Wednesday, August 1, 2018

Let us remember: One book, one pen, one child, and one teacher can change the world. -Malala Yousafzai


 My voice shalt thou hear in the morning, O Lord; in the morning will I direct my prayer unto thee, and will look up. Psalm 5:3

When He went ashore, He saw a great crowd; and He had compassion for them and cured their sick. –Matthew 14:14

Compassion asks us to go where it hurts, to enter into places of pain, to share in brokenness, fear, confusion, and anguish. Compassion challenges us to cry out with those in misery, to mourn with those who are lonely, to weep with those in tears. ... Compassion means full immersion in the condition of being human. –Henri Nouwen

Here I was engaging in the most glorious action of all human and of all superhuman life – I was communing with the very God of the universe himself. He was showing me His very heart, even the angels can do no more than this. I forgot that my being choked down against the bottom, of an ocean like an octopus, and like an octopus in disposition, too, makes no difference at all. A prison or a dungeon makes no difference if one is with God. We preach and profess that as true, and it is true, but upon my word I do not see many people who seem to have experienced it. I am exactly like these Moro women and children. “Bapa,” they say, “may I have this?” If I say “Yes,” they forget to take it, but if I say “No;” they beg me for it. August 21, 1930, Letters by a Modern Mystic, Frank Laubach
I sure saw a great crowd yesterday. It was our school's “Meet and Greet.”

One of my jobs as Magnet Coordinator is “increasing diversity,” and I humbly confess, I rocked the numbers this year, if statistics mean anything, which they do, in The District. In 1974, black and Latino students sued TUSD, alleging intentional segregation and unconstitutional discrimination on the basis of race and national origin. For some 40 years after the parties settled in 1978, TUSD has operated subject to a federally enforced desegregation order.

So yesterday I stood at the front door and welcomed each and every family to a brand new school year. Because of fears of malintentioned intruders, our doors must remain locked during school hours, so I stood there for three hours, with my foot jammed in the threshold, and my hand and smile outstretched. And I am pretty sure, for the most part, that this group of ever-so-diverse folk would not be welcomed so much at the other schools where I have taught. Just guessing, for a wide number of reasons, once again, most of them related to those statistics that now hang heavy over all school administrators’ heads.

After the Meet and Greet, the staff all filed into the library to listen to the part time school psychologist and the part time school speech therapist and the part time school nurse and the part time new exceptional needs aide and me, the new on-top-of-everything-else Reading Seed Coordinator, to review our two loaves and five fishes in order to feed this restless, hungry crowd spilling out to the very edge of legal class size limits.  We can’t turn anyone away. And as I looked around the rather tattered room, I know that each one of these folks has chosen not to turn anyone away. Working in The District is a choice.

The saddest conversations I overheard yesterday were the lunchroom chats, as yesterday was the first day we were to all sign up for our health care benefits. Guys, you cannot believe how rough it is. For each and every person sitting around the table filled with leftover bean taco fixings, insurance for their children is one third to one half of their monthly take-home paycheck. These monthly paychecks are under $2000 a month. One of the exceptional needs support teachers teared up. Yesterday we celebrated her pregnancy, after five years of hopeful waiting, at last she and her husband are expecting a child in March. She has no idea how they will make it financially. So now it turned into a bittersweet celebration as we scooped up salsa with slightly stale chips.

Then we all headed back to the classrooms. The classrooms with no air conditioning. Most of the teachers have gone out and bought those plastic box fans, but it is still a hot and sweaty chore, stapling cheerful charts and alphabets onto the sixty-year-old walls and rearranging and rearranging chairs and tables. The fifth grade teachers sent me to the warehouse for twenty more chairs because all of the classes have thirty students registered, and a bunch of other chairs are busted, but no more are to be had. The nice warehouse man said he would be on the lookout. I gave the teachers chairs out of my room, a book closet, where I hold Professional Learning Communities, and I will figure something out by next week. Actually, no one could fit into my room anyways, because there are thirty-two boxes of old texts to be shipped out… from when Ronald Reagan was president. I am a big fan of declutter. Mostly what I did all day was tall-person chores, reaching up high to stack and clip and detangle.

But there were happiest conversations I had were the “I missed you Ms. Christy” ones as little arms wrapped themselves around my long legs. And I gotta say, each and every one of these kiddos was ready for the new year. New haircuts, fancy dresses, slicked up shoes. Ready to dream big.

And I think back to the longing in my heart, my weekly Tuesday prayer to “make a difference in this hurting world.”

This is what I have asked for, again and again, from Abba, father.

Here I am, engaging in the most glorious action of all human and of all superhuman life – I am communing with the very God of the universe himself. He is showing me His very heart, even the angels can do no more than this.

Truly I tell youwhatever you did for one of the least of these brothers and sisters of mine, you do for me. 





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