Promoting service
June Casagrande
A uniform hush fell over all 1,700 high school students as the
news sank in: 25% of all Afghanistan children won’t live to see age
5.
Masterfully drawing such contrasts between the peace and privilege
of Newport Beach life and the rest of the world, Peace Corps Director
Gaddi Vasquez delivered a powerful message at Corona del Mar High
School’s third annual Community Service Day. The showcase of
volunteer opportunities brought representatives of nearly two dozen
community and social service agencies to the school, whose graduating
class last year dedicated more than 20,000 hours of community
service.
“The commitment to the community that we make as a school is
something we’re really proud of,” Principal Sharon Fry told the
students, school district dignitaries and volunteer agency
representatives assembled in the gymnasium.
Building on Fry’s comments, keynote speaker Vasquez called on
students to do even more to help people whose lives are very
different from their own. Himself an Orange County native, Vasquez
proudly recited the area’s blessings: excellent schools, good health
care, a high standard of living with many comforts and luxuries.
“Most people in the world go to sleep hungry. Would we accept that
in Orange County?” Vasquez asked. “We need to help those who are
hungry and impoverished and ailing.”
Vasquez, a former Orange County supervisor, emphasized that there
are many ways a student can make a difference in their own
communities or in places abroad. And now, he said, it’s more
important than ever.
“Sept. 11 changed everything. It changed how we live as Americans.
It changed how the world views us.”
He recounted a story from his recent visit to Morocco, where he
met a young man interested to know more about America. At one point,
the young man noted that Vasquez, a son of Latino immigrants, didn’t
look American.
“That tells me that we have to do a better job of showing the
world what America’s all about. The world needs to know that
Americans come in all colors and races,” he said.
The Peace Corps was begun in 1961 by President John F. Kennedy
with that goal in mind: promoting peace and freedom and friendship
throughout the world, Vasquez noted. The corps’ 7,000 volunteers,
ages 19 to 82, serve two-year tours for no pay in some of the most
impoverished countries in the world.
“All the agencies you see here today have people who believe in
what they do,” he told the rapt audience. “You need to be a part of
that process.”
* JUNE CASAGRANDE covers Newport Beach and John Wayne Airport.
She may be reached at (949) 574-4232 or by e-mail at
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