Jan. 26, 2012 issue 14 Loquitur

Page 8

Features

8 | The Loquitur

Thursday, Jan 26, 2012

Seeking Change Locally BY LAURA HANCQ Editor-in-Chief Service immersion trips can take you around the world or across a bridge. For the three Cabrini faculty members who traveled to the Romero Center in Camden, N.J. over the winter break to participate in the Urban Challenge Retreat, they can certainly attest to the fact that you do not need to go abroad to make an impact. Dr. Caroline Nielsen, assistant professor of biology and environmental science, Dr. Maria Elena Hallion, associate professor of exercise science and health promotion and Courtney Smith, assistant professor of history and political science, chose the journey over the Delaware River to Camden for their Mission Integration Immersion Trip as part of the President’s Initiative. Faculty who are part of the initiative got to choose between Camden, New Orleans and Guatemala. For Nielsen, the choice to go local was an easy one; it was about living up to her own teachings. Nielsen teaches an Engagements with the Common Good course about sustainable communities which has a focus concentrated in local purchases and the importance of valuing and protecting one’s own community. She, like her fellow retreaters, found they could make an impact very close to home. All three of the professors found truth in the words and theories of Vince Gallagher, author of “The Violence of Globalization”, who came to speak at the Romero Center. He believes there are many ways people can make a difference in a world today. “It’s just like our speaker said, in a world where so

many people are suffering, there are so many ways to help,” Nielsen said. “This experience reminds us there are so many opportunities to make things better.” Nielsen left feeling that any positive act that she did there helped make it a better place. Hallion agreed with this sentiment, especially through her positive memories of the incredible staff and volunteers she met. She credits them as having the most impact on her. “I met such wonderful people, the staff at the Romero Center and the volunteers and staff we met at the places we went, it felt great to know that I could make their day different or better because I was there,” Hallion said. The retreat consisted of visiting the Martin Luther King Jr. Child Development Center and the New Visions Homeless Day Shelter. At the MLK Jr. Center, the teachers enjoyed time with the children while helping with the hot lunch and snack. The children are between 2-5 years old and their parents have to be working or in school as well as have financial need. Smith cites the center as being her most memorable experience because it reminded her of where her mother used to work. At New Visions, Nielsen, Hallion and Smith sorted and packed toiletry bags and helped make and serve lunch. They then went back that night from 9-10:30 to make dinner for those visiting the shelter that night. Both Nielsen and Hallion recalled that aspect of the retreat as being incredibly memorable because of the people they met. They recalled a young woman named Marie, a volunteer cook, who is a law student but still finds time to serve. “Marie really reminded us about priorities,” Nielsen said. “She’s an example of how we say we are too busy to help but she is a law student and still finds time to help.”

Part of the Urban Challenge retreat includes a day where the participants live on $3 a day for food. Each person gets a dollar for each meal and then the group has to go food shopping to feed their makeshift family. In this case, the professors had $9 to eat for the day. The group will go down in the history of the Romero Center as being the only one to ever buy tea bags. “It’s one thing to see it, it’s another to experience it,” Nielsen said. “It’s so easy to say others should do things differently but until you live it, you don’t realize how hard it is.” Smith was fascinated by how we think about the price of food and how little $3 a day is, especially when it comes to feeding a family. It is without doubt that the participants will not take fruits, vegetables and good meat for granted again. Having completed the retreat, Nielsen is very focused on finding a way for Cabrini students to participate and to change their perception of the nearby city. “Urban Challenge is not an opportunity for you to change Camden but for Camden to change you,” Nielsen said.

Living in Solidarity

LCH23CABRINI.EDU

Imm Expe

Cabrini faculty a during immersi Ecuador

BY CHELBI MIMS Features Editor Each year during the winter holiday, students and faculty travel to Duran, Ecuador for the Rostro de Cristo Experience. The purpose of the trip is to live in solidarity with the people of Ecuador in a faith- based-community. This year, nine students and two staff members went on the trip, which lasted seven days. The students did not have to pay to go on the trip but participated in raising money by soliciting donations and organizing fundraisers and an auction. The attendees of the trip lived off of $2 dollars a day and learned simple options for food. They also developed relationships with the people of Ecuador by living and operating in their day-to-day life and participating in their community organizations. They built relationships with the students through the after-school program by helping them with their homework. Reflections were held nightly to discuss the events of the day and how it affected each person. Throughout the spring semester the group will have gatherings to reflect and debrief about the trip. “A lot of what we did was going around and meeting with specific people within the neighborhood and talking with them for a hour and learning their story and how they got to where they were,” Felicia Neuber, admissions counselor, said. “Since it was the rainy season everything was muddy and it was uplifting to see kids running around with no shoes but still so happy.” Before the trip in early January, everyone attending was prepped on what they would be doing while in Ecuador and the living environments. They met once a month and broke off into groups to develop a packing

list, information on what to expect and the culture and foundation of Ecuador. “I did not really have initial expectations. I was told we were going to live in solidarity with our neighbors but I didn’t know the actual agenda. I was kind of nervous and I had no idea that I would meet people that inspire me and change my life forever,” Hannah Wheat, junior social work major, said. The nine students and faculty lived in a “developed” neighborhood, which consisted of paved streets and cinder block homes but by the end of the week they saw cane homes and dirt roads. They also viewed the city of Guayaquil, which is a wealthy neighboring town. “It was a really intense experience! It made us all really think about the way we live our lives in comparison to the average life of an Ecuadorian. Every person we met though was immensely proud of who they were and what they had, which was really refreshing,” Cathy Matta, junior mathematics major, said. Students and faculty left the trip with a new view of life, family and friends. “Ecuador was the greatest experience I have ever had. This was the most eye opening trip I had and I wish more people could see what the 11 of us saw on this trip,” Jaclyn Rescigna, junior social work major, said. “I will always remember the people we met and the stories I heard from the children.”

CAM376CABRINI.EDU

ALL PHOTOS SUBMITTED BY CAMPUS MINISTRY

Top: The group went to a neighborhood market and bought goods from natives of Ecuador. Danielle Alio purches belts from a man they met in their village. Bottom: Father Carl plays with children after doing homework and arts and crafts.


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