Presented to individuals of Caribbean-Canadian heritage, who have attained success in their field of endeavours.

Ms. Maud Fuller

Ms. Maud Fuller

Maud Fuller's contribution to UWI is immeasurable. She is a loyal and proud graduate of the Mona campus and although she migrated to Canada, she always visited the campus on her trips to Jamaica. In 1987, she was spurred to action when she realized that some students had very little money left over for food after their expenses. She joined forces with some alumni in Canada and formed the University of the West Indies Alumni Association (UWIAA) Toronto Chapter and started to raise funds. The Chapter celebrated 20 years in 2008 and she was at the helm for all 20 of them. During her tenure, the UWIAA Chapter has provided scholarships for students at all the UWI campuses.

In addition, following another visit where she noticed the inadequate facilities for commuting students, funds were raised to help with the expansion of the Commuting Students Lounge at Mona.

For over twenty years, Maud Fuller has been the driving force in the UWI Alumni Association Toronto Chapter. Maud has also excelled in her own field and had an outstanding professional career as a classroom teacher and lecturer. She is also an Instructor/Lecturer with the University of Toronto’s School of Continuing Education where she is dedicated to the cause of interpreting the Caribbean child to Canadian teachers.In order to show its appreciation, the University named a scholarship from the UWI Regional Endowment Fund in 2009 in her honour.

Maud feels that it was a privilege to serve her Alma Mater, however the UWI feels it was privileged to benefit from her dedication and service and is proud to honour her and recognize her in front of her fellow Canadian UWI alumni, friends and other supporters this evening.

Dr. Herbert Ho Ping Kong

Dr. Herbert Ho Ping Kong

Dr. Ho Ping Kong is a graduate of the University of the West Indies (1965). He is also a graduate of St. George’s College high school in Kingston, Jamaica and a member of the school’s Hall of Fame. The Globe & Mail describes him as: “As brilliant as House…But Nicer.” Colleagues and friends describe Dr. Herbert Ho Ping Kong as a truly “renaissance man”. He walks with great humility, a calm and quiet demeanor and a genuine care for everyone. In his role as teacher and mentor, he has, and continues to be an exemplary example to hundreds in the field of medicine, many of whom have become top in their field, in Canada and the Caribbean. Some of his core work includes the advancement of research in sickle cell anemia; renal and heart failure; and other aspects of internal medicine.
Dr. Ho Ping Kong has an extensive career as a practicing consultant physician and teacher with important leadership roles in medical education and program development at the local, provincial and national levels. Dr. Ho Ping Kong founded and became the first Director of the Division of General Internal Medicine at the Royal Victoria Hospital in the McGill system from 1981 to 1984, in Montreal.

In Toronto he has conducted similar seminal activities at Toronto Western Hospital, The Toronto Hospital, and University Health Network as well as centrally at the University departmental level. Through his sustained innovative work at these institutions, he has established general internal medicine as a national academic force. Dr. Ho Ping Kong was appointed Chair of the Section of Medical Education at the Royal College of Physicians Annual Meeting in 1984 and Chair of the Royal College Nucleus Committee for Internal Medicine in 1986, with re-election in 1989.

In 1990 he was promoted to rank of full Professor by the University of Toronto and was appointed Associate Physician-in-Chief of The Toronto Hospital in 1992. About a decade ago Dr. Ho Ping Kong initiated the clinical fellowship program for training in sub specialties of internal medicine, for Caribbean trainees at the University Health Network. The program has grown to almost 20 consultant physicians…the majority of whom are back in the Caribbean practicing and teaching. In 2004 Dr. Ho Ping Kong became the inaugural holder of the Chang endowed chair in Internal Medicine teaching at UHN and University of Toronto. In his 40 years of teaching, Dr. Ho Ping Kong has received numerous awards. Most prestigious of these are the Dr. Mary E. Hollington Award for Excellence in Teaching in the Final Medical Year in 1989 and the Aikins Award for Individual Excellence in Undergraduate Clinical Teaching in 1990. Dr. Ho Ping Kong was awarded the most prestigious 3M Teaching Excellence Award of Canada in 1999, which recognized his role as an accomplished medical teacher, and placed him at the top of the teaching pyramid across all university disciplines throughout the nation. In 2003 he was awarded the distinguished lifetime Osler Award of excellence by the Canadian Society of Internal Medicine for practice and teaching of general internal medicine.

In 2008 the Jamaican government honoured him with the community service award for health. In the same year, the association of consultant physicians of Jamaica recognized him for his outstanding contribution to post graduate medical education in the Caribbean.

More recently the University Health Network recognized Dr. Ho Ping Kong’s lifetime contributions and achievements by naming its new centre, the Dr. Herbert Ho Ping Kong Centre for Excellence for Education and Practice.

Dr. Robert Moore

Dr. Robert Moore

Born, raised and schooled in Guyana (1930s and 1940s), Robert Moore entered the UCWI in 1951 on an Open Scholarship and graduated with a First Class BA General and Diploma in Education in 1955. Public speaking, debating and acting were his favourite campus activities as was his three-year chairmanship of the Student Christian Movement. The prevailing ethos of the campus, the impromptu nocturnal student talk sessions and the history lectures of Dr. Elsa Goveia made him an unwavering West Indian nationalist. Eight years (mid 1950s to early 1960s) at Queen’s College for boys in Guyana gave him the opportunity to introduce West Indian history at the middle and upper levels. Under his guidance, student debates became a dynamic element of the school’s life and outstanding performers of the ilk of Walter Rodney emerged. An honours history degree at Cambridge University in the early 1960s was rounded off at the end of that decade by a doctorate in Guyana’s race relations from Sussex University.

He then returned to the fledging University of Guyana to launch a major course in Guyanese History. Robert Moore took to radio broadcasting with a passion in the mid-1950s and, by the 1960s, he had a Caribbean audience listening to his comments on regional and global affairs whether beamed from the BBC in London or from Radio Demerara in Guyana. In the absence of television in Guyana, his verbal depictions of Guyana’s state ceremonies and major political and religious occasions commanded a wide audience across the region.

In 1974, Robert Moore was appointed High Commissioner for Guyana to Canada. In addition to the normal inter-governmental responsibilities of an ambassador, he joined with Canada’s non-governmental community in educating Canadians about the importance of international assistance to poor countries. Across the country, he was a well-known figure at conferences, think-tanks, consciousness-raising sessions and church assemblies focused on poverty alleviation in the Global South. At the end of his tenure, he authored a book on Third World Diplomats posted to First World Countries with the assistance of a prestigious Canadian research centre. In 1985, after a three-year stint at Carleton University’s International Affairs School, he joined The Canadian International Development Agency. There, returning to his early passion for education, he was primarily involved in a program to promote Global Education in Canadian schools. Robert Moore retired in 1997 and, co-authored a book called “Audacious Anglicans” which was published in 2008.

Dr. David Rudder

Dr. David Rudder

David Michael Rudder is one of the top calypsonians of his generation. In 1977 he joined Charlie's Roots, one of the top bands in Trinidad and Tobago. In 1986 he burst into prominence with his album “The Hammer” which produced two big hits, “The Hammer” (a tribute to the late pannist Rudolph Charles) and “Bahia Girl”. This was followed in 1987 with “Calypso Music”, a brilliant encapsulation of the history of calypso. In 1988 Rudder released his best album to date, “Haiti” which included the title track, a tribute to the glory and suffering of Haiti, “Engine Room”, which captures the energy of the steelband, and “Rally 'Round the West Indies” which has become the anthem of West Indies cricket. The song “Haiti” spurred his appointment in 1991 as a UNDP Goodwill Ambassador representing the Caribbean region.
David was born in Belmont, Trinidad on May 6, 1953. One of nine children, he spent much of his early childhood with his grandmother, a spiritual Baptist, growing up near a pan yard and a Shango yard, in a neighbourhood where boys dreamed of being entertainers. It was at school that he discovered how much the arts interested him. Rudder began singing at the age of 11 with a group called The Solutions. He also became an apprentice to the late Ken Morris, a master craftsman known for his copper work and carnival designs. David still paints today and in fact he sees himself more as an artist rather than an entertainer.
It was the influence of the Shango and Pan yard that was to actually colour his music. The chanting of the Shango Baptists continues to be at the heart of many of his songs. Long before Rudder established himself in the calypso arena, he was known as one of the few band singers who wrote all his own songs. His popularity flowed from his obvious talent and from the radically different image he cultivated of himself as a singer.
David Rudder enjoys reading and relaxing with his wife Christine and five children. He lives in Canada and spends much of his time touring in North America and Europe.

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