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Friday, April 11, 2025

Laventille orphan earns electrical degree but struggles for a job

by

Carisa Lee
1235 days ago
20211122
Upper Laventille resident Leon Sabazan, who became orphaned at a young age, speaks about his struggle to achieve success.

Upper Laventille resident Leon Sabazan, who became orphaned at a young age, speaks about his struggle to achieve success.

NICOLE DRAYTON

At the age of 13, Leon Sabazan be­came an or­phan. His moth­er died when he was just three years old and ten years lat­er, his fa­ther died, leav­ing him and his sib­lings to raise each oth­er at their Block 22, Laven­tille home alone.

“I want­ed to be there with them be­cause we are all we have and I want­ed to be amongst my fam­i­ly that I have,” Sabazan said.

But al­though his sib­lings bond­ed to­geth­er af­ter tragedy, he said they bot­tled their emo­tions, which for him resur­faced on days like Moth­er’s Day and Fa­ther’s Day.

“I felt a void in­side that I think was ir­repara­ble. I would pray for the day to pass quick­ly so every­thing could go back to nor­mal,” he said.

The now 29-year-old said the trau­ma of not hav­ing a fa­ther to teach him how to ride a bike or his moth­er teach him how to treat a woman af­fect­ed him grow­ing up.

“A moth­er’s love to a son, peo­ple speak of it but I don’t know how it is,” he told Guardian Me­dia.

He is now mar­ried and re­cent­ly cel­e­brat­ed his one-year an­niver­sary.

But to pass the time and stay away from bad in­flu­ences grow­ing up in Laven­tille, Sabazan spent his time re­pair­ing dam­aged ap­pli­ances (fans, TVs, ra­dios) around the house.

It was some­thing that not on­ly saved them mon­ey but helped cre­ate the emo­tion­al val­i­da­tion he craved as a teen.

“To get prob­a­bly some praise, be­cause grow­ing up you nev­er get enough praise as a child to feel want­ed….so fix­ing it, every­body say ‘aye you fix this well done west’,” he said.

This was a hob­by that gen­er­at­ed his ca­reer path as an en­gi­neer­ing tech­ni­cian but the jour­ney had many black­outs along the way.

“I breeze through sec­ondary school…no­body told me school was im­por­tant grow­ing up,” he said.

Af­ter ac­quir­ing on­ly one CXC pass, Sabazan went back to school and worked. He even­tu­al­ly got five pass­es and ap­plied to the Uni­ver­si­ty of Trinidad and To­ba­go (UTT)

“I would have done evening class­es while I was work­ing KFC and then had to teach my­self Math and PoB,” he said.

Af­ter six years of study­ing, Sabazan com­plet­ed his Elec­tri­cal/Elec­tron­ics En­gi­neer­ing Tech­ni­cian (EEET) de­gree.

“I re­alised that I need­ed to do some­thing bet­ter than this…It was a mo­ti­va­tion for me to go back and make some­thing of my­self,” he said.

But with a de­gree in hand, he now faces an­oth­er strug­gle, get­ting a job in his field.

Sabazan said he has ap­plied to sev­er­al jobs and be­lieves he did not get a call back be­cause of the area he lives in.

“I have not been suc­cess­ful in achiev­ing an in­ter­view or any­thing what­so­ev­er like that, so I’m hop­ing one day an op­por­tu­ni­ty will per­mit it­self and I would be able to utilise what I would have learnt at UTT.”

How­ev­er, he cur­rent­ly works for Food Drop.

Sabazan said he reached out to the Mem­ber of Par­lia­ment for his area, Fitzger­ald Hinds, about his job strug­gles but nev­er got a re­sponse. He al­so wrote to the At­tor­ney Gen­er­al and asked for as­sis­tance but that too was un­suc­cess­ful. But he said he has reached too far to give up now and hopes his sto­ry mo­ti­vates some­one to keep push­ing even in the midst of ad­ver­si­ty.

“Be­cause one would say that I had all the pos­si­bil­i­ties of choos­ing the wrong path but I de­fied the odds so I want this sto­ry to in­spire and en­cour­age oth­ers,” he said.


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