Equipping
inner-city youth at
Operation Friendship, Jamaica
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Christopher
Smith, foreground, and
Linton Smith, auto body
repairmen
at Operation Friendship,
prepare the JIG to
straighten the chassis of
a
motor car that was bent
out of shape in an
accident.
IT IS most
aptly described as an
oasis in an inner-city
community.For
nearly 40 years,
Operation Friendship has
provided young people in
many of the Corporate
Area's inner-city
communities and rural
Jamaica with a skill, in
the process,
giving them a start in
life.
From
Monday to Friday each
week, youngsters willing
to make the sacrifice to
attend
classes are trained in
woodwork, metal work,
electrical welding,
sewing and auto body
repairs
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among
other things at Operation
Friendship's headquarters at 2C
Bell Road, Kingston 11.
Today
Auto Feature focuses on
the Auto Body shop and the three
talented instructors who readily
pass on their
knowledge to youngsters eager to
equip themselves with a skill.
In
their six years together at the
institution, Christopher Smith
and Linton Smith, who are
cousins, and Oral Angus
have tutored at least 250
youngsters in the art of body
repairs and spraying. Another 20
are expected to start a
10-month course beginning
tomorrow.
Christopher
told Auto Feature that the
programme is made possible with
the assistance of Food for the
Poor which
is providing an allowance for the
instructors. He explained that
the youths are drawn from both
urban and rural
communities and will be in
training until July 2001.
"Training
will be every day except for
weekends," the instructor
with 15-years experience under
his belt told
Auto Feature.
He
will be working alongside his
cousin, Linton, who has been
fixing smashed-up motor vehicles
for the last 10 years.
Completing the team is Oral
Angus, who does the spraying.
The
three who grew up together in the
Kingston 13 area, have been
together for the past six years
at Operation
Friendship.
"I
was taught by my uncle,"
said Christopher, adding that
"wi born inna it." He
explained that both he and Linton
were
always hanging out at some garage
where their uncle or father
worked.
It
was by chance that the three came
work together. Christopher had
gone to a Justice of the Peace,
Webster Edwards,
to have him sign some documents,
when the JP, while examining the
documents, realised that he was
an auto body
repair man. Mr. Webster who runs
Operation Friendship and who was
looking for an instructor for the
Auto Body shop
invited Christopher for an
interview. Christopher, in turn,
invited Linton and Oral. They
were all asked to report for work
and have been together since.
The
three do an expert job and are
known to have transformed
vehicles so badly smashed up they
were headed for
the scrap heap. They are at home
on the JIG, a body straightener,
that can realign vehicles that
have been involved
in the worst accidents.
Despite
their tremendous talent, there is
hardly enough work for the trio
at times. They are appealing for
additional
private sector support, pointing
out that many of the youths who
start the training programme are
forced to quit
because of a lack of bus fare or
lunch money.
"Sometimes
from a class of 20, only eight
complete the course,"
Christopher said.
He
said that despite Operation
Friendship's primary function as
a training school, they welcomed
any job.
"We would be interested in
repairing the vehicles of
Government departments and
agencies," said Linton.
He added that it would be done at
prices difficult to beat "with
no compromise to quality."
Lynford
Simpson, Staff Reporter
Norman Grindley, Photographer
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