Leader of Fellowship Tabernacle, Reverend Dr Al Miller (2nd left), greets Digicel Jamaica Chairman, Harry Smith (left), Digicel Group CEO, Oliver Coughlan (2nd right), and Digicel Jamaica CEO, Jabbor Kayumov (right), at the Service of Thanksgiving to commemorate the 20th anniversary of Digicel in Jamaica.
In powerful praise and soul-stirring songs, Digicel gave thanks for 20 years of providing the most advanced communication services to Jamaica at a service of thanksgiving held at Fellowship Tabernacle in Kingston on Sunday.
The event, held on the eve of Digicel’s 20
th anniversary, was attended by Minister of Science, Energy and Technology, Daryl Vaz, Opposition Spokesman on Science, Commerce and Technology, Hugh Graham, and several members of the Digicel executive management team.
Leader of Fellowship Tabernacle, Reverend Dr Al Miller (2nd left), greets Digicel Jamaica Chairman, Harry Smith (left), Digicel Group CEO, Oliver Coughlan (2nd right), and Digicel Jamaica CEO, Jabbor Kayumov (right), at the Service of Thanksgiving to commemorate the 20th anniversary of Digicel in Jamaica.
In powerful praise and soul-stirring songs, Digicel Jamaica gave thanks for 20 years of providing the most advanced communication services to Jamaica at a service of thanksgiving held at Fellowship Tabernacle in Kingston on Sunday.
The event, held on the eve of the company s 20
th anniversary, was attended by Minister of Science, Energy and Technology, Daryl Vaz, Opposition Spokesman on Science, Commerce and Technology, Hugh Graham, and several members of the Digicel executive management team.
It made such an impression upon him, DeWine said. The horrors that he saw.
About 11 million people (6 million of them Jewish) perished in the Holocaust, and speaker after speaker said it s personal stories like the one DeWine s father told him that will connect future generations to the tragic event and prevent it from happening again. You suspend that sense of time and place and you listen to the person and their story, said Stephen Smith, director of the Shoah Foundation, a nonprofit that tapes interviews with survivors and witnesses.
One story shared during Thursday afternoon s event came from Holocaust survivor Al Miller of Butler County.
The Holocaust Museum of Los Angeles will host a livestream Yom HaShoah commemoration ceremony specifically honoring the Sephardic communities in Southern Europe and North Africa that were victims of Nazi brutality. The virtual ceremony, which takes place Sunday, April 11 will feature a keynote address by Dr. Aomoar Baum, associate professor and vice chair of Undergraduate Studies, UCLA Department of Anthropology, a speech from Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti, performances by singer-songwriters Shira Bouskila and Montana Tucker, and appearances from survivors.
While the museum itself remains closed due to pandemic restrictions, its Yom HaShoah event is open to anyone who wishes to join and honor the Sephardic community.
ELKTON â Depending on interest, Cecil Countyâs farmers and others in the agriculture industry could get the Johnson & Johnson COVID vaccine soon thanks to the efforts several county and state agencies.
Al Miller, Cecil County Councilman, credited John Donohue, deputy director of Cecil County Emergency Services, who in turn said it was through the efforts of Emergency Services, Cecil County Health Department and Maryland Emergency Management that the vaccine became available for the farm community.
Anyone who operates a farm, or is the spouse of a farm worker, can get the vaccine. Miller said there are 250 available for the northern end of the county. There were also 250 for the southern end, which have already been assigned, Miller said Tuesday.