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Monday, June 16, 2025

Boy who wrote SEA with broken wrist tops his school

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712 days ago
20230705
Celebrating his success after topping his school in the SEA exams, Jude Jones poses with his brother, Jake, and parents, Sunita and Jason, before heading to Gulf City for lunch yesterday.

Celebrating his success after topping his school in the SEA exams, Jude Jones poses with his brother, Jake, and parents, Sunita and Jason, before heading to Gulf City for lunch yesterday.

RISHI RAGOONATH

Se­nior Mul­ti­me­dia Re­porter

rad­hi­ca.sookraj@guardian.co.tt

 

In an ex­tra­or­di­nary dis­play of re­silience and de­ter­mi­na­tion, Jude Jones, a pupil of Ra­mai Trace Hin­du School in Debe, topped his school in the Sec­ondary En­trance As­sess­ment (SEA) ex­ams even though he wrote the ex­am­i­na­tion with a bro­ken wrist.

The night be­fore the SEA ex­ams in March, Jones ac­ci­den­tal­ly fell off his bed.

Al­though he suf­fered swelling to his hand, he tol­er­at­ed the pain and wrote the test, pass­ing for his first-choice school–Pre­sen­ta­tion Col­lege.

Dur­ing an awards func­tion at the school yes­ter­day, Jones re­ceived a tro­phy for out­stand­ing per­for­mance in the SEA ex­am­i­na­tions.

Speak­ing to Guardian Me­dia in an ex­clu­sive in­ter­view, Jones said he was al­ways de­ter­mined to tack­le his aca­d­e­m­ic hur­dles head-on. He re­vealed that his bro­ken wrist was not the worst of his chal­lenges.

Ear­ly last year, af­ter be­ing strick­en by COVID-19, Jones said he suf­fered swelling in his ap­pen­dix and had to un­der­go emer­gency surgery.

De­spite his predica­ment, Jones per­se­vered, study­ing for two hours every day as well as at­tend­ing ex­tra lessons.

“Af­ter the surgery, it healed a few months lat­er. I was so ner­vous for SEA and I don’t know how I did this, get­ting first in my school,” he said.

Recog­nis­ing the im­por­tance of ad­di­tion­al guid­ance, Jones praised his teach­ers Sir Ram­cha­ran Moti­lal and Ms Kel­ly Ram­lal for show­ing faith in him. 

“They were won­der­ful to me and so were my par­ents,” he said. Jones said he got 96 per cent in Maths, 90.62 in Lan­guage Arts which is Gram­mar, and in the ELA Cre­ative Writ­ing I got 18 out of 20,” he said. He not­ed that his class­mates al­so did well, pass­ing for first and sec­ond-choice schools. 

He al­so thanked his par­ents, Suni­ta and Ja­son Jones, who stood by his side. He said his broth­er Jake al­so mo­ti­vat­ed him.

Re­flect­ing on his ar­du­ous jour­ney, Jones said his pri­ma­ry school life was usurped when the min­istry closed down his school and they were trans­ferred in­to a tem­ple. Even though the new Ra­mi Trace Hin­du School is 90 per cent com­plete, it was nev­er re­opened.

He said the dif­fi­cul­ties filled him with the un­wa­ver­ing be­lief that hard work al­ways pays off. Jones’ dream is to be­come a pi­lot so he can have ad­ven­tures in the world and take his par­ents with him.

Hav­ing nev­er trav­elled be­fore, Jones said he want­ed to go to France. He al­so had some words of ad­vice for oth­er stu­dents who will be writ­ing the ex­ams.

“Al­ways put in a few hours of study and re­mem­ber nev­er to give up on your dreams,” he said.

Mean­while, Jones’s moth­er said he was al­ways de­ter­mined to go to school re­gard­less of the weath­er. When the Ra­mai Trace School was closed down, the pupils had to at­tend class­es in a tem­ple at Rock Road. He al­so took ex­tra lessons in Bar­rack­pore.

“Bar­rack­pore floods and whether it was rain­ing or sun­ny, he was al­ways ex­cit­ed to go to school,” she said.

Say­ing his suc­cess stands as a tes­ta­ment to the pow­er of re­silience and de­ter­mi­na­tion, Suni­ta said he went through a lot of pain in his jour­ney.

“We did not even know his hand was bro­ken. He was too fo­cused on SEA and when we took him to the doc­tor a week af­ter SEA we found out his wrist was bro­ken,” she re­vealed.

She said her son’s suc­cess was a re­minder that with the right mind­set and un­wa­ver­ing ded­i­ca­tion, one can over­come any chal­lenge, no mat­ter how daunt­ing.


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