Acting Principal, Mr. Sebro
Members of the School Board
Teachers and other members of staff
Distinguished Guests
The Graduating Class of 2004
Ladies and gentlemen
It gives me very special pleasure to have been invited to address today's
Graduation Exercise. Notwithstanding the fact that the Twenty-Fifth Meeting of
the Conference of Heads of Government to which I am en route, will take place
this week-end in Grenada, I accepted the invitation to address you at this
Graduation exercise because I wanted to celebrate with you Graduands - soon to
be Graduates - perhaps, this most wonderful day of your young lives, so far. I
will be doing so as a proud past student of this school - and, yes, as
Secretary-General of the Caribbean Community as well.
Graduands, Congratulations!
This is your special day and I hope it would be a wonderful day. I do not
intend to spoil it. After the many addresses and remarks that you have already
had today, I suspect that the last thing you would want is to be subjected to
another address - be it Keynote, Feature or otherwise. Let us therefore agree to
call it the Final Address and I am sure that you're saying, please let it be
mercifully short. It will not be too long.
The School Today
It has been many years since I last visited the school. So please permit me a
few observations. On my way here, I took the opportunity to pass by the school -
perhaps for some inspiration. It evoked such pleasant memories of my youth, of
the quality time I spent there, of the teachers who played such an important
part in sharing my life, and all in all memories of an institution that helped
to mould my life in a very positive way.
I also could not but notice and admire the physical transformation that has
taken place. In my student days the school comprised essentially the Assembly
Hall and three one-storey wings. Today, it boasts at least three multi-level
blocks in addition to the Assembly Hall, and can rival many of the best
secondary school structures anywhere in the Caribbean. The School Board, the
Administration, Staff, Parents and Donors, deserve the highest praise for so
adequately providing for so many more young Tobagonians - over 700 - I gather,
to receive a quality education.
And speaking of the student population, I have learnt of the overwhelming
predominance of girls. I am happy that you girls are availing yourselves of the
opportunity provided for a good education, but I am concerned about the decrease
in participation of the boys - less than 45 per cent I gather, of the overall
enrolment. This is an undesirable regional trend. Young men, you had better take
stock and reverse this trend without delay. Parents, you too have an
inescapable responsibility to guide and encourage our boys so that they don't
get left behind: So that their future is not destroyed in the present.
I am delighted to learn that the teaching establishment now numbers more than
forty and that the majority are not only Tobagonians, but products of the
school. This situation is likely to create stability and reduce the rapid
turnover plaguing many schools. But I must hasten to emphasise the need for
teachers other than Tobagonians, since the mix will help to widen the students'
horizons and enrich their educational experience.
All in all, my advice to you students is to appreciate and exploit to the
fullest the good fortune which is yours - Bishop's High School, Tobago. From all
indications you have already been doing so, for as we know the proof of the
pudding is in the eating. This proof is to be seen in the competitive and
successful performance of the school in its wide-ranging co-curricular
activities, including tennis, cricket, soccer, athletics, netball, drama/speech,
scrabble, music, and even calypso competitions.
The school should feel justly proud of its achievements in a number of
fields, including the Tobago House of Assembly 2003 Youth Awards Programme. Its
recent CXC and A-level results, for which students like Ryan Allaid, Josiah
Henry, Jannike Frank, Reinaldo Gift and Kristy-Jo Sebro, all deserve
congratulations, provides further proof.
The school is certainly producing students who can, not only cope, but excel,
in the nation and the new world. In fact, I thought Bishop's High School was
good in my day but I believe I have to admit that today it seems to be even
better. It is against the backdrop of this record and vision of achievement that
I must now speak directly to you the Graduands.
True to its motto, "CREDE CRUCI", Bishop's High School has provided
you with a quality education to serve as your foundation for life.
Some of those who have already passed through the hallowed halls of this
institution have given you worthy examples to follow. I recall that one was a
President of the Republic of Trinidad and Tobago.
Through its various programmes and myriad co-curricular activities you have
had the opportunity to learn and adopt many of the values, qualities and
attributes that characterise the "Ideal Caribbean Person." All CARICOM
countries have committed themselves to the goal of creating that personality.
In addition to the contribution of this school, your innate creativity and
acquired self-reliance, create the basis on which you can develop a healthy
lifestyle, a positive work ethic and a commitment to life-long learning.
That's where you are - or should be. Now where are you going?
Graduands, you have all just completed your CXC Examinations and I wish all of
you success. Many of you will be going on to A' Levels and then further studies,
while others will be entering the world of work. Irrespective of the category in
which you fall, awaiting you out there is an environment you cannot escape. It
is one that is appropriately alluded to in the theme for this year's Graduation
Ceremony: "Racing with Destiny".
What is this "Destiny" all about? It really concerns and involves
how well you manage in the complex and rapidly changing, technology-driven
world, which is already here and which you are about to enter. It is a world
with daunting challenges, but also with exciting new possibilities. You must
therefore be prepared for it, because this race with destiny is one that you
lose at your peril.
What is so different about this new World?
By way of an example: In my time or your parents', a few might have gone
abroad to study, but the majority did so at one of the campuses of the
University of the West Indies. Most then returned home, found a job and remained
in the same career until retirement - with the odd promotion now and then - more
then than now. International developments have changed all of that. Many of you
will not end up at UWI at all or return to live and work here. You are just as
likely to end up in environments with which you are today totally unfamiliar and
for which you will need to acquire in a short space of time, the capacity to
cope.
Right here in the Caribbean which is itself changing fast, the social and
economic situation is fast changing in a manner that will impact on your lives
significantly. One exciting development in that regard is the establishment of
the CARICOM Single Market and Economy (CSME). I am sure you have heard about it,
but as the Secretary-General of CARICOM I have a duty to remind you that it
focuses not only on the free movement of goods, services and capital, but
provides as well for the free movement of people, especially skilled persons, as
you are well on the way to becoming.
One important objective of this venture is the efficient and competitive
production of goods and services for both regional and international markets.
But an even more important objective of the entire enterprise is the creation of
a Caribbean Community worthy of our highest aspirations.
The CSME will provide you with the option of working in any CARICOM country
without the hassle of a work permit. The process is already operational for
those who fall the first categories of skills listed for free movement -
University Graduates, Sports Persons, Musicians, Artists, Managers, Supervisors
and other Service Providers.
To facilitate this process, CARICOM has created an enabling environment. The
framework involves a social security system to enable those who move from one
CARICOM country to another, not to lose their social security (National
insurance) benefits and arrangements to ensure that the children of those who
move are given access to the educational institutions in the country to which
their parents have moved. Moreover, Trinidad and Tobago is not only a foundation
member of the integration movement - the Caribbean Community (CARICOM) - it is
no less so a member of the Association of Caribbean States - a zone of
cooperation of all the states washed by the Caribbean Sea, for it is the
Headquarters of that Association. Likewise, it is actively participating in the
formation of the Free Trade Areas of the Americas (FTAA) - a trade grouping
scheduled to include all the countries of the hemisphere (except Cuba). It is
also seeking to host the headquarters of this Organisation.
So, students, your economic space is no longer confined to Trinidad and
Tobago but is fast encompassing the entire Caribbean Community, the hemisphere
and beyond. At the same time, you will, on the other hand, face competition in
your home country, for jobs and other opportunities from qualified persons from
other CARICOM Member States, and your products/services from all FTAA member
states as well. This, remember, includes from the United States of America. So
you must aim to be the best, and you must continue to upgrade your skills -
remember life-long learning. This is not simply so as to get a job, but equally
as entrepreneurs to create jobs as well.
The international economic environment, like the regional and hemispheric
ones awaiting you, is also undergoing considerable, rapid change. Trinidad and
Tobago and the rest of the Caribbean Community, for example, no longer enjoy the
historically preferential markets for their key exports. As you know, in the
past, we had protected markets, especially in Europe for our bananas, sugar and
other agricultural goods but this is fast ceasing to be the case. Trade
liberalisation and globalisation have seen to that in creating a
technology-driven, competitive global environment with an emphasis on services,
not only on goods. This means that our goods and services must be of a very high
quality and standard to enable them to compete on equal footing with those from
elsewhere in the world, not only in international markets but in our home market
as well. Another symbol of the change is that today the computer and the
internet constitute everyday tools of living and working; the personal cell
phone is fast replacing the family phone and as many of you well know, children
now go to school with their own personal cell phone. And soon, who knows, not to
have an e-mail address could well be the new definition of a vagrant!
Students, you must get ready to play an important role in this fast unfolding
global environment to help secure a place for your country and Region. This you
can do by equipping yourselves with the necessary entrepreneurial, technical and
managerial skills and capacity to enable your country and the Region to
withstand the many challenges we must now face. You must, however, be the best
if you are to succeed in this as well as in providing your families with the
quality of life to which you will aspire.
In this new world, no island is a land unto itself. The future of Trinidad
and Tobago and its people is inextricably bound up with that of the
international community. Our country must therefore share in the concerns
engaging the attention of the global community. For what affects others, now
also affects us. It is with this realisation that I must refer to the Millennium
Development goals and targets adopted by the countries of the World at the World
Millennium Summit 2000 to create a fairer and more stable world.
These goals include combating poverty, hunger, disease, illiteracy,
environmental degradation and discrimination among women - all goals, the
achievement of which will surely impact on your lives. As young persons on the
threshold of adulthood, you also need to be aware not only of the economic, but
also the social issues associated with this globalisation process. The defence
of democracy, of civil and political rights; peace and security; international
justice; the struggle against international organized crime and corruption; and
the issue of environmental sustainability are matters of no less importance to
your lives than the avoidance of poverty, hunger, disease and illiteracy. These
issues are all central to the quality of life you will experience.
Two particularly dangerous threat to your way of life - indeed to your very
survival and therefore ones to which you must pay the utmost attention, is the
scourge of HIV/AIDS and that of illicit drugs. You cannot compromise in the
battle to eradicate these. They are major concerns with which the international
community is now grappling. You, as citizens of Trinidad and Tobago; and more
so, as its future cannot afford to remain indifferent to these matters.
Graduands, what I have tried to do is to describe in a nutshell, the world
awaiting you, but not to scare you. On the contrary this is the world in which
you must not only be prepared to survive, but to excel. Do not therefore be
daunted by the challenges. As I leave this podium, I do so assured and confident
that not only will those who have already guided you through several hurdles,
especially your parents, stand ready to continue to continue to help you to do
so. I am equally confident that you on your part will do that which is necessary
to make your school, your country and your Caribbean proud. And one can ask no
more.
Go forth therefore in confidence, the new women and men of tomorrow from the
Graduating Class of 2004 of my alma mater, Bishop's High School, Tobago.