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Imarah
Radix, Miss Guyana World 2009
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to 2009 Press Releases
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ARTICLE FROM STABROEK
NEWS 2009
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Imarah set to do Guyana proud
By Oluatoyin Alleyne
November 21, 2009 in The Scene By Oluatoyin Alleyne
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Miss
Guyana World Imarah Radix in a creation by Lou
Ann Lewis Jackson. (Photo courtesy of the Radixes)
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Guyana is being represented at
this year's Miss World Pageant in South Africa by a
24-year-old, multi-talented young woman who sees herself
as level-headed, is confident and is of the opinion
that her strongest points in the contest are her talent
and her charity work.
Imarah Radix, who has lived
between Guyana and England for the past few years, was
recently selected by the Ken Chung-led Miss Guyana World
committee as the queen to represent Guyana at the December
12 pageant. While Imarah has gone to school in England
from her teenage years, she has always returned to Guyana
to spend the holidays with her mother, Shahiba Radix.
Imarah's father, Kenrick Radix, came from a well-known
Grenadian family and was a lawyer who served as Minister
of Legal Affairs in the Maurice Bishop government. He
later returned to private practice and died after years
of illness. Her mother Shahiba, served as Chief of Protocol
in the Maurice Bishop government. According to Shahiba,
whose mother was from Buxton and her father from Berbice,
the Radixes are known in Grenada as being the first
Black family to become professionals in the island.
She sees her daughter's mixed Black and Indian ancestry,
as representing a true reflection of Guyana.
Imarah is already in South Africa
where competition is in full swing and so far her version
of Etta James' "At Last", made more popular recently
by Beyonce, has been given a favourable nod by the judges
and she has made it through three rounds of judging
and may very well compete in the finals of the talent
segment tomorrow night.
"I am very confident and proud
of my performance so far. I have been pacing myself
with all the various challenges that I have been faced
with. I am taking part in all the fast-track competitions
to maximize my experience and also my exposure and in
turn Guyana's exposure on the world stage," Imarah told
The Scene in a recent email interview.
The Oxford Brookes University
graduate told The Scene that she is also confident of
doing well in the Beauty with a Purpose charity project,
the winner of which is announced on the night of the
pageant. Imarah's charitable work with children did
not start when she became Miss Guyana World, but is
something she has been doing for many years. She upped
the ante when she became queen, which saw her undertaking
four projects in two months, and raised $174,000 which
was used to feed 170 orphans and disadvantaged elderly
persons. Her charitable work has also taken her into
the Dharm Shala in Albouystown and for some time she
has been working with the children at the Red Cross
Convalescent Home in D'Urban Backlands. But what really
pulled at her heartstrings is the work she did with
the Varqua Foundation which runs a free education programme
at School of the Nations for children in Tiger Bay.
Imarah, who has a degree in International
Relations and Politics and one day hopes to work at
a UN agency told The Scene that she was shocked at the
illiteracy level of many of the children in the area
and she has now pledged to dedicate her energies to
hold English and dance classes for them. Meanwhile,
Imarah, who has deferred her place on a Master's Degree
course in International Relations and Diplomacy at the
University College Kensington in London to represent
Guyana, has already found out that the competition in
South Africa is very challenging "not to mention fast
paced. "Everyday there is a new schedule planned full
of surprises which keeps all of us on our toes. We have
a very heavy security detail… 24/7. So far we have attended
many charity galas and also participated in fashion
shows wearing beautiful gold gowns by top South African
designers. We have also had wonderful sightseeing tours
in London, Abu Dhabi and the Eastern Cape here in South
Africa. The Eastern Cape was beautiful. My group visited
the Niguni Lodge on Safari and we saw huge herds of
wild elephants, zebras, buffalo, baboons, velvet monkeys,
warthogs and antelope."
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Miss
Guyana World Imarah Radix wearing a crocheted swimsuit
designed by Vashti Harlequin. |
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Miss
Guyana World Imarah Radix wearing a crocheted
dress designed by Vashti Harlequin
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Imarah also said: "The competition
is starting to heat up now because the preliminary competitions
choosing the top twenty have begun with the sports final
which took place at the lovely newly opened Nelson Mandela
Stadium… "The things I have enjoyed most have been meeting
all the other contestants and exchanging gifts with
them; the sightseeing tours and the unique gifts I have
received from the hosts in all the countries we have
visited so far. "I am having a wonderful time. There
are many aspects of South Africa that are similar to
Guyana, for example the Market Place made me feel like
I never left Georgetown… It's been a fantastic experience.
I have made friends that will last a lifetime. I do
miss my mother very much though and the home-cooked
duck curry!" While there are over 100 beauties vying
for the crown Imarah said she is particular close to
Miss Barbados, Leah Marville; Miss Bahamas, Joanna Brown,
Miss Botswana, Sumaiyah Marope and Miss Austria, Anna
Hammel. In her biography for the pageant, Imarah, who
spent some of her formative years in Grenada but returned
to Guyana with her mother after her Grenadian father
died, described herself as a "very outgoing and friendly
person" who has a wide variety of interests outside
her academic pursuits.
She loves reading and swimming
and during her A-Levels in England as a teenager undertook
the Duke of Edinburgh Bronze Award where she learned
navigational skills and the challenge of setting up
camp outdoors. An ardent scuba diver, Imarah is a certified
open water and advanced open water diver, a trained
wreck diver, navigational diver, deep diver and a peak
performance diver among others. Her sense of adventure,
she said, has seen her visiting countries such as Egypt,
Margarita Island in Venezuela, Thailand, Nigeria and
many European countries. But it is not all water. Imarah
has been in classical ballet training from the age of
three and has also added ballroom, tap, jive, hip hop
and Latin dances. She said that during her university
year she choreographed a dance for the university's
Afro-Caribbean Society talent show. Imarah has also
hit the fashion stage many times modelling at the Guyana
Fashion Weekend and appearing in GEM Magazine as well
as on the cover of Extra. She has done photo shoots
for GT&T and modelled for designers such as Michelle
Cole and Olympia Small. She has also won a competition
in England to be the face of a brand called Tigress
Clothing.
Her ambition to work at a United
Nations agency or an affiliated non-governmental organisation
is fuelled by her interest in the treatment of children
and their fundamental rights. She described herself
as a passionate person in her values and morals, totally
committed to fulfilling her dreams while contributing
and playing her part to make this world a better place
for future generations to enjoy. Imarah feels strongly
about issues such as racial discrimination, world poverty,
social injustice, climate change and conservation of
wildlife and the environment. In an interview with the
Miss World committee prior to journeying to South Africa,
which is now on the Miss World website, she was asked
'What would it mean to you to do well at Miss World?'
and she had this to say: "It would give me a great sense
of fulfillment to do well at Miss World not just for
my own personal satisfaction but also to make my family
and country proud. The Miss World pageant would be the
platform from which I would be able to launch myself
into the great challenge of changing the world for the
better through raising awareness and support for both
environmental and charitable work all over the world.
I would dedicate myself to reaching out to the under-privileged
in societies all over the world in order to make a real
difference to people's lives. Doing well at Miss World
would give me the opportunity to present to the world
all that Guyana has to offer visitors, such as lush
rainforests, majestic waterfalls and vast rivers. Guyana
is renowned for its great variety of timber, gold, rum
and sugar which are regarded as the best in the world.
As an Ambassador I am inviting the other contestants
as well as the wider world to discover Guyana through
connecting with me during my time in South Africa."
Asked who she admires most, Imarah said while her mother
is her "rock" it would have to be President Barack Obama
for his achievement in breaking down barriers and inspiring
people of all races, cultures and ages to "get involved
in the political movement and caring for the environment
in an active way." (samantha_alleyne2000@yahoo.com)
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