEO who asked him if he was doing something unlawful with the SOPs.

“I said no, I was simply assembling them to be sent to her office… She responded very aggressively and said to leave the centre…that the Chief Accountant will come lock up the facility,” he indicated.

At that point, the IT Manager said he was almost complete with organising and securing the documents in the room so they finish off and left.

Giddings said when he returned to Ashmin’s Building the following morning, it was locked up and cordoned off with party representatives and observers standing outside. He then left to go to his office at GECOM’s head office in Kingston.

According to the IT Manager, he did not return to Ashmin’s until March 23, 2020 and upon entering the tabulation centre, “I had observed that several items were missing… I retrieved the remainder of the items that were there and when I returned to the headquarters, I wrote to the CEO informing him of my observations.”

Giddings said there were no responses from the CEO on this matter despite it being a serious occurrence. He added too that there were about 17 cameras in the centre but they were not installed by GECOM and therefore, he could not say the location of the footage.

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Small Machinery To Boost Efficiency Of Saint Lucia Farms – St. Lucia Times News

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: St. Lucia Times News

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by Anicia Antoine

The Ministry of Agriculture and the Taiwan Technical Mission are making strides toward improved food security with the introduction of small farm machinery.

Minister for Agriculture, Fisheries, Food Security and Rural Development, Hon. Alfred Prospere, had the opportunity to see first hand the shipment of small machinery brought in under the second phase of the “Enhancement of the Efficiency of the Production-Distribution Supply Chain in the Fruits and Vegetable Sector” Project, also known as the Seven Crops Project.

The shipment, which includes tillers and cultivators, aims to reduce farmers’ reliance on labour, while increasing efficiency and optimizing land use, ultimately improving farmers’ quality of life.

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Ambassador of the Republic of China (Taiwan) to Saint Lucia, H.E Peter Chia-yen Chen explained that using modern agricultural machinery is critical to improving a farm’s efficiency.

He added that the Taiwanese government remains committed to assisting Saint Lucia’s agriculture sector’s transition to more advanced farming methods, and that he is looking forward to the outcome.

Hon. Minister Prospere said the introduction of small machinery is part of efforts to make the agriculture sector more attractive to the youth.

He emphasized the importance of adapting to farm mechanization as one of the innovations that could be critical to future food security, because it allows farmers to produce more crops at a lower cost.

The next phase of the initiative will be a public showcase to introduce farmers to the logistics of accessing the machinery as well as its cost.

SOURCE: Ministry of Agriculture

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Nigerian-Bajan producer wants to come home, build, partner Loop Barbados

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Barbados News

Unbeknownst to many, Nigerian actor, producer, executive producer and entrepreneur Nwakaego Boyo, familiarly called Ego, spent a good chunk of her childhood living in Barbados because her mum is Bajan. So, technically and genetically, she is Nigerian-Barbadian.

Ego played Anne Haatrope in the popular early 90s soap – Checkmate, and today, she is a mother and the founder and Managing Director of Temple Productions, Temple films and Temple Studio.

the dream for Temple started on Temple Road

Loop caught up with Ego on this Good News Day, November 10. When we reached out to the producer, she was so warm and open to the interview, she said ‘yes’ without hesitation.

Loop: How did you get started with acting?

Ego: I have always had an interest in acting, but I got started professionally after my degree in Theatre Arts.

I had the opportunity to sit down with a writer and producer — the late Amaka Igwe and after a reading, she offered me a role as the lead character in the series, Checkmate. Checkmate was a television series that was on air nationally in Nigeria from 1991 to 1995.

Loop: What led to the creation of Temple Productions and where did the name come from?

Ego: I created Temple Productions because I wanted to have the opportunity to make films that focused on subjects and themes that I liked, content that was of interest to me.

The name, Temple Productions, came from the street that I lived on for most of my childhood and early 20’s. (Temple Road in Lagos). The story of the company started there. It was where my childhood friend and I, came up with many stories for films and series that we wanted to make. Now that I think back on this, I smile because we were so young, optimistic and full of verve.

To put it simply, the dream for Temple started on Temple Road and it became the natural name for my company.

I lived in Barbados from 1968 to 1971. I was 10 days old when I left Nigeria with my mother and my sister because of the Biafran war

Loop: What has been the biggest challenge and success of your production company since you started it back in 1996?

Ego: The biggest challenge has been raising financing for our projects.

There isn’t a very formal structure for raising funds, so like many creatives, one resorts to funding from friends, family, one’s own resources, NGOs (non-governmental organisations), and if you have the opportunity, corporate organizations.

My greatest professional successes are yet to come. I’ve had varying degrees of success though — the films that we’ve worked on, the stories that I’ve been passionate about and have been able to bring to the screen, the great film professionals and people I have worked with, the awards that our films have won, I am grateful for all of that but I am definitely looking forward to more.

Loop: How do you juggle working and motherhood?

Ego: The age old question! Juggling work and motherhood at the time when my children were younger was a bit of a challenge, but I had great support and I’m thankful for that.

My husband was and is incredibly supportive, and that partnership raising our children helped a great deal to make it easier. I also had my two mums and sisters who I depended on and who were and still are very supportive.

Obviously there were times when I had some mom-guilt about not being there enough for a play, or homework or not being with my children at particular times, but I always tried to make up for those times.

When I could and when they were younger, I took my children with me to work. Luckily I had a job that made it possible for me to do that.

Loop: What do you remember of your childhood years in Barbados? And what is the one thing you remember about Barbados?

Ego: Not very much to be honest. I lived in Barbados from 1968 to 1971. I was 10 days old when I left Nigeria with my mother and my sister because of the Biafran war (Nigerian Civil War). We left on one of the Red Cross planes and flew to my mother’s home in Barbados.

We lived there for three years and a bit, until the war ended, and then we returned to Nigeria. I don’t remember very much, I was quite young. I lived with my mum, my sister and my grandparents, and we had a whole group of uncles and aunts on my mother’s side and I remember being happy running around and singing songs with my Grandma. By all accounts, it was a wonderful idyllic childhood.

Founder of Temple Productions, film maker Ego Boyo

Loop: If you had to compare Barbados and Nigeria, what’s a food or dish that you find similar or think we share?

Ego: Okra! Barbados has cou cou and okra, in Nigeria we use it to make a soup. (See video at the top of this article*)

Loop: Do you see yourself making a home in Barbados one day, perhaps when you retire?

Ego: I definitely see myself living in Barbados at some point.

I would love to buy a home and live on the beach. A few more films to make and see how we can make that happen. I love the vibe on the island – I love how gentle and easy it is to just be. I have quite a lot of family still living in Barbados. It is always lovely to see them and catch up. I was there in August 2021, and had hoped to go back this year but it did not pan out.

Ego Boyo at the beach in Barbados

I have always loved the work of Denzel Washington, Viola Davis, Meryl Streep, Idris Elba, Delroy Lindo, Hugh Grant, Regina King, Philicia Rashad, Issa Rae

Loop: Let’s talk about the concept behind your creations, the movies Ghost and the House of Truth, especially with the subject of girl trafficking being a global issue. What led you to depict this topic in film?

Ego: The film “The Ghost and The House of Truth” came from a script brought to my attention by the director of the film, Akin Omotoso – who came across it in South Africa and suggested it to me.

The script was part of a project in South Africa. After a few years we acquired the script, and after a number of changes, setting it in Nigeria, we decided to go ahead and make the film.

For me the idea of reconciliation between victims and perpetrators piqued my interest. I wanted to learn more about how that sort of situation could work and also in instances where people give into despair, how they got to that point and what the turnaround can be. I honestly just wanted to explore that critically and to give audiences the opportunity to see that on screen.

Loop: Is working with Bollywood or Hollywood stars a dream of yours? Is there any particular actor or actress you would love to work with?

Ego: Working with actors from any other parts of the world is definitely a dream of mine. I embrace the idea of working with people who have a completely different experience from mine. I have always loved the work of Denzel Washington, Viola Davis, Meryl Streep, Idris Elba, Delroy Lindo, Hugh Grant, Regina King, Philicia Rashad, Issa Rae, off the top of my head, these are the people I would love to work with.

We are also looking into possibly working in Barbados

Loop: The concept of the Silent Experiment Film was novel. Did you expect the success that your film A Hotel Called Memory garnered?

Ego: It was actually a very short script, it was something like 12 pages. The concept behind the film was the opportunity to have actors deliver convincingly to an audience without uttering a word. When you look at the history of film, a lot of films started out as silent films before the talkies.

We wanted to see just how we could push the boundaries using silence and sound effects to convey the message of the story. We wanted to see if an audience would experience the film or embrace the film almost in the same way as they would a film with dialogue.

I could not have foreseen the success that it had, even within a niche audience. I was pleasantly surprised at the reception to the film and even the critics who watched it and were very positive and forward thinking in their reviews.

I hope that an even larger number of people will come to understand and appreciate experimental filmmaking.

It is still my hope that people can see beyond the films that they regularly enjoy and open themselves to experiences with different genres and different experimental films.

Loop: What’s next for you and Temple Productions?

Ego: We are currently working on a slate of feature films, and our plan is to make two films in 2023.

We are also looking into possibly working in Barbados, to see what partnership opportunities and collaborations are open to us there. I am very happy to say that exciting times are ahead and I am looking forward to everything working out.

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TRINIDAD-ENERGY-Government appoints National Energy to lead export promotion of energy services

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Cana News Business

Post Content

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COMMENTAAR: Orde op zaken stellen

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: De Ware Tijd Online

DEZE WEEK ZIJN in De Nationale Assemblee verschillende wetten besproken die te maken hebben met de goksector. Aanpassing van sommige

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#LoopGoodNewsDay: Hats off to our volunteers, charitable organisations Loop Cayman Islands

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Cayman Compass

As we mark Good News Day today, Loop News contributor and financial services professional Alric Lindsay talks about some of his experiences as a volunteer with various groups in the Cayman Islands.

Lindsay shares a number of positive aspects, including his appreciation for those managing charities, the benefits to the overall community of their work and his own personal growth from the opportunity to be a part of the charitable efforts of various organisations.

Charity bosses

Chef Christian from the Wharf Restaurant and Alric sorting meals for distribution.

Regarding the people who run charities, Lindsay shares that “some of the people that you see heading up charities are those who left their full-time jobs somewhere else in the industry”.

“This is admirable because they could be working for a big firm making a higher salary, perhaps even living a lavish lifestyle, but, instead, they choose to dedicate their lives to helping others,” Lindsay says.

“Working closely with some of the organisers, I also acknowledge that, while they are doing their work selflessly and are not asking for any reward in return or even to have a light shine on them, they do make personal sacrifices that many people are unaware of — often giving everything they have to ensure that others may have a chance to progress,” Lindsay adds.

Speaking of the time commitment made by these charity bosses and charity members, Lindsay explains that while organising teams in and outside their organisations to help others, they spend long hours identifying additional community needs, liaising with private and public sponsors and organising volunteer teams who will go where the help is needed.

“The time spent by them means that there is less time available to their own families or even recreational activities. This is time that they may never recoup,” Lindsay explains.

“Rarely do they ever think of it as a loss though, in fact, some see it as more of a personal investment in their communities, which could lead to successful outcomes for those who receive assistance.

“I have to say, though, sometimes it is hard to watch how hard charity organises work. This is especially the case for individual organisers who, at times, offer all the resources they have, which may be the last thing they have, just to let fellow individuals and families in the community know that someone is there for them,” Lindsay continues.

“For these and many other reasons, I appreciate these humble, kind and hardworking persons who operate charities,” Lindsay says.

Corporate responsibility

Governor Martyn Roper and Alric Lindsay interact during a charity event.

Lindsay noted that many local companies contribute to charities from time to time.

“I remember delivering goods during the pandemic lockdown, for example, and the Wharf chef, Christian, prepared meals for Caymanian and other tourism workers.

“I also recall how much smaller restaurants, like Levonna’s kitchen and Famous Restaurant, cooked some meals for free so that others could have one. In addition, the doctors at Doctors’ Hospital made meals at their facility, which volunteers delivered to all districts, from West Bay to East End.

“There were also big corporations, like Maples and Calder and Cayman Finance, I think, which made substantial donations to charities like the Cayman Food Bank.

“Lastly, outside the pandemic, many companies allow their employees time off during the day to do charitable work, like delivering meals to the elderly through Meals on Wheels. It is really amazing to see, companies big and small helping this way,” Lindsay says.

Those that receive help

Regarding people that charities help, Lindsay says it is almost impossible to discuss the details due to the high level of confidentiality and privacy that charitable organisations must maintain in respect of the people they assist.

Notwithstanding this, he shares; “Help is a two-way thing, not one-way as some people might initially think.

“For example, there are days when a volunteer feels immense joy just by seeing the smile on someone’s face as they receive assistance. It is this joy that keeps some volunteers going.

“Admittedly, it is also what kept me going, delivering meals during the pandemic and now, while doing weekly meal deliveries to the elderly and shut-ins, mostly in West Bay.”

Mentors help along the way

Alric and Sherry-Ann

Lindsay also explains that, in carrying out the work of charitable organisations, he and other volunteers had significant help along the way, mostly in the form of mentors.

“In my experience with the Cayman Food Bank, Mrs Marie Eden and Mr Phillip Hyre were excellent examples to follow. They are always patient, kind and willing to assist, even in their busiest and toughest times.

“They really bring a new definition of what it means to be resilient,” Lindsay says.

“I also admire people like Ms Sherry-Ann, who find creative ways to help and who are able to rally up a high level of support for causes within a short timeframe where assistance is urgently needed,” he continues.

Encouraging others

Based on his positive experience with charitable organisations and individuals in the community, Lindsay says he would encourage others to make charitable work an integral component of their daily lives.

“Even if you think you don’t have anything to offer, please remember that your resources are not just financial, but include your time, even if it is only the one hour that you spend helping an organisation or an individual in the community.

“It is really worth it to the overall community in the end,” Lindsay concludes.

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