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- Tuesday, February 01, 2005
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- Students launch tsunami relief
efforts
- Grace Lutheran, Trinity High and Lincoln
Grade school get creative in their efforts to aid
tsunami survivors.
- By BILL DWYER
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- River Forest may be far removed from the disasters and
tragedies that befall other parts of the world. But that distance
apparently hasn't diminished many young people's capacity for
empathy. Throughout River Forest the last week, students were busy
raising money to assist with the relief efforts in the wake of the
Dec. 26 South East Asia tsunami.
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- At Grace Lutheran School, Lincoln School, and Trinity High
School, the efforts were intense and heartfelt-everything from a
large work of art, to funny hats. At the heart of it all was a
profound desire to help others.
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- "We're always telling [our students] to use their
talent to make the world a better place," said Trinity High School
art teacher Viki Siliunas. Over the past three weeks, over 20
Trinity students took that lesson to heart, using their artistic
and organizational talents to do just that. So far those efforts
have paid off at Trinity to the tune of $1,400, and two of the
students involved, Lauren Matthews of Oak Park and Emily Lappe of
River Forest, hope to raise even more.
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- Trinity administrators decided three weeks ago to raise money
for a Sri Lanken orphanage run by a Dominican priest who once
lived at a north shore church rectory while a student at Loyola
University. According to press accounts, the Rev. Paul
Satkunanayagam was in a room overlooking the sea with the
children, saying Mass, when the tsunami hit. Satkunanayagam saw
the huge wave of water coming and got 300 children to higher
ground, but the orphanage was completely destroyed.
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- Aware that "art raises awareness," Siliunas had the
inspiration to design and execute a mural reflecting scenes from
the Tsunami on an 8-foot-high by 16-foot-long section of wall in a
school hallway.
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- While over a dozen Trinity art students gave up their lunch
hours and after-school time for two weeks, other students like
Matthews and Lappe stepped up. They and other members of the
school's Amnesty International chapter made the rounds of the
lunchroom and hallways, soliciting donations.
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- "It seemed like people were being very generous, more than
usual," said Matthews.
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- Siliunas first produced a collage sketch of scenes from the
many photographic images taken of the events in the wake of the
tragedy. A grid pattern was then sketched out, and the images
sketched out on the wall in Gesso. The drawing was then filled in
with charcoal, with some of the red gesso still visible. The
effect is both powerful and stark, just like the subject matter,
which shows curling waves breaking on either side behind a group
of individuals, many reaching out in fear and suffering. Wrapping
around all of the people in the mural are enormous arms, as though
the rest of the world were trying to envelop and comfort
them.
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- Everyone involved in the project, artists and solicitors
alike, agreed that all the work had been worth it.
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- "We felt really good about it," said Lappe, echoing her
classmates' shared belief that they all have been involved in
something special.
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- Something special that they all also agree isn't finished
yet.
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- "We can't stop here," said Matthews of the fundraising effort.
"We have to keep going."
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- Those wishing to donate to the Trinity Tsunami Mural fund can
contact Mary Tansey at 771-8383.
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- Hat privileges for sale
- Over at Lincoln School, 511 Park Ave., funny hats were the
order of the day on Thursday. For a one-dollar donation, each
student was allowed to wear whatever sort of creative chapeau they
desired, and for many it got quite creative. Lincoln's student
body moved through the school day in everything from homemade
designs featuring toilet paper rolls, to tops sporting sea
anemones and various flowers, to plain old White Sox caps.
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- Everyone, school faculty included, appeared to be enjoying the
one-day opportunity for sartorial distinctiveness.
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- Besides a good-sized pile of dollar bills on her desk Thursday
afternoon, Lincoln School secretary Joan Figatner also had to
contend with a dozen plastic milk cartons full of coins being
lugged into the school office. The coins had been collected in
each classroom over the past two weeks. As Frank Franco helped
Lincoln Principal Pamela Hyde load the heavy containers into
plastic milk crates set on a hand truck, he had a belated
brainstorm.
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- "We should have had a contest to guess how much all these
coins weigh," said Franco. "Thank God for the two wheeler," said
Hyde, looking at the mass of coins that easily weighed 150 pounds.
When the counting was concluded at Corus Bank later, all that
poundage translated to $3,047.95.
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- Hyde said she was delighted with the results of the
process-both the money raised and the positive effect on her kids.
Those students, she said, had a strong sense of the gravity of the
situation over in South East Asia.
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- "It was a good way to give them a sense of power," said
Hyde-as well as allowing some fun.
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- "They were real excited to wear their hats," she added with a
smile.
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- As with Trinity, Hyde said her students want to continue their
efforts.
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- "Some kids have come to me to talk about other ideas (for
fundraising)," she said.
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- The day before at Grace Lutheran, students turned over $300
they collected from Wednesday Chapel donations to the Women of
Grace Club. According to organization President Harriet Roberts,
that money paid for the shipping of some 250 relief kits put
together by her organization. The effort, organized by members
Marj Koenig and Ginger Folgers, put together 100 school, 100
health and 50 layette (baby) kits that included many items people
in more blessed areas of the world take for granted, but which are
desperately needed by Tsunami survivors. The kits, containing
everything from pencils and paper, to soap and towels to diapers
and baby blankets, were then shipped to Lutheran World Relief,
where they were then shipped overseas.
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- Roberts said part of the intent was to involve the entire
Grace Lutheran church and school communities in the effort.
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- "Everyone had a little part to play," she said.
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- Content © 2005 Wednesday Journal Inc.