Tsunami Relief from the Leadership Seminar at La Salle Academy in Providence RI, USA: For several months, Lasallian schools have been involved in a number of efforts to raise money for those affected by the tsunami which devastated areas in Sri Lanka, Thailand, India, Indonesia, and other countries in the Indian Ocean basin. One example of such efforts was recently described by Joseph R. LaPlante of the “The Providence Visitor.”
In the article he described what he saw as a most creative fundraising effort. Students attending the Leadership Seminar at La Salle Academy in Providence raised $6,555. They put into practice the lessons they learned from their teacher, Maryann Donohue-Lynch, in mobilizing virtually the entire student body.
They raised money by holding a “Dress Down Day” in exchange for a donation. (A Dress Down Day is when students are allowed to wear clothes other than their school uniform.) The money raised was donated to Catholic Relief Services for the direct use in tsunami relief efforts. Students also collected hundreds of pairs of sandals for victims in Sri Lanka where the Brothers operate schools.
Maryann Donohue-Lynch said that she was ambivalent about the project at first, because the school had already sponsored four “Dress Down Days” for other charities. She was uncertain whether the administration would permit another.
Mike Pereira, a Senior, recalled advice given by real estate magnate Donald Trump during an episode of the television show, “The Apprentice”: “If one ever has the opportunity to talk to the boss, take it, because it is personal and one can understand better what they expect and one can explain better what one wants to do.”
So, Mike asked for an appointment with the school’s assistant principal, Patricia Murphy, and she loved the idea.
“I was happy to do anything I could to make the students conscious of the world around them,” Ms. Murphy said. “Step up and do something, that’s what we are about around here.”
The students in the seminar wanted to teach a lesson, said Kayla Cruz, a Senior. “We wanted to show that just because one is younger, it doesn’t mean one can’t help.”
She recalled a class trip in November to the United Nations and the impact it had on the class. “We saw everything in the world that people are going through, and knew that doing this could help people out.”
In addition to the Dress Down Day, students created a Power Point presentation and hung information posters about the tsunami and the devastation that resulted.
(From an article by Joseph R. LaPlante, The Providence Visitor)
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