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‘PATH Has Made Me into the Man I Am Today’ – Beneficiary

By: , March 30, 2024
‘PATH Has Made Me into the Man I Am Today’ – Beneficiary
Photo: Mickella AndersonGordon
Programme of Advancement Through Health and Education (PATH) beneficiary, Zackarie Campbell, speaks about the benefits of the programme, at the ‘On the PATH to Transformation’ town hall meeting in Portmore, St. Catherine, on March 27.

The Full Story

The Programme of Advancement Through Health and Education (PATH) has been a crucial safety net, impacting the lives of 350,000 beneficiaries from almost 130,000 families across Jamaica.

Among the beneficiaries is Zackarie Campbell, a university student who lives in Portmore Pines in St. Catherine, who has been on PATH since childhood.

“PATH has always been a part of my journey. I was first enrolled in PATH in 2009 by my mother and my father. My earliest memories of the programme date back to high school when we used to get box lunches until it evolved into PATH giving us more liberties by providing lunch tickets to decide upon what we wanted to buy,” he recalls.

Mr. Campbell, who is a resident of Portmore Pines in St. Catherine delivered a moving testimonial during Wednesday’s (March 27) staging of the ‘On the PATH to Transformation’ town hall put on by the Ministry of Labour and Social Security at the HEART College of Construction Services Auditorium in Portmore.

He explains that the full significance of PATH for him, at that time, was the economic and social support the programme provided when the family suffered a major loss.

“When I just started high school, I lost my mother to cancer. At the time, my father had three of us boys and he was the only person taking care of us, so that was a big burden,” he recalls.

The family was living in Trench Town at the time and his father wanted to relocate.

“PATH played a very big role in my development. Because of the things that PATH took care of, my father could divest his very limited resources into other things,” Mr. Brown says.

By 2017, as an upper sixth-form student at Kingston College (KC), he was representing the institution in Television Jamaica’s Schools’ Challenge Quiz, and had his eyes set on enrolling in college after high school.

This would make him the first person in his family to reach that level and, as he puts it, his parents had sacrificed all they had for the family.

It was a PATH scholarship that eventually propelled him to the tertiary level, although he says the journey “wasn’t easy and wasn’t smooth”.

“Looking back, all of those things were good for self-discovery because they revealed to me a lot about myself that I never knew until that moment,” Mr. Campbell says.

At first, he was enrolled at the University of the West Indies (UWI) in an Electrical Engineering programme but he was unable to complete the course.

“With the support system that I got from PATH, I was able to re-enroll at UTech in the same programme and now I am at final year,” the proud beneficiary says.

Today, Mr. Campbell is a shining example of how the programme can impact lives in a positive way, and he is always willing to tell his story.

Still, the determined youngster has just one regret.

“My biggest regret is that my father who was there with me throughout the entire journey won’t be able to see me completing this degree because in August of last year, he succumbed to his illness – he was sick with cancer for some time,” he says.

“It was a very difficult time because everything I was doing was to try and live up to the standard he had set for me. At that time, I was also an intern at the Ministry of Labour and Social Security and the office embraced me and comforted me.

“I would not have been able to make it [without that support]. PATH was there for much of my development and it has made me into the man I am today,” Mr. Campbell declares.

Portfolio Minister, Hon. Pearnel Charles Jr., who is currently leading the PATH programme towards transformation, says that testimonies like Mr. Campbell’s indicate the tremendous work that PATH has already done.

“If I needed any reminder of how important this process is or any reminder of the success that the PATH team and all who have contributed to PATH have already achieved, then these testimonials have certainly affirmed for me,” the Minister says.

Minister of Labour and Social Security, Hon. Pearnel Charles Jr., addresses the third ‘On the PATH to Transformation’ town hall meeting in Portmore, St. Catherine, on March 27.

At the same time, he underscored that the programme must continuously improve, in response to present-day circumstances.

“Times have changed, circumstances have changed, we are evolving and as leaders, our responsibility is to ensure that we are constantly and consistently improving,” Mr. Charles Jr. adds.

Minister of Labour and Social Security, Hon. Pearnel Charles Jr. (left), speaks with beneficiaries of the Programme of Advancement Through Health and Education (PATH) who gave testimonials during the third ‘On the PATH to Transformation’ town hall meeting in Portmore on March 27. They are, from left, Dr. Makeda Bailey; Lateisha Bailey; and Zackarie Campbell.

 

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