Dr Neva Alexander: Living her dream by fulfilling others
Dr Neva Helena Alexander, has come a far way from her humble beginnings to becoming an author, entrepreneur and educator.
Moving from house to house as a child was not easy for her, and her days as a youth are not something she has the fondest memories of.
"I lived in about 12 different homes before leaving Jamaica at age 11," she tells Outlook. Her mother was a hard-working woman who tried her best to make an honest living for her and her brother. While her brother stayed in one location, her mother often left her in the care of others and, while some were willing to assist, most were very unpleasant.
"I was staying with a teacher at Windward Road at one point. She was very caring and nice, but not everyone was like her. There were occasions when the money from my mother came a day late and the person would pack me up and put me outside," Alexander recalled.
Though her father was present in her life, she was unable to stay with him as he had remarried. Despite his new union, she continued to have a good relationship with him.
Overcoming the challenges she faced, Dr Alexander went on to pass her Common Entrance Examination for Holy Childhood High School. However, she did not attend as she went to New York to be reunited with her mother.
Alexander was happy to be closer to her mother, who was a domestic helper, and seeing what her mother was going through became motivation for her. "I went with her on a few jobs, and seeing some of the houses made me say to myself, 'I am going to work for this'," said Dr Alexander - and work hard she did.
She studied law at John Jay College for Criminal Justice. Unfortunately, this did not materialise into a career for her. "I was working closely with a judge for a case and the defendant allegedly had some mob ties and one day, on my way home, I was being followed, and it was a lawyer that was also working on the case who took notice. It was such a frightening experience, and I realised that this was not for me,"
Dr Alexander recalls to Outlook.
By this time, she was coming into her own with her passion for education and culture. She did her master's in social sciences at Long Island University and her doctoral studies
in educational leadership at Argosy
University. Education was her calling because as fate would have it, soon after she was offered a once in a lifetime opportunity- to teach leadership to women in Saudi Arabia.
"I remembered the call like it was yesterday. It was December 26 2009, I was in Macy's and I thought that my friends were playing a practical joke on me because I never applied. What happened was that they saw a copy of my resume online and chose me. I told them I would call back, expecting a friend to call and say it was a joke," explained Alexander.
Her 'friend' did not call back, and when she received the second call the following Wednesday, she jumped at the opportunity. She did an interview and was offered the job on the spot. Throughout the entire process every thing seem very surreal to Alexander.
"It finally hit me when the visa was in my passport. I was like, 'this is really happening'. I felt everything. I was anxious, excited and fearful because the culture was so different and you did not want to do anything to offend them," notes Alexander. This experience was one that she would never want to change.
For this new adventure, she was not able to carry a Bible and there were some men that still refused to do business with women- something she experienced firsthand when she wanted to check on her electric bill. She had to have one of her male colleagues deal with the matter for her. But she experienced so much kindness. She recalled going to the park with a colleague and being offered food by different families. Alexander even made note of the sign that were on some of the grocery stores that said, 'Please do not steal just ask.'
While many would consider the woman oppressed in these countries, Alexander has a different perspective. "If a woman needs something, she gets it. The women get what they want and the men drop what they are doing and follow them or do it. They get a lot of time to work on themselves because they are taken care of. In essence, the men's schedule is disrupted and not the other way around," she noted.
It was teaching the women that motivated Alexander to make two giant steps in her career- entrepreneurship and becoming an author. During her interacting with the women, they were not able to name one 'female leader' that they knew. She knew instantly that this was something she wanted to change. She knew that this was not only a problem in Saudi but in the world, and she wanted to motivate women to accomplishing their full potential. So she wrote a Females' Guide to Understanding Leadership. The irony was that men are the main consumers of Alexander's book.
She was already versed as a teacher, teaching psychology, entrepreneurship among other course at Universities which includes City University of New York where she still lectures in Sociology of Education online. While helping the women she knew that she wanted to start a program that will recruit persons for University.
National Educational Venture Alliance (NEVA) was born upon her return to the United States. NEVA is an organisation centred on educational services and exam test preparation. Two years later she expanded and brought an outlet home to the land of her birth.
"Jamaica is my roots," she said simply. She wanted to give everyone the opportunity that she had and NEVA was a perfect avenue to do so. They offer Test Prep Classes for SAT, LSAT, GMAT and GRE program. NEVA was launch in Jamaica in July.
Alexander has relocated to Jamaica to get the ball rolling as the main lecturer. However, children are exposed to other lecturers through online learning.
This is not the end if the story for her as she would like to have a second book directed at teenagers.
"There is so much left for me to do, I cannot tell you where exactly I will be in 10 years but I know I will be educating," she said.
When it comes to potential, your mind is your own limitation and Alexander proves this. Her advice, "Never give up. Never envy anyone for what they have because you never know what they went through or how hard they worked for it."