PORT OF SPAIN – More than 100 children from three Trinidadian children’s homes experienced an immersive introduction to Carnival arts during Spirit Mas’ second annual Children’s Carnival Workshop at the National Academy for the Performing Arts (NAPA) on January 11.
The event brought together youth from St Mary’s Children’s Home, Credo Foundation, and Rainbow Rescue for a comprehensive exploration of Carnival’s creative dimensions. Participants engaged in both theoretical and practical sessions across multiple disciplines including songwriting, costume design, deejaying, stilt-walking, and traditional soca and cultural dance.
Guiding the young participants were nationally recognized practitioners in each field. The songwriting segment, led by Freetown Collective’s lead singer Muhammad Muwakil alongside music producers Kitwana Israel, Kyle Phillips, and Mevon Soodeen, provided deep insights into musical creation. Facilitators demonstrated fundamental songwriting techniques, vocal dynamics, and the transformation of creative concepts into polished productions.
The workshop culminated in a collaborative achievement as participants composed and performed their own unofficial soca composition. Fifteen-year-old Aliyah emerged as the lead vocalist, recording verses while other children contributed supporting vocals and additional lyrics. The emotional impact was palpable when participants heard their collective work played back for the first time.
“It was shocking. It sounded amazing, and I didn’t even recognise my own voice,” Aliyah expressed, adding with hopeful anticipation, “Maybe one day I’ll be a singer.”
The program featured specialized instruction across multiple Carnival disciplines: Marvin Dowridge led cultural dance sessions, Rocstars Deejay Academy provided DJ instruction, Nkwame Martin taught soca dance, and the National Steel Symphony Orchestra introduced steelpan fundamentals. Costume design was facilitated by Nakitah Hyatali and Deshaune Fitzwilliam, while stilt-walking instruction came from the Kaiso Kai Valencia Cultural Group, with makeup artistry handled by Madame Maharaj Beauty School.
Aliyah highlighted the workshop’s significance for cultural preservation, noting: “This is a way of passing down knowledge and experience so the next generation will be educated on our culture and heritage. It’s important that Spirit continues this.”
