People of 麻豆直播: Alumna鈥檚 hunger for higher education propels her from 鈥榟umble beginnings鈥

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The 麻豆直播 community is full of unique, inspiring perspectives 鈥攁nd we鈥檙e sharing them as part of an ongoing series.

People of 麻豆直播: Roxann Whittingham

Part One: 鈥淚 would cry and cry and cry and say, 鈥業 want to go to school.'鈥

I come from humble beginnings, and that鈥檚 a mild term for it.

Now I joke about how, when I was growing up, my sister and I only had one pair of red shoes we had to share.

My mom and my dad separated when we were young, so it was a bit difficult for my mom as a single parent.

So, with one pair of red shoes to share, this meant both of us could not go out at the same time. If I鈥檓 going out this weekend, my sister would have to stay home, and then we鈥檇 rotate the one pair of shoes like that.

And of course, you know, red shoes don鈥檛 match with everything鈥

But even growing up this way, I was always very ambitious, very curious, very industrious.

I would tell myself: 鈥淵ou know what? If my tummy鈥檚 empty, I鈥檓 going to fill my head with knowledge.鈥

Roxann Whittingham, 麻豆直播 alumna

My mom was a very hard worker and she really inspired me to strive for everything that I鈥檝e accomplished in my life.

I was very hungry for knowledge from early on because I saw the only way out of that lifestyle was to get myself to a higher level of education.

I lived in a rural district in Jamaica, so getting to school was also a challenge. I would walk for miles to get there, sometimes barefoot, sometimes with lunch, sometimes without lunch.

A person smiles at the camera.

Some days my mom would say to me, 鈥淩oxann, you can鈥檛 go to school today because I don鈥檛 have any money for your lunch.鈥

I would cry and cry and cry and say, 鈥淚 want to go to school.鈥 And, you know, I would make such a mess of myself that she鈥檇 eventually give in and tell me 鈥淥K.鈥

I would tell myself: 鈥淵ou know what? If my tummy鈥檚 empty, I鈥檓 going to fill my head with knowledge.鈥

My problem was I wanted to learn and that kind of zeal propelled me into high school, but in Jamaica at the time going to high school was almost like a luxury, something you dream off.

So, I had to fight to go to high school.

Part Two: 鈥淚 decided I wasn鈥檛 going to give up.鈥

If you didn鈥檛 score a certain average, you couldn鈥檛 get into high school.

And even if I scored a good average, the spaces for high school were so limited. Say, for example, 1,000 students could take an exam, they only had space for 100.

I wasn鈥檛 able to get a spot at first, but I decided I wasn鈥檛 going to give up because if I didn鈥檛 get to high school I would have to settle for a very, very mediocre life.

Roxann Whittingham

So, a couple of my friends were good at athletics, and being good at sports was one of the ways to get accepted into high school.

They got invited to a private exam for athletic students, so, of course, I decided there is no way they鈥檙e going to leave me behind.

My name was not on the invitation list, but that鈥檚 how brave and determined I was.

When we got to the location to do this exam, I was just praying the gentleman didn鈥檛 realize I didn鈥檛 belong in the group. I snuck my way into the exam so quick and sat all the way in the back. I managed to finish the exam.

A couple weeks later, I got a letter from the school. The gentleman said he realized when he was going through the exam papers that I didn鈥檛 belong there, but my grades were higher than the invited students, so he couldn鈥檛 deny me.

That鈥檚 how I got into high school.

鈥淏urning desire to go to college鈥

That same determination helped me face other challenges later in life.

I worked here and there, you know, trying to make ends meet.

College, for me, was so far-fetched because coming from a poor community, colleges were such an unattainable thing.

But I still really had that burning desire to go to college.

Part Three: 鈥淐oming here was not an easy thing. There was a lot of culture shock, a lot of racism.鈥

Trigger warning: Anti-Black racism.

Some of my church members said, 鈥淲e see how determined you are, and you鈥檙e such a hardworking person.鈥 They were the ones who put the money together and helped me go to teacher鈥檚 college.

Later on, my marriage ended and that propelled me onto this next phase of coming to Canada.

It was challenging to live on one salary and being a mom to two boys.

I ended up having to clean offices and houses just to get by, and at one point before my sons arrived here, I was homeless for a bit, staying with different friends.

Coming here was not an easy thing. There was a lot of culture shock, a lot of racism, you know, a lot of things to struggle with.

Black people have a right to be angry because they鈥檝e spent their whole lives having to defend themselves, having to defend their emotions, having to try to prove that they鈥檙e human, having to try to prove that they鈥檙e equal.

Roxann Whittingham, 麻豆直播 alumna

I even once had a man follow me in his car through a Costco parking lot, swearing and screaming racial slurs and honking his horn.

I just kept walking until he yelled, 鈥淵ou Black piece of ****, go back to your country.鈥

I was like, 鈥淥K, you鈥檝e got my attention. What do you want to say to me?鈥

When he saw that, he rolled his windows up and bolted.

I thought that was the end of it. When I came out of Costco, my car was keyed from the front to the back, both sides.

As a Black person, you鈥檙e always having to prove yourself. And it鈥檚 not only for you, but almost like for your whole generation.

I have to succeed so everyone can see that, hey, we are more than cooks, cleaners, nannies, all those things that we鈥檙e labeled.

A person stands and smiles at the camera.

If somebody tells me I can鈥檛 do something, I tend to work twice as hard to prove them wrong.

A lot of people don鈥檛 understand why Black folks are so angry.

They have a right to be angry because they鈥檝e spent their whole lives having to defend themselves, having to defend their emotions, having to try to prove that they鈥檙e human, having to try to prove that they鈥檙e equal.

I feel like there鈥檚 a system set up to block Black people. Every time there鈥檚 an opportunity, somebody鈥檚 saying to you, 鈥淵ou can鈥檛 come any higher. This is where you belong.鈥

鈥淎 lot of change on the horizon鈥

But 麻豆直播 kind of opened up the door for me, and I met some amazing professors in my last semester who really helped to build my self-confidence.

I鈥檓 happy with the place I am right now, and I鈥檓 not as angry as I was before. I just keep going.

We have such a long, long way to go as a society, but I see a lot of change on the horizon.

Roxann Whittingham, alumna of 麻豆直播鈥檚 Child and Youth Care program (Class of 2020) and former VP of Community Engagement for 麻豆直播 Students鈥 Association Orillia. Roxann also recently created a scholarship for Black students studying at 麻豆直播.

As well, Roxann is an author of three books and an entrepreneur. Follow her . 聽

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