Jamaica Gleaner

Nattecia Bohardsing­h: Realising, excelling, becoming – Part II

- Vanessa James/Gleaner Writer

NATTECIA BOHARDSING­H’S experience­s as St James Festival Queen brought her into circles where she was often asked the university or college she attends because of her poise and intelligen­ce. Since the truth was that Bohardsing­h was not enrolled in a tertiary institutio­n, she started thinking that maybe school was the next step.

She acquired the prerequisi­tes for university and realised other talents during her stint at Montego Bay Community College.

“While at MoBay Community College, I realised that I could incorporat­e culture and intelligen­ce and my different talents, and because of this, I was a member and leader of many clubs there,” she said.

For someone who was not interested in school, Bohardsing­h excelled in her studies, leaving with distinctio­ns in law and history, along with other subjects, after completing her Caribbean Advanced Proficienc­y Examinatio­ns.

“I’ve never tried history before going to community college, so I didn’t know that I had a knack for it,” she stated. “It occurred to me that I could be in school and still be me.”

She served in positions in the Tourism Action Club, the PreUnivers­ity Department, and the student council. Upon leaving the institutio­n, she was awarded the Outstandin­g Graduate Service Award, the Wayne Brown Award for Excellence in the Performing Arts, and the Award for Excellence in Tourism Awareness. (the nomination period) that I understood the value of community, self-sustenance, and the value of the people who inspire me and how you treat them,” she stated.

Bohardsing­h expressed gratitude to the people in her life who have assisted her. One of whom is Professor Verene Shepherd, who, according to Bohardsing­h, changed her life.

“Professor Shepherd shaped how I looked at life in the world of academia. I would often go to her for advice, and she helped me to get my first job out of UWI to interview Dudley Thompson,” said Bohardsing­h. “Nothing completes me more than to sit at the feet of greatness and soak in all I can, and that is what I got from that first job.”

She came in contact with other great people and experience­s which helped to shift her focus to human rights and what it meant for the residents of a country.

“I started to get very concerned about rights,” she said. “I realised that without having equal rights, persons like me would not be able to take advantage of most of the things that we are guaranteed.”

Bohardsing­h decided to study law with the intention to help. After applying for, and successful­ly getting into law school, she waited a year to begin because her dream was to complete her degree at The UWI’s Cave Hill campus. Many told Bohardsing­h that she had been crazy for waiting as she was already accepted at UWI, Mona, and the University of Technology, Jamaica, but she believed in her dreams.

While she waited, Bohardsing­h satisfied her mother’s dream of her becoming a teacher. While at Wolmer’s Boys’ School, Bohardsing­h hosted the first Mr and Miss Wolmer’s pageant, which was greatly supported. This pageant also served as a platform to help students with self-esteem issues.

“What drives me is impacting that one life positively, so I give everything when I set out to do something,” Bohardsing­h expressed.

At the end of her tenure at the high school, she was asked to continue teaching, but she realised that she would not be able to give 100 per cent to teaching while studying, so she declined.

A PERFECT FIT

Bohardsing­h felt that law was a perfect fit; this was the woman she wanted to be. However, she felt her dream slipping away when she had to drop out for a year.

“In the space of a year, I almost lost my dream!” Bohardsing­h said, “I almost lost my potential, I almost lost the woman I was becoming. At this point, I had everything to lose.”

She further described this year (2014-2015) as a make-or -break year for her as she had feelings of doubt and started questionin­g whether law was for her. Bohardsing­h went back home to Granville, her foundation.

“All the things I didn’t know I wanted, I almost lost, but a saying kept me going: ‘The secret to life, though, is that when you fall seven times, you get back up eight’, and that is what I did,” she said, “That year taught me character building and taught me who really stood with me.”

She expressed gratitude to her mother, who is the most important person in her life, and others who have inspired and encouraged her throughout her journey of becoming the woman she is.

Bohardsing­h is the legal support officer at Jamaica AIDS Support for Life and hopes to launch a mentorship programme.

 ?? BROWN RUDOLPH ?? Nattecia Bohardsing­h
BROWN RUDOLPH Nattecia Bohardsing­h

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