"I must admit that Harvard taught me a great deal. It's a great Club for mentoring. It was there I got my social grounding as a boy. And I would forever be grateful for the Club for the role it played in my life." - Neil Shaka Hislop.
An international colleague shared a quote with me: "After all has been said and done, more has been said than done."
We were having a conversation about issues of inequality and social injustices and our shared passion for finding solutions. It was an early Monday morning conversation, given the time difference between UK and T&T.
That conversation was the impetus for deciding to reference and use excerpts from my address at the Harvard Club 80th Anniversary Dinner held on Saturday at the Harvard Club. I had opened my address with the Shaka Hislop quote.
The Harvard Club is a Trinidad and Tobago cultural, sports and social institution with real history built, maintained and sustained by the pride and passion of its members over the past 80 years - that's 29,200 days; 700,800 hours; 42.48 million minutes; 2.52 billion seconds of persistence, perseverance, resilience, commitment, dedicated volunteerism - day in, day out.
In 1943, the club, was established at an important juncture in the history of T&T. The founding members had a ground-breaking vision and mission for the social and cultural impact of the Harvard Club at a time when the elite and exclusive symbols of the social order of T&T's society was shaped by the political, economic and social order of colonialism, World War 2 and the American Base.
For 80 years - Three score years and 20 - Harvard has been A HOME AWAY FROM HOME. A trusted second home for approximately 16,000 children and youth, who participated in the Harvard Club clinics over the years.
Bunty Lara, the father of a then 13-year-old Brian Lara once told Indar Ramloogam: "Indy take care of my son. I am leaving him in your hands." An expression of TRUST similarly expressed by thousands of parents and grandparents over the years.
"Harvard take care of my child. I am leaving them in your hands."
As Harvard heads into the dawn of a new age and era the club must continue to be a pioneering and significant contributor to national development. Trust must remain a pillar value for the club.
In 20 years, Harvard will celebrate 100 years. Over the next 20 years to 2043, the current custodians and stewards, must with courage, pursue strategic priorities and undertake important initiatives while accepting the responsibility for building on the club's founding philosophy and ideology. The club has always been a beacon of hope, inclusivity and opportunity.
Creating more than just excellence in sports, Harvard was intended to be more than just a sports club. The club takes as much pride in its Harvard Harps steelband, calypso shows and culinary fund raisers as it does its success on the field of play.
For 80 years, the Harvard Club way is - when all is said and done, more is done than said.
Making a positive difference in the lives of children and youth with sports and culture is what Harvard is about. That both Shaka Hislop and Brian Lara are honorary members of the Harvard Club is a testament to the role, Harvard played in their formative years.