Despite the known challenges for Christians in Nigeria, especially in certain regions, there is much great news for the country’s Catholics in need of being shared, especially the successes of Catholic school students.
Two Catholic Schools in the Archdiocese of Onitsha, the native diocese of Cardinal Francis Arinze, recently, at different levels of international secondary school competitions, won.
Encouraging the Catholic schools’ performance, Archbishop of Onitsha, Valerian Okeke, and his team of collaborators in education, say they are «grateful to God for these victories.» They congratulate the students and their tutors for their hard work and successful performances.
At the last World Technovation Challenge Competition, an annual world competition, in the United States, six students of Regina Pacis Model Secondary School, Onitsha, were the overall winners.
The Catholic school had earlier won the competition at the national level and then proceeded to the international level that brought together students from different parts of the world. Over 115 countries participated in the competition, but only 12 teams from all over the world were selected as finalists for the pitch in San Francisco.
Developing the mobile application called the FD-Detector «to help tackle the challenge of fake pharmaceutical products in Nigeria and beyond,» the young Nigerian female students of Regina Pacis won.
Moreover, they also applied the robotics and coding insights in solving existential problem of fake drugs.
International Festival of Engineering, Sciences and Technology (I-FEST)
Four students from another Catholic school in Onitsha Archdiocese, St. John’s Science and Technical College, Alor, won the bronze medal in the just concluded International Festival of Engineering, Sciences and Technology (I-FEST) competition in Tunisia.
I-FEST, a nine-day-festival organized by the Tunisian Association for the future of Science and Technology (ATAST), is open for all students and supervisors, ages 14-24, as well as for parents and professors.
They were given this award for their brainchild known as Toroidal transformer, which according to them, was an improvement on other devices of electrical inverters and transformers already in the market.
Catholics in and from Nigeria express much joy for this good news, noting it is an even greater encouragement for the Catholic Church’s engagement in primary and secondary education in Nigeria.
Sources contributing to this article: Chukwuebuka Onuabuchi and Ononye VC
(Photo copyright of the young women: Chukwuebuka Onuabuchi; Photo copyright of the young men: Ononye VC)