Jamaica Gleaner

Shineka Gray laid to rest

- Christophe­r Thomas Gleaner Writer

TEARS FLOWED freely as relatives, friends and well-wishers congregate­d inside and outside the Kings Seventh-day Adventist Church in Mount Salem, St James, on Sunday, to say their final farewells to 15-year-old Green Pond High School student Shineka Gray, one month after her murder.

Gray, who resided in Mount Salem and was a grade-10 student at Green Pond High School, was found dead on February 1 with multiple stab wounds, three days after she was reported missing. She had last been seen in Montego Bay, leaving the funeral of a former schoolmate.

During her funeral yesterday, tributes in speech and song were provided by Gray’s classmates from Green Pond High and from the Fustic Road-based Refuge Temple Apostolic Faith congregati­on, where she was a member. Other tributes came from family members, friends and neighbours, members of the church community, and political representa­tives.

While presenting the eulogy, Refuge Temple Apostolic Faith Sunday-school teacher Mark Hamilton remembered Gray as a loving individual, and at the same time lamented the nature of her passing.

“Shineka came into the world without a hitch. She had a keen

sense of people ... she was a bubbling pot of love,” said Hamilton. “February 1 was a dark day, as all of our fears came to reality. It is still an unbelievab­le act, but one that we have to accept. Regardless of the situation, God is still in control.”

BETTER PARENTING

In the meantime, Michael Ellis, principal of Green Pond High, made a call after the service for parents to be more active in how they raise their children, to prevent a

recurrence of incidents such as Gray’s murder.

“I feel we have done an injustice to our children, and we need to start parenting them in a better way. I feel that we are too permissive in many ways; I

honestly don’t feel we have taken this thing called parenting as seriously as we ought to,” said Ellis.

“What we need is a renaissanc­e of what I call traditiona­l values and attitudes. I strongly believe that we

ought to be more intentiona­l about how we raise our children, and I am a strong advocate for what I call primitive godliness. We cannot raise our children without God in their lives; otherwise, this is going to happen again.”

 ??  ?? Michael Ellis (at podium), principal of Green Pond High School in Montego Bay, presents a tribute during the funeral for slain 15-year-old Green Pond High student Shineka Gray, at the King’s Seventh-day Adventist Church in Mount Salem, Montego Bay,...
Michael Ellis (at podium), principal of Green Pond High School in Montego Bay, presents a tribute during the funeral for slain 15-year-old Green Pond High student Shineka Gray, at the King’s Seventh-day Adventist Church in Mount Salem, Montego Bay,...
 ??  ?? Members of the grade-10 student cohort at the Green Pond High School in Montego Bay present a musical tribute during the funeral for slain 15-year-old Green Pond High student Shineka Gray.
Members of the grade-10 student cohort at the Green Pond High School in Montego Bay present a musical tribute during the funeral for slain 15-year-old Green Pond High student Shineka Gray.
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