Fr ridge rpt oct 13print

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Report

The Ridge

October 2013

What does a Forest Ridge education look like in real life? You might ask yourself from time to time, “I wonder what my daughter will be doing 20 or 30 years from now?” I am sure some days you wonder what she will be doing next week, but in those necessary, quiet moments of parenthood, you surely wonder about her future and what it holds for her. You may hear from your daughter, oftentimes with great excitement, and sometime over and over again, what she is doing every day in her classes and activities. If you are lucky, she paints a wonderful picture for you of her day-to-day life at Forest Ridge. You hear us say with almost equal enthusiasm how we are intentionally educating Women As Global Leaders — young women who will shape our world tomorrow.

But what does that look like in real life? Let me tell you a short story about one of our alums who attributes her work today to her education at Forest Ridge. Cora Edmonds ’83 is a talented artist who has a gallery in Pioneer Square that features the work of some of today’s best artists. Cora is a gifted photographer who, in 2000, visited a remote village in Nepal. Over the course of her visit to a region with a single Cora Edmonds with her husband landing strip and no form of local transportation, where villagers scrambled to provide one meal a day for their families, Cora photographed a young boy in the hands-folded position that accompanies the ancient greeting Namaste. This translates, roughly, to “The Spirit within me honors the Spirit in you.” Namaste is what Cora’s now-famous photograph is named. That boy stayed in her mind to such an extent that a few years later she traveled back to Nepal to find him. Travelling from village to village, they were reunited and Cora then made

arrangements to pay for a boarding school education for him — the beginning of a better life for that boy and his family. The story doesn’t end there. Cora saw the girls in the village, many of whom she believed were potential victims of human trafficking, and realized she was called to do more. So, she set out to found a school for girls — providing an opportunity for its students to have a life that could change their world. Today her school enrolls about 50 students who are provided three hot meals a day and taught at a level that prepares them for a secondary- and college-level education and, most importantly, for a life and opportunities they never would have dreamed were possible. That’s what a Forest Ridge graduate does. It could have stopped with a beautiful picture and the education of one boy. It didn’t — she knew she had to do more. We will find ways to work with Cora. She presents us with an opportunity to rediscover our missionary roots, which were so instrumental in the ministry of Madeleine Sophie and Philippine Duchesne. Sisters were sent all over the world with a common goal — to educate girls and bring them to the Heart of Jesus, the core of a Sacred Heart education. Cora is not a Religious of the Sacred Heart; she is a Forest Ridge graduate, who embodies the goals the Women As Global Leaders program sets for our students today and is an inspiration for us all. Cora’s story can be your daughter’s story one day. Thanks for allowing us to be a part of her journey.

Namaste boy now, and then.

Mark Pierotti Head of School


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