Wed | Sep 24, 2025

Centenarian credits faith in God for long life

Published:Sunday | January 26, 2025 | 12:06 AM
St Thomas centenarian, Eliza Cooper, lifts her hands in reverence as she sings the hymn, ‘Near the Cross’, with members of the Sunshine Senior Citizens Club who paid her a visit on January 15, at her Beckford Town home.
St Thomas centenarian, Eliza Cooper, lifts her hands in reverence as she sings the hymn, ‘Near the Cross’, with members of the Sunshine Senior Citizens Club who paid her a visit on January 15, at her Beckford Town home.
Centenarian Eliza Cooper is photographed with her caregiver, Chanice Manhertz, during a visit by the Sunshine Senior Citizens Club at her home in Beckford Town, St Thomas, on January 15.
Centenarian Eliza Cooper is photographed with her caregiver, Chanice Manhertz, during a visit by the Sunshine Senior Citizens Club at her home in Beckford Town, St Thomas, on January 15.
Centenarian Eliza Cooper (seated), receives a visit from the Sunshine Senior Citizens Club at her home in Beckford Town, St Thomas, on January 15. The members of the club are (from left) President Marlene McPherson; Vice President Aneta Simpson; member Mar
Centenarian Eliza Cooper (seated), receives a visit from the Sunshine Senior Citizens Club at her home in Beckford Town, St Thomas, on January 15. The members of the club are (from left) President Marlene McPherson; Vice President Aneta Simpson; member Marvaline Reid; Secretary/Treasurer Petrel Adams; and Past Executive President Dotlene Irving.
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AT 102 years old, St Thomas centenarian, Eliza Cooper, has a mind as sharp as a razor, and will mention in any conversation that it has been her faith in God that has helped her to sustain long life.

The devout Christian, born on June 3, 1922, was visited by the Lyssons-based Sunshine Senior Citizens Club at her cosy home, perched in the cool hills of Beckford Town, St Thomas, on January 15.

“God bless mi, mi join mi church. I’m in the Methodist Church right now,” she says, noting also that she still partakes in communion.

Cooper has been baptised since age nine and was a member of the Baptist church before becoming a Methodist. With her unwavering faith in God, she expresses concern that younger generations are not taking the Church seriously and do not fear God, bemoaning that the Church “gone right down now”.

Still, the St Thomas resident is grateful for the life she has lived and her enduring mental strength. She easily lists the names of her seven children, her many grandchildren and countless great-grandchildren.

When asked about her diet and to list some of the foods she enjoys eating, she says quite sharply, “Everything!”, while making the point that she only wants the assurance that the food is “cooked good”.

Though her eyesight is now gone, she points out that she has “lost no screws” and her mind remains intact.

. Cooper was one of two seniors visited by the Sunshine Senior Citizens Club.

President, Marlene McPherson, says these visits are intended to lift the spirits of seniors within the reach of the club.

“Miss Cooper is one of our shut-ins and we did not get to go to her during the Christmas season because we went to other persons, and we know she is properly taken care of, so we delayed until now. [This visit is] to let her know that we still remember her because she always asks us to come back and visit,” McPherson said.

The club presented Cooper with gifts, lifted her up in prayer and helped her sing one of her favourite hymns, Near the Cross.

McPherson, emphasising the importance of the visit, explains, “When you reach a certain age, quite a number of your friends and relatives die. [We want] to let them feel that they still belong and also to let her know that we are here for her.”

On Cooper’s Christian faith, McPherson summarised: “When you know the Lord and you have been in a relationship with him, the Lord has a way of sustaining you, not only physically but spiritually. The spiritual and the physical work together and we see that in her life.”

The Sunshine Senior Citizens Club is more than 20 years old and is part of an islandwide network of clubs catering to the nation’s seniors. These clubs are governed by the Ministry of Labour and Social Security.