Daily Observer (Jamaica)

Former ward gives back to Maxfield Park Children’s Home

Treniel Lowe: Education, for me, is very important

- BY SHARLENE HENDRICKS Observer staff reporter hendrickss@jamaicaobs­erver.com

Growing up at Maxfield Park Children’s Home since age five was an experience that made all the difference for Treniel Lowe.

Now, the 24-year-old, final-year University of Technology, Jamaica (Utech) hospitalit­y and food service management student is giving back to other children at the State-run facility.

After a concerned neighbour found him and his two older brothers, mere toddlers at the time, alone at home for over 24 hours and called the police, Lowe and his siblings were taken from their struggling single mother and placed in State care.

“According to the officer from CDA [Child Developmen­t Agency], my mother left us at home unsupervis­ed for a period of time and somebody that lived next door called the police who came and took us. When I spoke to my mother about what happened, she did admit to leaving us, but she said that she only intended to be away for a short period of time. She said she went somewhere and she fell ill and she ended up staying for long than she intended,” Lowe told the Jamaica observer on December 3 during one of his daily sessions assisting children at the home doing online classes.

What was possibly an unfavourab­le circumstan­ce — being weaned from his mother at such a young age, and put in a new environmen­t — proved to be the opposite for young Lowe. He credits his developmen­t and academic achievemen­ts to his years living at the children’s home.

“Often times, when kids are placed in a home people think that it is the end of the world for them. But it’s not. Maxfield Park was my foundation. It was my experience at this home that shaped me into the person I am today, because they are the ones who put me on the path that I am on now,” he told the Sunday

Observer.

“It is only right for me to give back in whatever way I can. Education, for me, is very important and I can relate to these kids because I grew up here. So, I choose to give back my time and abilities to help them because I used to be one of them.

“Although I am in my final year at Utech, right now I am not as occupied with school, so I’m here helping the children with online learning. And with COVID disrupting school, I knew I had to give of my time to help out. It’s been challengin­g, but we are doing the best that we can,” he said.

Faced with the prospect of not having any family support once he left the home, education became the main focus for the aspiring hotel manager. After graduating from Mona High School with seven subjects, Lowe decided to pursue a bachelor’s degree in food service and production management.

“The focus was always on education from I went to the facility, so it was not the end of life. They continued my developmen­t as a person. And when I learnt that I didn’t have my biological family around, I figured that I should make the best of the opportunit­y to get an education and not follow the pattern that my mother did, which led to me and my brothers ending up in a children’s home,” he related.

“Education was the way forward, and I knew that I had to do well in school in order to help myself. I knew that my family could not support me and give me everything that I would have needed in life, and Maxfield provided me with the means of attaining certificat­ion,” Lowe said.

Having dedicated much of his time to volunteeri­ng at the home, Lowe now serves on the board of directors as a programmes coordinato­r. His training in hospitalit­y led him to create the Maxfield Park Taste Competitio­n, to give children at the home the opportunit­y to learn the crucial life skill of cooking, something which, he said, is a missing component for many people when they leave the facility.

“This is something that I realised growing up as a child there, that even though we were given three meals a day, learning how to cook for ourselves was not enforced. So I initiated that competitio­n to teach the children how to cook, which is a life skill they will have when they leave the facility,” he explained.

“Right now, this is how I give back. But as soon as I’m finished with school and in the working world, I know that my giving back will be on a much larger scale.”

 ?? (Photos: Naphtali Junior) ?? Treniel Lowe talks to the Jamaica Observer during a class at Maxfield Park Children’s Home. He said his experience growing up at the home shaped him into the person he is today.
(Photos: Naphtali Junior) Treniel Lowe talks to the Jamaica Observer during a class at Maxfield Park Children’s Home. He said his experience growing up at the home shaped him into the person he is today.
 ??  ?? Treniel Lowe, final-year University of Technology, Jamaica student, assisting children at Maxfield Park Children’s Home, where he grew up, with online classes on December 3.
Treniel Lowe, final-year University of Technology, Jamaica student, assisting children at Maxfield Park Children’s Home, where he grew up, with online classes on December 3.

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