Club’s collection shows they care
- Share via
Collecting school supplies for hurricane victims and conducting
canned food drives for the less fortunate are just some of the ways
the John Burroughs High School Junior Civitan Club has found to make
a positive impact in the lives others -- and gain a feeling of
happiness and satisfaction in their own.
The group, which is currently over 100 members strong, is working
on a project to collect and distribute backpacks filled with school
supplies to children who have been displaced by Hurricane Katrina.
The Club’s president, 16-year-old junior Jessica Yount, said
working on the project helped her feel connected to those who
experienced the disaster, despite distance.
“When I hear about things across the country, it’s hard to know
what it’s like for those people,” Jessica said. “But to see them and
to know we’re helping those people out is a great feeling.”
Project and Membership Director Stella Nguyen, 17, was also glad
participating in the Junior Civitan Club gave her a chance to help
out those affected by the hurricane.
“I’m happy we’re involved,” Stella said. “I watch the news every
day and it breaks my heart how they possessed so much one minute and
that they could lose everything in the next.”
Every month the club focuses on at least one school project and
one community project.
On Oct. 29 the group will hold a haunted house in the school’s
gymnasium to kick off their “Can-do” canned food drive campaign,
where those wishing to gain admittance can bring either a canned food
item or a $5 donation.
“We’ll be taking the gym and turning it into two haunted houses,
one for younger kids so we don’t scare the bejesus out them and one
for older kids,” Jessica said.
The event will also include face painting and candy distribution.
The group also recently helped out the local chapter of Families
of SMA with their Walk-n-Roll event on Sept. 18, designed to help
raise money and awareness about the childhood genetic disease spinal
muscular atrophy.
“It was an honor for me that the people running it asked us to
help, and it was really fun actually,” Stella said. “I love being
around kids, and being able to help them makes me feel good.”
Junior Civitan Members put up posters and signs, handed out
T-shirts and supervised to make sure those participating in the event
were safe.
The club is a part of Civitan International, a public service
organization that emphasizes helping people with developmental
disabilities.
Members pay initiation fees and membership dues, the bulk of which
goes to fund brain research at the Civitan International Research
Center in Birmingham, Ala.
“I saw the cause it made me so happy to be working for it,” Stella
said of the club’s connection to the research center.
The club’s advisor, English teacher Lauren Marcos, said in
addition to helping the community, the students who participate in it
build on their own characters.
“It gives them a sense of leadership,” Marcos said. “It really
helps them empathize with people who are not as well off as they are
and it gives them a buy into their community.”
Students also say what they gain from participating in the club’s
service projects is simple emotional satisfaction.
“Sometimes you think about how hard it is, and how much work it
is,” Jessica said.
“But the warm and fuzzy feeling you get when you know you’re
helping someone you haven’t even met, but they’re so thankful for
everything you’re giving them -- that makes it totally worth it,” she
added.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.