| After the earthquake, small houses help teach big lessons |
|
|
| By Kristen Hare, Beacon staff |
| Posted 9:49 am Tue., 2.2.10 |
|
The instructions are simple, the materials really just scrap. Take cardboard or matboard and cut tiny triangles, rectangles and squares. Assembly a little house. Color or paint it.
Then seal it, add a pin to the back and sell it. Easy enough.
It was, instead, a lesson in how something small, like a child or a tiny pin, can do and mean big things. At Mason School of Academic and Cultural Literacy in the Clifton Heights neighborhood, news of the earthquake in Haiti hit hard for students and faculty because one of the teacher's assistants, Marcelle Theodor, is Haitian. Theodor arrived at school the day after the earthquake, unaware how bad things really were. That same day, art teacher Karen Norman got an idea through an e-mail. Norman learned of Haitihouses.org , a project started by two Florida high school art teachers. With cardboard or matboard scraps, the project calls for the creation of tiny, bright house-shaped pins, made and then sold by students. The website recommends a number of organizations for which to donate that money. As Norman and her students got busy creating the pins, learning about the disaster in Haiti, the crumbled houses and what they could do, Theodor learned of the loss of life and homes in Haiti, too. It took her a week to contact her brothers and sisters in Port-Au-Prince, to find out their homes were all flattened, and that she'd lost some cousins. "And so we wanted to do something for her family," Norman says. Students at Mason made the pins, which Norman and another teacher took home to finish, and they showed Theodor that she wasn't alone.
Photos provided by the school A Red Cross representative accepts a check from the people at Mason school. Marcelle Theodor, a teacher's assistant from Haiti, is at far right. "It went deep into my heart," says Theodor, who says she didn't expect the show of support or devotion from the school. "And I felt that I have family that is comforting me over here." Having a teacher from Haiti, a direct link to understand the disaster, helped take the earthquake from the abstract, says principal Deborah Leto, to the personal. "It wasn't just some horror playing on TV." The pins were sold for $1 for students and at least $2 for teachers. Norman says students made about 300, and about $800 was raised from their sale. Students also paid $1 to wear hats to school, and teachers paid $5 to wear jeans that day. The total raised was $1,200. The school had hoped to send the money to Theodor's family, but her family said there was nothing to buy, and so instead the school gave the money to the Red Cross last week. They were told the organization would do their best to get it to Theodor's village. Norman, whom Leto says has the heart of a social worker, says Mason's student population is made up of kids with diverse backgrounds. About one-third are ESL students, some who are recent immigrants. Students come from Somalia, Iraq, Burundi and Myanmar, and there's a small Hispanic population of students as well. Some of the students know what it's like to come from a place where shelter isn't a sure thing, she says. But Leto thinks many of the kids, who were born here, don't have a direct connection with war or disaster. Instead, she thinks, they just get it. "Kids aren't as inattentive to the world as we think they are." The school doesn't have any plans for any more fundraisers, but the buzz around the house pins isn't over yet. On Monday, Norman says, a kindergartner who had scraped up 50 cents approached her. "And she said, Ms. Norman, can I get a pin?" Give a little Students and schools throughout the St. Louis Public School District have given to and participated in fundraisers for Haiti. Patrick Wallace, executive director of communications with SLPS, says the efforts so far have been individual to the schools, and in the next few weeks the district will organize district-wide efforts to continue supporting people in Haiti. Below is a list of what schools have done so far. And these are just schools in the city of St. Louis, with the story of generosity being played out throughout the area.
|
Brent Jones | St. Louis Beacon
This Saturday was the debut of a new show by The Improv Shop that will bring out of town improv teams to St. Louis to play for — and with — a local audience. The Road Show brought teams "Everybody Grok" and "Felt" from Chicago.
We talked to Eric Christensen, producer of the Road Show and member of local improv team "Ted Dangerous"; Katie Nunn, member of "Ted Dangerous" and improv coach; and Melanie Penn and Ranjan Khan, members of local teams "Melanj" and "Magic Ratio"; about the St. Louis improv scene and why it's important to welcome teams from other cities to perform here.
Emergency preparation still lagging in St. Louis
This two-part series looks at the region's preparation for a major earthquake, tornado, epidemic illness or other disaster. Read more about St. Louis and disasters.
Doug Williams says the proposed consent decree before the U.S. district court here may not be perfect, but it's the best way to move forward to stop the costs of inadquate waste- and storm-water systems.
M.W. Guzy fears his daughters' affection for trash TV might have been genetically inherited, as he finds himself drawn to the anybody-but-Mitt show, playing on a loop on cable "news' channels.
Miguel Dulick recounts a trans-Honduras tour that, again, reminded him of the power and joy of keeping siblings and parents connected.
In this week's Beacon Roundtable, Dick Weiss, Jason Rosenbaum, Jo Mannies, Robert Joiner and Dale Singer sit down to talk about the Missouri primary and redistricting, the controversy around…
General manager Nicole Hollway is back to the Beacon blog and she's trying to piece together what social media is and means to people.
Ben Finegold says recent moves by Lindenwood and Webster universities have positioned the region to be the chess capita of the United States.
@
Register to receive our daily email of new content. If you're already registered, email us at [email protected] with the subject line "subscribe".
The Beacon's nationally recognized Barroom Conversations program on race, class and other issues that divide will be held on Monday, Feb. 13, 2012, at 7:30 PM discussing Education and Class. RSVP on Facebook and invite your friends! We'll pick up where we left off at Six Row Brewing Co., 3690 Forest Park Avenue at Spring. We look forward to seeing you again!