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Trinity Cross designer dies
Wilhelmina McDowell Benjamin died last Thursday. She had been ailing with severe rheumatoid arthritis.
Days after celebrating her 85th birthday, the artist who designed the Trinity Cross passed away last week.
Benjamin was born in Montserrat on December 17, 1933, but came to Trinidad and Tobago at the age of three.
She made her mark on the country when, in 1969, the medal she designed years earlier, the Trinity Cross, would serve as the country’s highest honour for close to 30 years. The Trinity Cross was eventually replaced by the Order of the Republic of Trinidad and Tobago in 2008, after High Court Judge Peter Jamadar ruled two years before it was discriminatory against Muslims and Hindus due to the Christian symbol it represented.
Benjamin defended her design then, however, stating that she had not created the medal with religious imagery in mind. Despite her letters to the editor of various newspapers explaining such, the Trinity Cross was removed as the nation’s highest award.
Benjamin worked for many years at the Central Library and at the library in The University of the West Indies until her medical condition prevented her from continuing work. She remained an active member of the St Mary’s Anglican church up until her passing.
Source: Trinidad and Tobago Guardian