Schools operated by the Sanatan Dharma Maha Sabha (SDMS) are willing to take in migrant children come September.
The confirmation came from SDMS executive member and Chaguanas West MP Dinesh Rambally during Indian Arrival Day celebrations hosted by his organisation at the NCIC Nagar in Chaguanas on Thursday.
Rambally said, “The board of education and the executive of the SDMS always had under consideration whether or not they could accept migrant children in their schools. What has happened is that we are always under demand. There is a huge demand for children to get into spaces which we do not have, that continues to be a problem. That is why we fight, clamour and struggle to get our schools upgraded and our incomplete schools completed so we can have space.”
He said once the space becomes available, the SDMS will consider allowing migrant children into their system. Meanwhile, speaking about the United National Congress’ internal election, he said the United Patriots team is receiving a lot of support. He said the call for internal elections was a call made by members of the public who wanted to exercise their rights to ensure that a strong UNC would go forward to face the polls.
When asked about the lack of support for the United Patriots slate by UNC leader Kamla Persad-Bissessar, he said, “I personally don’t want to comment too much on the actions of the political leader, Mrs Kamla Persad- Bissessar, on an account of today being Indian Arrival Day. What I would want to say, however, Mrs Persad-Bissessar is displaying conduct, her actions is speaking towards what is unbecoming of a leader. More and more I am convinced in my mind, and I think the population is a discerning population and they are seeing why it is that Mrs Persad-Bissessar is the greatest asset for the PNM right now. Mrs Persad-Bissessar is turning out to be Dr Keith Christopher Rowley and his Cabinet and the PNM’s greatest asset moving into the next general election on account of her action.
Speaking earlier during the function, Rambally said the East Indian community is the product of unsung visionaries.
He said, “It is not hard to understand the sacrifices they made. What is hard to understand is how easily they embraced it. Today, we must ask ourselves why.
“What was that fire burning in their hearts that kept their aspirations alive despite being uprooted from all that home and country, and throughout the darkest moments of their lives? What was it that kept them going and what did they hope for? For sure, they hoped that we, their children, will have a life that was far different from theirs, a life far removed from illiteracy, poverty, hunger and anonymity. Above all, they wanted to give us an insurance against powerlessness because it was precisely this wind of powerlessness that blew our forefathers from India to here.”
Rambally said customs are not mere relics of the past but are the living, breathing essence of the identity and a testament to the endurance of local East Indian culture. “Preservation of these sacred and beautiful traditions is not automatic. It requires conscious effort and commitment, particularly from us all, as parents and elders. We have a sacred duty to educate our children about their ancestral traditions and cultural heritage, and to instil in them a sense of pride and understanding of their roots. Above all, we must tell them that they too are custodians of a tradition that is not only beautiful and auspicious, but also one that sustains our very lives in ways that we cannot always fully understand.”
Contacted for comment yesterday, Education Minister Dr Nyan Gadsby-Dolly referred the T&T Guardian to her previous comments about the plan.
Last month, the minister said from September, 200 Venezuelan migrant children whose parents are legally registered in this country in 2019 will finally get a chance to enrol in primary school. She confirmed that 19 Roman Catholic schools had been earmarked for migrant enrolment.
“We have identified a group of students who are ready to transition and so we are working to get them into some schools under the Catholic Education Board,” Gadsby-Dolly said then.