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Saturday, May 31, 2025

Jimecya, Xhaiden cop South Junior Calypso titles

by

KEVON FELMINE
105 days ago
20250215

KEVON FELMINE

Se­nior Re­porter

kevon.felmine@guardian.co.tt

There was no pi­cong, no po­lit­i­cal taunts—just pure “kaiso! kaiso!” as the youths of South Trinidad de­liv­ered thrilling ren­di­tions at the South Ju­nior Ca­lyp­so Fi­nals 2025 on Thurs­day.

The event saw 18-year-old Jime­cya Bur­nett and eight-year-old Xhaiden Dar­ius claim­ing the top prizes.

While the au­di­to­ri­um at San Fer­nan­do City Hall was not at full ca­pac­i­ty, those va­cant seats meant that some ca­lyp­so lovers missed out on a treat, as each of the ten con­tes­tants de­liv­ered out­stand­ing per­for­mances.

In the sec­ondary school cat­e­go­ry, Bur­nett, a stu­dent of the New But­ler As­so­ciate Col­lege, had to fend off strong con­tenders Josi­ah Fer­ri­er and Ke­shawn Gomez, who fin­ished sec­ond and third re­spec­tive­ly.

Dressed like a queen, com­plete with a tiara, Bur­nett de­liv­ered a pow­er­ful mes­sage urg­ing young women to know their worth and strive for great­ness. She en­cour­aged them not to al­low any­one to treat them as in­signif­i­cant.

“To gath­er suc­cess, you don’t need to un­dress. Be a woman who is wor­thy,” she crooned.

Over­whelmed but grate­ful af­ter her vic­to­ry, Bur­nett ad­mit­ted that she had not ex­pect­ed to win. Her sole fo­cus dur­ing her per­for­mance of Know Your Worth was to get her mes­sage across, as it ad­dressed is­sues she had per­son­al­ly wit­nessed. She felt com­pelled to be the voice ad­vo­cat­ing for change.

Her win serves as a strong mo­ti­va­tor as she heads in­to the Ju­nior Na­tion­al Ca­lyp­so Monarch Com­pe­ti­tion semi­fi­nals this Sat­ur­day in Port-of-Spain. She hopes her mes­sage will res­onate and earn her a place in the fi­nals.

“It is not re­al­ly about me, but my fam­i­ly. I want­ed to be the per­son to say, ‘Now is the time to stop, know your worth.’ Apart from fam­i­ly, young ladies in so­ci­ety to­day need to recog­nise their val­ue,” Bur­nett said.

In the Pri­ma­ry School cat­e­go­ry, Xhaiden Dar­ius claimed first place with an en­er­getic and pro­fes­sion­al per­for­mance, rem­i­nis­cent of sea­soned ca­lyp­so vet­er­ans on the big stage.

Neat­ly dressed in a green tuxe­do and singing Ca­lyp­so Will Sur­vive, the young per­former cap­ti­vat­ed the au­di­ence.

Xhaiden, who has been singing since the age of five, said he had ex­pect­ed to place sec­ond, be­liev­ing that run­ner-up Katelin Sul­tan’s per­for­mance was bet­ter than his.

“I feel very hap­py, and I feel very hap­py for the oth­er con­tes­tants that made it. They were very good. The sec­ond-place win­ner, Katelin Sul­tan, I just want to say good job—you were very good, and I loved your per­for­mance,” Xhaiden said.

He said Lord Kitch­en­er was his favourite artiste, and he dreamt of per­form­ing on the grand stage at Skin­ner Park, fol­low­ing in the foot­steps of his moth­er, Tamei­ka Dar­ius, who has made a name for her­self in ca­lyp­so.

Janaya Clarke fin­ished third in the cat­e­go­ry.

San Fer­nan­do May­or Robert Par­ris said he was im­pressed with the semi­fi­nal rounds and be­lieves the event has the po­ten­tial to grow fur­ther, em­pha­sis­ing the im­por­tance of giv­ing young peo­ple a chance to show­case their tal­ent.


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