Friday, June 24, 2011

Ruth Saman's Valedicttorian Speech to 2011 Class


Valedictorian Speech To AlphaMax Academy 2011 Graduating Class
By Ruth M.P. Saman

Honorable members of the AlphaMax Foundation, keynote speaker, Dr.Eugene Marcus, Distinguished guests, the 2011 graduating class, AlphaMax staff, students, parents, and well wishers, Allaho Abho, Peace, Namastay, Jai Jinendra, Assalaamu alaikum, Shalom Alechum, Sat Sriakaal, Good Evening.

I am Ruth Saman, and together with Shafeek Nazir we are giving the valedictorian speech for the class of 2011.

Many of you are perhaps surprised to see that two very quiet people were chosen to be the valedictorians for our class.  I guess this shows the power of AlphaMax to transform its students.

Three years ago, I came to the Academy not knowing what awaited me.  I, however, believed that I was ready for the AlphaMax challenge.  On that first day when I received such a warm welcome from both students and staff, I could immediately feel the special quality of the Alpha Max community.

In those early days, what many saw was a quiet little girl always sitting in a corner not talking much.  Three years have passed and today I stand before you, able to talk to an entire audience. 

How much I have grown, how much we all have grown, and how much the Academy has grown.  In the three years that I have attended the Academy, I have seen the Academy grown from a little school that looks like a house into a school that will soon occupy a large complex.

In three years’ time, we have done so many activities in the Academy.  In the school year 2008-2009, the Academy had their annual competitions; where we competed against each other.  In 2008, the school also produced a dramatic speech presentation called “Great Thoughts, Great Minds, Great Moments in Time”. We also completed a DVD of this production.

In 2009-2010, the school produced another dramatic presentation called “Many Faces of Love.”  I was honored to be chosen to be part of this production.  Also this year, Alpha Max began moving into its new building on Standvastestraat.

In 2010-2011, there were many positive achievements.  We had distinguished visitors.  Or art teacher’s portrait- the Four M’s, A portrait of Hope and Peace was chosen  as a state gift from the Surinamese to the Venezuelan president. 

I was also part of a group who did research on presentations on the history of Suriname.  Our group also had a pleasant boat trip on the Sweet Merodia.

During the Easter break, most of the middle and high school students went on a survival camp at Bosbivak.  This camp gave us an opportunity to understand and interact positively with nature.  We discovered the mental, emotional and physical skill that we all need.

A few weeks ago, our students planted citrus trees to show our commitment to working on national food security.  The highlight for our year was the placing of a bust of India’s most famous artists and philosopher Rabindranath Tagore on our school lawn.  Alpha Max is only one of the fourteen sites worldwide where a Tagore bust was placed this year.

This last weekend, I was also part of another group who were invited to a seminar presented by Adek students which focused on values.  This program called spotlight on values is a jointly conducted by the United Nations and the Brahma Kumaris World Spiritual University.
These events are only a small part of the life of the Alpha max community.  Our graduating class has had an education grounded on the values that leaders of the future need.

On behalf of the class of 2011, we would like to say a special “Thank You” to Mr. Taylor and his dedicated staff and teachers.  We truly appreciate your love and guidance; another special “Thank You” to our parents and guardians. You have paid for our education, not only with money but also with time, sacrifice and love.  All of you have played an important part in shaping our lives.

Fellow graduates, you have seen many friends leave the academy. Today, however, others will see you leave.  You already know that the world out there is bitter sweet.  If you hold on to the lessons you received here, you will make it!!  If you ever feel like quitting, remember that “A saint is a sinner who never fails.”
In those moments when you feel like giving up, say this affirmation:
“I take grounded action towards my dream. 
 I face the possibility of rejection and criticism with a smile. 
 I keep going no matter what may come.
 I am protected.”
I hope these words make you strong.  Know that you are always protected.

Congratulations to the class of 2011!!  Let us always remember to say the affirmation “Thou and I art never apart.”  Whenever we say it in our minds, let us remember our high school Alpha Max and the beautiful times we spent there.

I will miss you:
Azim, the guy who makes frog noises,
Shiromani, our future TV presenter
Jaleesa, our model,
Jill, crazy Ramona,
Jessica, our flying penguin,
Sharen-vess, our sloth protecter
Maryssa, our happy child
Shafeek, naked barbarian

Thank you

Thursday, June 23, 2011

AlphaMax"s Graduation Ceremony for 2011 Class

AlphaMax Academy held its annual graduation ceremony in the banquet hall of the Torarica Hotel on June 22th.
The nine students graduating from the class of 2011 were : Jessica Bang A Foe, Marysa Brand-Flu, Sheromani Heilbron, Azim King, Jill Liauw Kie Fa, Shafeek Nazir, Jaleesa Pigot, Ruth Saman, Sharen Vess Schaap.

The keynote speaker for the evening was Dr. Eugene Merkus, member of the board of Directors. He delivered a rousing and inspiring call to all Surinamese youth to seize the times and develop their talents and skills not only for their personal gain but for the benefit of Suriname and the world. 

As usual the event was well attended by parents and friends of the school. A middle school ensemble consisting of musicians-Justin Ho, Emanuel Landbrug, Dion De Bie, Daniel Kolf and singer Alysha Wazir played two pieces for the audience. Their work was well received by the audience.

Special awards were handed out by Ambassador K.J.S. Sodhi of India to the recipients of The Rabindranath Tagore award --Reann Kersenhout and Kristina Taylor and the winner of the Gandhi King award--Shafeek Nazir.
Kristina and Reann produced two extremely mature and touching sonnets in tribute to Rabindranath Tagore. The sonnet form is one of the most complex forms of writing in english poetry and this is only the third occasion that students of the academy have produced sonnets.

The valedictorians for this year were Ruth Saman and Shafeek Nazir. They both presented very personal statements of the impact on their lives of the unique AlphaMax program of studies and activities.


The chairman of the Dalian company in Suriname presented ties to the five  GLYC students who are representing AlphaMax and Suriname in China from June 26th to July 7th.

At the end of the ceremony parents and friends gathered on the pier to sip and chat.

The Academy Awards for Excellence in 2011 are:

Best ACT                                Claire Patandin [Special Mention: Yamil Baptista]
Best TOEFL, Best PSAT         Isabella Sew-Atjon
PSAT Merit                            Claire Patandin, Vinantia Nandlal
Humanities Award                 Ruth Saman, Shafeek Nazir,Kristina Taylor, Reann Kersenhout
Tagore Award for Literature  Kristina Taylor, Reann Kersenhout
Gandhi-King Award               Shafeek M. Nazir



LOWER SCHOOL AWARDS

Best Performance:       Akash Lewis, Emile Bram, Noelle Sitaram

Phonics                        Shemaiah Johnson, Neo Ameerali

Science                        Sally Siu, Abygail Cambridge

Nature Encounters      Emile Bram, Kwingha Landveld

Math                            Leonardo Batista, Jael Eriks
                                    Asad Karamat-Ali

Merit                           Noelle Sitaram, Esperanca Woei, Stephanie Bai,Angelina Wip, Sally Siu

Best Conduct              Noelle Sitaram, Brandon Browne, Esperance Woei

Arts & Crafts              Iva Ameerali, Esperanca Woei

Most Improved           Yada-Maria Moi Thuk-Shung, Brandon Browne, Gabriel de Miranda, Iva Ameerali



MIDDLE SCHOOL

Best Performance        Emily Jong Tjien Fa, Winnie Siu, Alysha Wazir, Noor Patandin

Math                            Alysha Wazir, Matthew Ho, Mary Siu.Andrea Lau, Daniel Kolf

Science                        Emily Jong Tjien Fa, Tamia Hoppie, Matthew Ho

English                        Tamia Hoppie, Andrea Lau, Alysha Wazir, Emily Jong Tjien Fa

Social Studies             Alysha Wazir, Winnie Siu, Noor Patandin, Andrea Lau

Most Improved           Cimara Proeve, Dion de Bie, Daniel Kolf, Kevin Woei


HIGH SCHOOL

Math                            Claire Patandin, Li Yun Xu, Justin Ho, Sharen-Vess Schaap

Science                        Claire Patandin, Ruth Saman,Marysa Brand-Flu, Vinantia Nandlal

English & Writing        Jason Hoppie, Brienne Renfurm, Yamil Baptista

Art Most Outstanding      Alwyn Beckles
      Most Improved         Shafeek Nazir

Technical Drawing      Tiffany Hoashin, Vinantia Nandlal, Alain Soeklal, Aaqil Wazir

Sports                          Xiomara Getrouw, Gabriel Grauwde

Merit Awards              Tiffany Hoashin, Brienne Renfurm, Jason Hoppie, Justin Ho, Michael Grauwde, Reann     Kersenhout

Most Improved           Li Yun Xu, Tiffany Hoashin

Tuesday, June 14, 2011

Rabindranath Tagore’s Ideals and the AlphaMax Academy





First Lady Ingrid Bouterse-Waldring and Ambassador K. J. S. Sodhi in front of the bust of Rabindranath Tagore at AlphaMax Academy



On the 4th of June, the Trustees, Administrators, Faculty, Staff, Students and Friends of the AlphaMax Academy have welcomed the arrival, installation and unveiling of the bust of Gurudev Rabindranath Tagore on the lawns of our relatively small and obscure school.  To mark Tagore’s 150th Birth Anniversary Year, a great honour has been bestowed upon us as an institution in Suriname.  We are deeply appreciative to the Indian Council of Cultural Relations (ICCR), the Embassy of India, and our First Lady, Mrs. Ingrid Bouterse-Waldring. 

In point of fact, it is, however, no coincidence that the AlphaMax Academy has become home in Suriname to the bust of India’s internationally-recognized poet laureate and educator:  Rabindranath Tagore has been a largely-unseen towering figure of inspiration at our fledgling institution of learning which ranges from kindergarten to primary to secondary and post-secondary education.  From its inception in September 1998, teachers and students of the Academy have recited, often daily, those memorable words which first appeared in Tagore’s world-famous and respected collection of poetry, “Gitanjali.”
            
"Where the mind is without fear and head is held high           
 Where knowledge is free             
 Where the world has not been broken up into fragments by narrow domestic walls         
 Where words come out from the depth of truth              
 Where tireless striving stretches its arms towards perfection               
 Where the clear stream of reason has not lost its way into the dreary dead sand of dead habit              
 Where the mind is led forward by Thee into ever-widening thought and action           
 Into that heaven of free, my dear beloved God, let us all awake”

Thus, when Suriname’s First Lady Ingrid Bouterse Waldring unveils the Tagore monument, she did not only reveal a wonderfully sculpted bronze figure of Tagore, but she also unveiled a plaque that bears this inspiring prayer.



According to Deputy Principal of the Academy, Ir. Emiel A. Krak, These powerful words, which have guided our heart and minds for 13 years, are part of the nourishment of students, staff, and teachers at the Academy.  This text is one of our school anthems.  It reminds us of the key ingredients and values we are striving to inculcate within ourselves.  A proper life-inspiring education should equip students, teachers, parents and members of society with a positive spirit of courage, deep self-respect and dignity, a thirst for truth, and a deep willingness to go beyond one’s prescribed boundaries in relation to narrow, inimical perspectives and actions.  S/he who possesses these qualities is awake in the real heaven of freedom.  Tagore’s words constantly call to our remembrance what’s the aim of our education and our life-purposes.
Bust of Gurudeva Rabindranath Tagore on the lawns of AlphaMax Academy, Paramaribo, Suriname.


Gurudeva Rabindranath Tagore is a sacrosanct and significant Teacher [with a capital ‘T’] within the geography of this little school,” said Principal and Academy Founder, Sean F. Taylor.  “As a creative person and educator, his approach and ideas serve as a beacon and lighthouse.  He’s a trailblazer for the 21st century.  We’ve sought without fanfare and fuss to emulate several of his educational ideals.

When this school was established here in Zorg-en-hoop, Tagorean ideals hovered silently in the background.  We certainly did not attempt to replicate the poet’s experiment at Shantiniketan, for the circumstances here and our context – like those in India and elsewhere – are special and unique.  Of paramount importance was the spirit and approach to education and learning.

Thus, at the AlphaMax Academy, an essential ingredient in the learning and teaching experience is the establishment of an inspiring environment where nature and beauty are enshrined, nurtured and sustained.  Yet, while beautiful, it was not to be overly ornate or cosmetic; simplicity was to be a key ingredient and the students were to have direct access to respected inspiring teachers whose task is simply to call forth their innate gifts, abilities and skills.
First Lady of Suriname Ingrid Bouterse-Waldring addressing the audience at the unveiling ceremony for Tagore bust
While dispensing knowledge through a wide range of traditional disciplines across various levels, the AlphaMax has sought to cultivate a values-based learning environment and experience where teachers and students meet each other in an atmosphere of scholarship, mutual respect, creativity, and the development of various forms of expressive skills.

To help foster and enrich the holistic formation of its young scholars, from its inception, the Academy has devoted four of its five school days to left-brain academic and ratiocinative development and activities, and one full school day to right-brain creative endeavors.  An unswerving resilient insistence on the latter is vintage Tagore, who like his Occidental contemporaries, Rudolf Steiner and Maria Montessori deplored lop or one-sided child/human development at the expense of a willful fostering and guidance of creative gifts and skills.  Indeed it is through the latter that the inner ‘child’ is nurtured and brought to a ripe maturity.

To illustrate how important contact with nature was to the life of the educator and poet, during one of his many travels to lecture in the West, Tagore wrote:
“I wish I could be released from this mission.  For such missions are like a  mist that envelops our souls – they seem to shut us off from the direct touch of God’s world…  The springtime has come – the sky is over-flowing  with sunshine.  I long to be one with the birds, and trees and the green  earth.  The call comes to me from the air to sing, but, wretched creature  that I am, I lecture – and by doing it I ostracize myself from this great world of songs to which I was born.”
New York, March 18th, 1921

Tagore virtually enjoined it upon his students and teachers to study and work outdoors in the midst of nature.  Not only was literature, or art, but even mathematics was conducted under the jasmine bower.  

On the day when the school turns from left to right-brain activities, in addition to fine art, technical drawing, and classes on Living Values, students of the Academy are guided in the practice of the two most ancient oriental systems of exercise - Tai Chi and yoga asanas.  Even as Waldorf students do eurhythmy, AlphaMax students learn and practice tai chi and yoga.  These ancient exercises reflect the inclusive international character of the school:  it should be said that our express intent is to forge a new middle course in Suriname through tangible activities in our plural harmonious multi-cultural society.  While we are walking the talk about mutual respect in our activities, at the same time, our students benefit by consciously engaging in constructively guiding and directing their wills, energies, and forces.

The natural fruits of this novel approach to the learning and teaching environment have found ample expression not just in the liberation of latent creative forces and skills, but also above-average academic performances by many students – some of whom had been dismally dismissed by an orthodox system which had exhausted other options.   
Over the years, the creative impulses of AlphaMax students have found outlets through Academy publications and public performances at various venues, including the Patronaat.  Whereas earlier, school productions were classical – often dramatic presentations from Shakespeare , in 2010, students presented “The Many Faces of Love” – a gala celebration of literature, song, dance, and video-presentations of the many facets of that mysterious elixir that drives all existence.  One highlight of the program was the poetry of Rabindranath Tagore which was the centerpiece of the ‘Eros-Agape’ love-panel.  

In 2011, we have presented for public audiences selections from Tagore, including his “Earth Song,” a poem that is amazingly mimetic of the spirit of life in Suriname.
In 2009, a captive audience at the Patronaat was dumbfounded at the oratorical skills of Surinamese students who presented the story of democracy – tracing its roots in American society from the time of the founding fathers through the modern era, including the struggle for freedom on the subcontinent and Africa, and culminating in the victory proclamation of U.S. Barack Obama.  The Academy’s oratorical presentation of “The Portrait of Hope & Peace” had earlier been captured in a different, yet condensed format, on canvas, by its respected Art Professor, Ruben Karsters.  The latter’s “4Ms:  A Portrait of Hope & Peace” was a celebration of leadership models for youths and future generations in the 21st century.  Professor Karsters’ unique portrayal of India’s Mahatma Gandhi, South Africa’s Nelson Mandela, and American activists, Malcolm X and Martin Luther King, won international attention and acclaim in 2010 when President Desire D. Bouterse of Suriname presented the Karsters’ portrait to Venezuela’s President Hugo Chavez, and an MSNBC poll voted the President’s gift as one of the most appropriate presents a head of state could give to another.

In the AlphaMax Academy, East meets West; and North and South dwell together in a relationship of mutual respect – not one based on hegemony or obeisance or subservience.  Mindful and respectful of all cultures and faiths, we stress a common underlying unity, for all human aspirations ultimately move towards the quest for love, peace, happiness, harmony, freedom, and prosperity. 

Few respected thinkers in the 20th century expressed their views as beautifully and with clarity as did Rabindranath Tagore.  Some of his thoughts are:
             "contemptuously treated, and men, who made big profits the sole end of their life, were looked down upon.”

            “As I look around I see the crumbling ruins of a proud civilization strewn like a vast heap of futility.  And yet I shall not commit the grievous sin of losing faith in Man."

The AlphaMax Academy is very happy to welcome this supreme artist, thinker and educator, Gurudeva Rabindranath Tagore on these school lawns.  The garden here has been prepared for him – we’re proud the students will run and play amidst these blooming flamboyant trees, the sculpted likeness of him, fajalobis, and orange trees planted by Miss Suriname and our students.  In our hearts and minds, as an educator, Tagore stands on no lower a rung than Maria Montessori, Paulo Friere, and Rudolf Steiner – other educators from other rich traditions who are also worthy of celebration and emulation.  In a nutshell, their teaching is singular:  The creative impulses of our children – indeed all people – are to be nurtured to maturity and are worthy of being treasured – for beneath its expression, subtle forces of transformation are at play. 

Were Tagore alive today, he would no doubt find himself sifting through the vast plethora of cultural statements which capture the imaginations of modern youths.  For sure, he would be enchanted with the plurality of Suriname.  In a letter to a friend he wrote,
            “I feel that the true India is an idea, and not a mere geographical fact.  I have come in touch with this idea in far-away places… and my loyalty was drawn to it in persons who belonged to countries different from mine.  … The idea [is that] of ‘The Infinite Personality, whose Light reveals itself through the obstruction of Darkness.’  [Thus] Our fight is against this Darkness.  Our object is the revealment of the Light of this Infinite Personality of Man.  This is not to be achieved in single individuals, but in one grand harmony of all human races.  The darkness of egoism which will have to be destroyed is the egoism of the Nation.  The idea of India is against the intense consciousness of the separateness of one’s own people from others, which inevitable leads to ceaseless conflicts.  Therefore my own prayer is, let India stand for the cooperation of all peoples of the world.”

In 1941, at the age of 80, three score and ten years ago, in his final speech entitled “The Crises of Civilization,” Tagore explicitly alludes to the urgent need for the transformation of thought and action in modern societies.  He said, “I … look forward to the opening of a new chapter in history… after the atmosphere [has been] rendered clean with the spirit of service and sacrifice.  Perhaps that dawn will come from this horizon, from the East where the sun rises…  A day will come when unvanquished Man will retrace his path of conquest, despite all barriers, to win back his lost heritage.”  

In Suriname, the AlphaMax Academy is one small institution which has already hearkened to the call for such transformation and the ushering in of a new era inspired by ideas from the ‘east.’  The call has not been restricted to some.  Kindred institutions, like Waldorf, Montessori, Maharishi, and countless other unnamed schools openly seek to reflect the new light, which though not visible on the horizon, is already rising. 

Particularly refreshing at this juncture in time in Suriname is the fact that recently the self-same intent and efforts found creative and vocal expression in a hit single  by Tale Spin, released last year by Royant Studios.  Curiously, the voice of Krishnamurti, a contemporary from Tagore time, can be heard on the single.

Lyrics “United” by Tale Spin, Naomie Sastra & Krishnamurti Jiddu

Sunday, June 5, 2011

Tagore Bust Unveiled at AlphaMax Academy in Suriname


Thursday, June 2nd, 2011

On Saturday morning, 4th June, Her Excellency First Lady Ingrid Bouterse-Waldring joined His Excellency K.J.S. Sodhi, Ambassador of India at the official unveiling ceremony of the national bust of Rabindranath Tagore on the lawns of AlphaMax Academy. Over 150 persons, including local dignitaries, such as Vice President of the Republic of Suriname, H.E. Robert Ameerali and H.E. Mrs. Ameerali, ICC Director to Suriname, and scores of AlphaMax Academy teachers, school children, and parents were on hand to witness the historic moment at the Academy’s facility located on Stanvastestraat and Stierappelstraat in Zorg-en-hoop, Paramaribo.




The majestic bronze bust, which weighed 250 kilograms, was a gift from the Indian Council for Cultural Relations (ICCR), in New Delhi, to mark the 150th Birth Anniversary Year of India’s most internationally celebrated poet of the 20th century. In 1913, Tagore, who was also renowned as an educator, philosopher, dramatist, choreographer, singer, songwriter, orator and publisher, was the first Asian and the first non-European to win a Nobel Prize. Born on May 7th, 1841, Tagore – who, following his Nobel Prize laureate conducted lecture tours in Asia, Europe and the Americas – is a cross-cultural international icon, enjoying profound respect in East and West as a supreme artist, scholar, and international humanist.

First Lady Ingrid Bouterse and Ambassador Sodhi addressed the gathering following the unveiling ceremony. The First Lady said, “While reading his biography I learned that Tagore worked hard to develop an appropriate system of national education. In 1918 he founded the Visva Bharati University, an international center of Culture and Humanistic Studies, because in his opinion the lack of education was the main obstacle for national progress. Indeed, knowledge is a fundamental need for development and growth of a nation.

“One of Tagore’s ‘fireflies’ teaches us that in every nation,” the First Lady continued, “education should be intimately associated with the life of the people. Children and Education is therefore my most important working area. In my opinion all children should have access to education. And of course culture, art, music and literature are very important in the development of our children. They bring color to our lives, inspire us to enjoy nature, and teach us to appreciate the little things that life brings to us.”


The Tagore bust on the lawn of the AlphaMax is one of 14 replicas to be unveiled worldwide, all presents of the Government & People of India through the Embassy of India and the Indian Council for Cultural Relations (ICCR). The 1.20 meter bronze metal bust is a masterpiece exemplar of the work of India’s renowned sculptor, Gautam Pal, who also hails from Bengal, the home-state of Tagore. To date, Tagore busts have been unveiled by national leaders in Seoul, South Korea, Dhaka, Bangladesh, Havana, Cuba, Shanghai, China, and Singapore.

The ceremony was counterpointed by several cultural presentations which featured the work of Rabindranath Tagore. ICCR’s vocal music teacher in Suriname, Mrs. Mahhumita Bose – also a Bengali by birth – sang a deeply moving Rabindranath Sangeet, “Aloker-ei jharna dharai dhuije dao.” Students from the Academy gave two oral interpretative renditions of five Tagore poems. In order of presentation, first were selections from Tagore’s world famous ‘Gitanjali,’ followed by a Tagorean porm, ‘Earth,’ which the poet published in 1893. The AlphaMax presentations were made by Shafeek Nazir (Class of 2011), Ruth Saman (Class of 2011), Kristina Taylor (Junior), Reann Kersenhout (Sophomore), and Mr. Taylor, the Academy’s Principal & Director.

The cultural celebration of the morning came to a climax with the enthralling presentation of the “Bihu Dance” performed by visiting Indian artistes and dancers from the state of Assam in India. With hand and body gestures that were reminiscent of dance steps of indigenous peoples of Suriname, the Assam dancers received a standing ovation after their performance. It was the group’s first public appearance in Paramaribo following successful presentations in the Eastern Caribbean.

The Tagore bust-unveiling ceremony is part of a series of celebratory events organized by the Rabindranath Tagore 150th Birth Anniversary Celebration Committee. The latter consists of the Embassy of India, the Indian Cultural Center, the AlphaMax Academy, ArtVibes United, and Schrijversgroep ’77. Last month, Art Vibes United in collaboration with the co-sponsors presented a week-long art and sculpture exhibition at Fort Zeelandia. This month, the Schrijversgroep and Art Vibes United are co-sponsoring art and creative writing competitions for school children at the VOJ and VOS levels. Entries for these national school competitions will close by June 30th, 2011.


Starting Monday, June 7th, entries will be open for an adult National Art Competition and an adult National Creative Writing and Poetry competitions. Rules for the art, poetry, and writing competitions are available online at www.iccsuriname.com , www.indembassysuriname.com and www.schrijversgroep77.org. Entries will close on July 31st, 2011.

The winners from the national schools and adult competitions will be announced by August 7th, 2011. Gurudev Rabindranath Tagore left these mortal shores on August 7th, 1941.

The AlphMax Academy and the Ideals of Tagore


The Trustees, Administrators, Faculty, Staff, Students and Friends of the AlphaMax Academy have welcomed the arrival, installation and unveiling of the bust of Gurudev Rabindranath Tagore on the lawns of our relatively small school.  To mark Tagore’s 150th Birth Anniversary Year, a great honour has been bestowed upon us as an institution inSuriname.  We are deeply appreciative to the Indian Council of Cultural Relations (ICCR), the Embassy of India, and our First Lady, Mrs. Ingrid Bouterse-Waldring. 

In point of fact, it is no coincidence that the AlphaMax Academy has become home in Suriname to the bust of India’s internationally-recognized poet laureate and educator:  Rabindranath Tagore has been a largely-unseen towering figure of inspiration at our fledgling institution of learning which ranges from kindergarten to primary to secondary and post-secondary education.  From its inception in September 1998, teachers and students of the Academy have recited, often daily, those memorable words which first appeared in Tagore’s world-famous and respected collection of poetry, “Gitanjali”:
                Where the mind is without fear and head is held high
                Where knowledge is free
                Where the world has not been broken up into fragments
                                 by narrow domestic walls
                Where words come out from the depth of truth
                Where tireless striving stretches its arms towards perfection
                Where the clear stream of reason has not lost its way
                                 into the dreary dead sand of dead habit
                Where the mind is led forward by Thee into ever-widening thought and action
                Into that heaven of free, my dear beloved God, let us all awake.
Thus, when Suriname’s First Lady unveils the Tagore monument on June 4th, she will not only reveal Gautam Pal’s wonderfully sculpted figure of Tagore, but she will also unveil a plaque that bears this inspiring prayer.
According to Deputy Principal of the Academy, Ir. Emiel A. Krak, “These powerful words, which have guided our hearts and minds for 13 years, are part of the nourishment of students, staff, and teachers at the Academy.  This text is one of our school anthems.  It reminds us of the key ingredients and values we are striving to inculcate within ourselves. A proper life-inspiring education should equip students, teachers, parents and members of society with a positive spirit of courage, deep self-respect and dignity, a thirst for truth, and a deep willingness to go beyond one’s prescribed boundaries in relation to narrow, inimical perspectives and actions.  S/he who possesses these qualities is awake in the real heaven of freedom.  Tagore’s words constantly call to our remembrance what is the aim of our education and our life-purposes.”
“Gurudev Rabindranath Tagore is a sacrosanct and significant Teacher [with a capital ‘T’] within the geography of this little school,” said Principal Sean F. Taylor.  “As a creative person and educator, his approach and ideas serve as a beacon and lighthouse.  He’s a trailblazer for the 21st century.  We’ve sought without fanfare and fuss to emulate several of his educational ideals.”
When this school was established here in Zorg-en-hoop, Tagorean ideals hovered silently in the background.  We did not attempt to replicate the poet’s experiment at Shantiniketan, for the circumstances here and context – like India and elsewhere – are unique.  Of importance was the spirit and approach to education and learning.
While dispensing knowledge through a wide range of traditional disciplines across various levels, the AlphaMax has sought to cultivate a values-based learning environment and experience where teachers and students meet each other in an atmosphere of scholarship, mutual respect, creativity, and the development of expressive skills.
To help foster and enrich the holistic formation of its young scholars, the Academy devotes four of its five school days to left-brain ratiocinative development and activities, and one day to right-brain creativity.  A resilient insistence on the latter is vintage Tagore, who like his Occidental contemporaries, Rudolf Steiner and Maria Montessori deplored one-sided child development at the expense of a willful fostering and guidance of creative gifts and skills.  Indeed it is through the latter that the inner ‘child’ is nurtured and brought to a ripe maturity.  Tagore virtually enjoined it upon his students and teachers to study and work outdoors in the midst of nature.  Not only was literature, or art, but even mathematics was conducted under the jasmine bower.  
On the day when the school turns from left to right-brain activities, in addition to fine art, technical drawing, and classes on Living Values, Academy students are guided in the practice of the two most ancient oriental systems of exercise - Tai Chi and yoga asanas.  Even as students at some schools do eurhythmy, AlphaMax students learn and practice tai chi and yoga.  These ancient exercises reflect the inclusive international character of the school:  it should be said that our intent is to forge a new middle course in Suriname through tangible activities in our multi-cultural society.  While we are walking the talk about mutual respect in our activities, at the same time, our students benefit by consciously engaging in constructively guiding and directing their wills, energies, and forces.
Over the years, the creative impulses of AlphaMax students have found outlets through Academy publications and public performances at various venues.  Whereas early school productions were classical – often dramatic presentations from Shakespeare, in 2010, students presented “The Many Faces of Love” – a gala celebration of literature, song, dance, and video-presentations of the many facets of the mysterious elixir that drives existence.  One highlight of the program was the poetry of Rabindranath Tagore, the centerpiece of the ‘Eros-Agape’ love-panel.  Again, in 2011, we have presented for public audiences selections from Tagore, including his “Earth Song,” a poem that is amazingly mimetic of the spirit of life in Suriname.
In 2009, AlphaMax Academy students presented the story of democracy – tracing its 18th century roots in American society from the time of the founding fathers through the modern era, including the struggle for freedom on the Subcontinent and Africa.  The Academy’s oratorical presentation of “The Portrait of Hope & Peace” had earlier been captured in a different, yet condensed format, on canvas, by its respected Art Professor, Ruben Karsters.  The latter’s “4Ms:  A Portrait of Hope & Peace” was a celebration of leadership models for youths and future generations in the 21st century.  Professor Karsters’ unique portrayal captured India’s Mahatma Gandhi, South Africa’s Nelson Mandela, and American activists, Malcolm X and Martin Luther King.
In the AlphaMax Academy, East meets West; and North and South dwell together in a relationship of mutual respect   – not one based on hegemony or obeisance or subservience.  Mindful and respectful of all cultures and faiths, we stress a common underlying unity, for all human aspirations ultimately move towards the quest for love, peace, happiness, harmony, freedom, and prosperity. 
The AlphaMax Academy is very happy to welcome this supreme artist, thinker and educator, Gurudeva Rabindranath Tagore on our school lawns.  The garden here has been prepared for him, and we’re proud students will run and play amidst the blooming flamboyant trees, a sculpted likeness of the poet, fajalobis, and even orange trees planted by Miss Young Suriname and our students.  In our hearts and minds, as an educator, Tagore stands on no lower a rung than Maria Montessori, Paulo Freire, and Rudolf Steiner. 

[A more detailed version of this article is available online at:

Friday, June 3, 2011

Official unveiling ceremony of the Rabindranath Tagore bust


Thursday, June 2nd, 2011
PRESS RELEASE
On Saturday, 4th June, at 1000 a.m., First Lady Ingrid Bouterse-Waldring will join Indian Ambassador K.J.S. Sodhi, local dignitaries, and scores of AlphaMax Academy teachers and school children at the official unveiling ceremony of the Rabindranath Tagore bust on the lawns of AlphaMax Academy in Zorg-en-hoop.  The ceremony will take place at the Academy’s Stanvastestraat and Stierappelstraat school facility.

The occasion will be a festive one to mark the 150th Birth Anniversary Year of Tagore, India’s internationally acclaimed and most celebrated poet in the 20th century.  In 1913, Tagore, who was also renowned as an educator, philosopher, dramatist, choreographer, singer, songwriter, orator and publisher, was the first Asian and the first non-European to win a Nobel Prize.  Born on May 7th, 1841, Tagore, who, following his Nobel Prize laureate conducted lecture tours in Asia, Europe and the Americas, is a cross-cultural international icon – enjoying profound respect in East and West as a supreme artist, scholar, and international humanist.

The Tagore bust that First Lady Bouterse will unveil on Saturday morning is one of 14 replicas to be unveiled worldwide, all presents of the Government & People of India through the Embassy of India and the Indian Council for Cultural Relations (ICCR).  The 1.20 meter bronze metal bust is a masterpiece exemplar of the work of India’s renowned sculptor, Gautam Pal, who also hails from Bengal, the home-state of Tagore. 

To date, Tagore busts have been unveiled by national leaders in Seoul, South Korea, Dhaka, Bangladesh, Havana, Cuba, Shanghai, China, and Singapore.

First Lady Ingrid Bouterse and Ambassador Sodhi will address the gathering on Saturday.   Among the cultural features to be enjoyed by those in attendance there will be a dance presentation by the visiting 14 member dance troupe from Assam, India.  It will be the visiting artists’ first public appearance in Suriname following presenting successful shows in the Eastern Caribbean.
The Tagore bust-unveiling ceremony is part of a series of celebratory events organized by the Rabindranath Tagore 150th Birth Anniversary Celebration Committee.  The latter consists of the Embassy of India, the Indian Cultural Center, the AlphaMax Academy, ArtVibes United, and Schrijversgroep ’77.  Last month, Art Vibes United presented a week-long art and sculpture exhibition at Fort Zeelandia.  This month, the Schrijversgroep and Art Vibes United are sponsoring art and creative writing competitions for school children at the VOJ and VOS levels.  Entries for these national school competitions will close by June 15th, 2011.  For information, please visit www.iccsuriname.comwww.indembassysuriname.com or www.schrijversgroep77.org
Starting Monday, June 7th, entries will be open for an adult National Art Competition and an adult National Creative Writing and Poetry competitions.  Rules for the art, poetry, and writing competitions are available online at  www.iccsuriname.comwww.indembassysuriname.com and www.schrijversgroep77.org.  Entries will close on July 31st, 2011.
  Winners from the school and adult competitions will be announced by August 7th, 2011.  Gurudev Rabindranath Tagore left these mortal shores on August 7th, 1941.

officiële Openingsceremonie van het Rabindranath Tagore borstbeeld op het grasveld van Alphamax Academy

Donderdag  2 juni 2011
PERSBERICHT
Op zaterdag 4 juni om 10.00 uur zal First Lady Ingrid Bouterse-Waldring samen met de Indiase ambassadeur K.J.S. Sodhi zich voegen bij andere notabelen, Alphamax Academy leerkrachten en schoolkinderen voor de officiële openingsceremonie van het Rabindranath Tagore borstbeeld op het grasveld van Alphamax Academy aan de Stanvaste- en Sterappelstraat, te Zorg en Hoop, Paramaribo.
Het zal een feestelijke aangelegenheid zijn ter viering van de 150ste geboortejaar van Rabindranath Tagore. Hij is Indiaas internationaal bekendste en meest gevierde dichter van de 20ste eeuw. Tagore, geboren op 7 mei 1841,  stond ook bekend  als pedagoog, filosoof, dramaturg, choreograaf, zanger, componist, redenaar en uitgever. In 1913 was hij de eerste Aziaat en de eerste niet-Europeaan die de Nobelprijs won. Hij is een cultureel internationaal icoon die diep respect genoot tijdens zijn lezingen tour die werd uitgevoerd als Nobelprijswinnaar in Azië, Europa en Amerika.
Het Tagore borstbeeld die First Lady Bouterse-Waldring zal onthullen op zaterdagochtend is een van de 14 replica’s die over de hele wereld zullen worden onthuld; cadeaus van de regering en volk van India via de Ambassade van India en de Indiase Raad voor Culturele Betrekkingen (ICCR). De 1.20 meter hoog bronzen borstbeeld is een meesterwerk dat een goed voorbeeld is van het werk van de beroemde beeldhouwer Gautam Pal, die net als Tagore ook afkomstig is uit Bengalen, India.
Tot op heden zijn er Tagore borstbeelden onthuld door de nationale leiders in Seoul, Zuid Korea; Dhaka, Bangladesh; Havana, Cuba; Shanghai, China en Singapore.
First Lady Ingrid Bouterse-Waldring en ambassadeur Sodhi zullen tijdens de ceremonie zaterdag een korte speech houden. De aanwezigen zullen als een van de culturele presentaties, kunnen genieten van een dans presentatie door de uit 14-leden-bestaande dansgroep uit Assam, India die op dit moment Suriname bezoeken. Het zal het eerste publieke optreden in Suriname zijn van deze bezoekende kunstenaars na succesvolle shows op de Oost-Caribische eilanden.
De Tagore borstbeeld onthullingceremonie is onderdeel van een reeks van evenementen georganiseerd door de Rabindranath Tagore 150ste geboortejaar feestcommissie bestaande uit de Indiase Ambassade, Alphamax Academy, ART Vibes United en Schrijversgroep’77. Vorige maand organiseerde Art Vibes United een schilder- en beeldhouwkunst tentoonstelling in Fort Zeelandia.  Deze maand organiseren Schrijversgroep’77 en Art Vibes United  landelijke kunst- en creatief schrijfwedstrijden voor schoolgaande kinderen op het VOJ en VOS niveau. De deadline voor deze nationale school wedstrijden is op 30 juni 2011 (verlengde datum). Voor meer informatie kunt u terecht op www.iccsuriname.com ,  www.indembassysuriname.com en www.schrijversgroep77.org En voor eventuele vragen over de scholierenwedstrijd kunt u terecht bij Ismene.krishnadath@gmail.com  of sdankerlui@yahoo.com , telefoon:520513 of 491755.
Vanaf maandag 7 juni kunnen volwassenen deelnemen aan de Nationale schrijf- en kunstwedstrijd. Regels voor de kunst- en schrijfwedstrijd zijn online beschikbaar op op  www.iccsuriname.com , www.indembassysuriname.com en www.schrijversgroep77.org  De deadline voor inzendingen is op 31 juli 2011.
Winnaars van de scholieren- en volwassen wedstrijden zullen worden bekendgemaakt op 7 augustus 2011. Gurudev Rabindranath Tagore verliet zijn aardse lichaam op 7 augustus 1941.