“It’s a small world.” This is something we say when in an unexpected place we meet or hear about someone we know. I remember voicing that very sentiment in London several years ago when my husband and I spotted a display of peanuts from the Williamsburg Peanut Shop in Harrods Department Store. Then there was the time I ran into a family from my music school in Williamsburg during a trip to the Bahamas. It was unexpected, and it felt like the earth was much smaller than its 25,000-mile circumference. Today, with the technology to access people and news across the globe, the world seems small, indeed.
I will never forget the moment during junior high school when I heard
about the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. It was a chilly
November day in 1963 when my principal, his voice shaking, announced
it over the intercom. At the age of thirteen, I felt like life as I
knew it was ending. Kennedy’s presidency had brought hope and
optimism to our country, and now he was gone. The future was
uncertain, and all US citizens, regardless of party affiliation,
joined in mourning tinged with fear. We didn’t have the internet
then, but we stayed glued to our TV sets for days.
I remember clearly the live television broadcast of Good Morning
America that I was watching September 11, 2001 as I dressed for
work. The image of one plane, then another, crashing into New York’s
Twin Towers was surreal and paralyzing. Even the anchor, Charles
Gibson, was too stunned to speak for a moment. The earth stopped, seeming to shrink in size as countries around the world weighed in on
this unspeakable tragedy.
We are in the midst of another such world-shrinking event, one we
will remember for the rest of our lives. My high school students, who
already have so much on their plates with schoolwork, exams, college
prep, athletics, and social issues must add concern about whether
they or a loved one will contract the virus. They are feeling like I
did in 1963: worried, fearful, and wondering if life will ever return
to normal. Their school administrators and teachers are doing
everything possible to ease their minds and accommodate their
learning until they can return to campus, but it’s a challenging
time of uncertainty, especially with wide access to media coverage.
So, how do we cope amid a pandemic? Last Friday, our principal called
an assembly to announce that the school would be closed for at least
two weeks. The students sat very still and quiet. As I glanced about
the auditorium, I observed tension in their body language and faces. It was like they were afraid to look at each
other, afraid or unable to react. That Friday was supposed to be
opening night for their musical, 42nd
Street. The students had worked tirelessly every day after school
since January, and now their performance was postponed until further
notice. Other students learned that all athletic activities were
suspended, including a tournament, and my All-State Chorus delegates
soon heard that their event would not take place. Many students began to weep silently in disappointment.
Amid their dismay, the most important statement by our principal may
not have sunk in, but it stood out to me. She said, “Remember, we
are people of faith.”
Ours is a Catholic school founded by The Sisters of Mercy. We start and end every day with prayer; we hold monthly Masses; at each level, the
students are required to take a theology class; and every student must
accumulate service hours. Mercy Core Values underscore our curricula.
At the Upper School where I teach, our students are typical high
school kids with all the typical high school behaviors. There are
cliques; there is boundary testing; there are negative attitudes and
inappropriate comments. Some get into trouble and receive demerits or
attend Saturday detention; some earn poor grades and must be placed
on academic support, which might include dropping extracurricular
activities. They are normal American teenagers. The difference is not
in the students we serve, but in the learning environment we provide.
As a Mercy School, our faith education and service to the community,
both local and global, are at the forefront of everything we teach.
This faith-based education is evident in the way we handle issues and
relate to each other. That’s what the principal meant by “We are
people of faith.” She was saying that people of faith in God don’t
need to panic or live in fear, not because we are exempt from disease
or suffering, not because we’re better than people without faith,
but because we have assurance that God walks with us through all of
life’s ups and downs, even a pandemic, and sustains us with His
unconditional love. We recognize that God is sovereign.
Our students may not yet be mature enough in their faith to believe
that they can cast all their cares on God, but we, the faculty and
administrators, are committed to modeling mature, merciful faith and
unconditional love for them and each other. With God’s help, we
will get through even this together as "people of faith."
Cindy L. Freeman is
the author of numerous award-winning short stories and three
published novels: Unrevealed, The
Dark Room and
I Want to Go Home.
Website: www.cindylfreeman.com;
Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/cindy.l.freeman.9.
Her books are available from amazon.com or hightidepublications.com
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