Photo Credit: Students test for themselves how to connect an outlet single phase light switch to a light bulb and double phase light switch during an electrical and electronics maintenance class offered at the East End Seventh-day Adventist Church on Tortola, last month. [Photo: Jacob Adolphus]
British Virgin Islands | Royston Philbert, North Caribbean Conference Staff and IAD News Staff

The East End Seventh-day Adventist Church on Tortola in the British Virgin Islands territory recently began offering an electrical and electronics maintenance course to residents on the island. The initiative is meant to enhance the skills and abilities of residents of Fat Hog’s Bay and the surrounding communities as job losses and unemployment numbers rise in the midst of a nearly year-long pandemic, church leaders said.

Jacob Adolphus, public affairs and religious liberty director for the East End Adventist Church, said church leaders took the needs of the community to heart when the minister of education in Tortola made a statement encouraging individuals to learn a practical skill as a fall-back in case their professional job is lost.

“That was the motivation for the initiative; to equip people with skills so that they can utilize [them] to help themselves and/or to help others,” says Adolphus.

Two licensed electricians led the two-hour-long classes held on Tuesdays and Thursdays in December. The course provided electrical theory and hands-on learning with circuitry and electrical mechanics for building maintenance. 

“Attendees were immersed in practical, real-life examples that illustrated how electricity is distributed, and they benefited from a foundational overview of the role electricity plays in everyday life,” Adolphus says.

Pastor Jerome Bevans, who leads the East End congregation, praised the venture organized by the men’s ministries, public affairs, and religious liberties departments.

“East End Adventist Church is always looking for innovative ways to impact the community in a practical and relevant way,” says Bevans. “I commend the departments that partnered to preach Christ in a way that the community could appreciate. Soon, the connections made will light up the world.”

Ten residents who completed the course took part in an informal graduation ceremony hosted in the church’s fellowship hall on Dec. 15, 2020, to recognize their achievements. Students thanked the organizers during the ceremony for the empowering experience.

The overwhelming success of the endeavor has spurred the church to plan to teach additional trade skills such as plumbing courses in the months ahead.

This article was originally published on the Inter-America Division’s website 

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