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Thursday, June 5, 2025

Trini is Commander and Judge Advocate General in the US Navy ... Ayana Pitterson has a deep desire to serve

by

Fayola K J Fraser
431 days ago
20240331

Fay­ola K J Fras­er

“She does talk good!”

Grow­ing up in Trinidad sur­round­ed by rep­e­ti­tions of this phrase meant

that not on­ly were adults im­pressed with your skil­ful com­mand of the spo­ken word, but you were bound to use those skills as a lawyer in the fu­ture.

Ayana Welling­ton Pit­ter­son, born and raised in San Fer­nan­do un­til the age of 12, was used to hear­ing those words and, in­deed, found love ear­ly on for com­mand­ing a room with her abil­i­ty to orate well be­yond her years. Cur­rent­ly a Com­man­der and a Judge Ad­vo­cate Gen­er­al in the US Navy, she has ful­filled her dreams of pur­su­ing law and per­se­ver­ing through a chal­leng­ing and com­pet­i­tive jour­ney.

In her years at San Fer­nan­do Methodist Pri­ma­ry School, Pit­ter­son re­mem­bers ex­celling in po­et­ry and choral speak­ing com­pe­ti­tions, carv­ing a niche of ex­cel­lence for her­self from ear­ly on. When her moth­er came to her, the el­dest of six sib­lings, with the news that they would be mi­grat­ing to the Unit­ed States, Pit­ter­son re­mem­bers feel­ing woe­ful­ly dis­ap­point­ed, as she al­ready had big dreams of at­tend­ing Na­pari­ma Girls’ High School. Nonethe­less, her fam­i­ly moved to the Bronx, and she set­tled in, stay­ing the course and per­form­ing well in school. Pit­ter­son re­called the ear­ly dif­fi­cul­ty of go­ing to a new coun­try and a new school, where she sound­ed dif­fer­ent from the oth­er chil­dren. “Since I had an ac­cent, every­one would laugh at me at first,” she said, but, armed with the in­nate con­fi­dence of an or­a­tor, she says that “once I felt con­fi­dent enough to speak, peo­ple au­to­mat­i­cal­ly lis­tened.” It was this abil­i­ty to be com­mand­ing, per­sua­sive, and pow­er­ful with words that served her well at age 13 and con­tin­ued to be the back­bone of her ca­reer over 30 years lat­er.

Af­ter be­ing ac­cept­ed to an Ivy League school, one of the top per­form­ing col­leges in the US—Barnard Col­lege—Pit­ter­son con­tin­ued her charge to­wards be­com­ing an at­tor­ney. When she took a year to work as a para­le­gal in a top law firm in New York City af­ter at­tend­ing Barnard, it be­came clear to her that al­though she loved law, she did not ever want to prac­tice cor­po­rate law. “Be­sides the fact that cor­po­rate law was so bor­ing,” she says, “I knew I want­ed to ac­tu­al­ly help peo­ple, not just help busi­ness­es.”

While at­tend­ing Hof­s­tra Uni­ver­si­ty to do her law de­gree, she learned about Judge Ad­vo­cate Gen­er­als (JAGs) in the US Navy. A JAG pro­vides au­thor­i­ta­tive and time­ly le­gal coun­sel in the ar­eas of na­tion­al se­cu­ri­ty law, mil­i­tary jus­tice, ad­min­is­tra­tive law, and sailor and fam­i­ly le­gal sup­port. The na­ture of this field ap­pealed to Pit­ter­son’s deep de­sire to serve, and she ap­plied to and en­tered the JAG Corps up­on com­plet­ing law school.

At present, she has served in the JAG Corps for 18 years and has lived in four states through­out her ca­reer. Al­though be­ing con­stant­ly on the move hasn’t been easy, es­pe­cial­ly with her fam­i­ly, Pit­ter­son re­flect­ed on how the job has giv­en her a unique per­spec­tive on life.

“Be­ing in this job has al­lowed me to have an open mind, and not be afraid of change,” she says, and al­though she is now po­ten­tial­ly near­ing re­tire­ment, she in­sist­ed that her home is not in any par­tic­u­lar place but with her loved ones. Pit­ter­son be­lieves that life does not hinge up­on where you plant your feet over time, and de­vel­op­ing per­son­al at­trib­ut­es of flex­i­bil­i­ty, adapt­abil­i­ty, and re­silience are some of the great­est gifts this ca­reer has giv­en her.

If one thing is for cer­tain, Pit­ter­son has nev­er for­got­ten her deep Tri­ni roots and cred­its her suc­cess to her Tri­ni up­bring­ing. “Trinidad is where my skills come from,” she says, re­mem­ber­ing the way her teach­ers in school pushed her to stand on her feet and de­vel­op her ca­pa­bil­i­ty in oral ad­vo­ca­cy and the way her moth­er pushed her to work hard.

Im­print­ed in her psy­che is her up­bring­ing in T&T, which fos­tered life­long lessons and skills. “I was raised learn­ing how to re­spect oth­ers, com­mit to aca­d­e­m­ic ex­cel­lence, and prove my abil­i­ties,” she says, as she is nev­er one to shy away from life’s chal­lenges. Rais­ing her chil­dren with many of the same skills she was raised with, she is al­most tick­led by their cha­grin when they bring home a “B” grade.

As a Com­man­der 05 in the US Navy, she has faced many unique chal­lenges op­er­at­ing at a high lev­el in a male-dom­i­nat­ed en­vi­ron­ment. “It can be lone­some when you’re the mi­nor­i­ty,” she says, “as one of few women in my rank and one of even few­er Black women.”

Pit­ter­son said that al­though she has been ho­n­oured and over­joyed to climb the ranks, there are few women and peo­ple of colour to men­tor her and em­pathise with her chal­lenges. Nev­er one to sit idly in her trou­bles, she has made an ac­tive ef­fort to rem­e­dy this sit­u­a­tion. She vol­un­teers for com­mit­tees to en­sure di­verse re­cruit­ment and re­ten­tion of mi­nori­ties and women of colour, and she al­ways has an out­stretched hand to men­tor ju­nior JAGs. She al­so re­mains ac­tive in speak­ing up on is­sues that af­fect women and Black peo­ple and en­sures she is part of dis­cus­sions and de­ci­sion-mak­ing. “I con­tin­ue to make com­mu­ni­ty in my pro­fes­sion, ver­sus it be­ing sim­ply a so­lo ef­fort,” she says.

As she serves in the US Navy, she re­mains a Tri­ni through and through, sali­vat­ing at the thought of a chick­en roti “with nice big pieces of pota­to,” and a “bake and shark at Mara­cas.” Pit­ter­son is now an ad­vis­er to war­fare com­man­ders, pro­vid­ing cru­cial le­gal ad­vice on var­i­ous mat­ters, from ad­min­is­tra­tive law, to op­er­a­tive law, al­low­ing them to come to the best pos­si­ble de­ci­sions.

Her ad­vice to oth­er women who are seek­ing to pas­sion­ate­ly pur­sue the things they have al­ways want­ed is sim­ple–com­pe­tence. She en­cour­ages women to strive for ex­cel­lence in their ca­reers, as “suc­cess comes from com­pe­tence be­cause peo­ple re­spect you when they know you’re good at what you do and good at learn­ing your craft.” Com­man­der Ayana Pit­ter­son is a Tri­ni woman mak­ing a huge im­pact abroad, as her prowess in the US Navy as a Judge Ad­vo­cate Gen­er­al is a mile­stone of which we can all be enor­mous­ly proud.


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