1,600 Volunteers Participate Around the World in Eighth Annual Service Day

September 28, 2009

St. John’s University held its eighth-annual University Service Day on Saturday, September 26, with over 1,600 students, faculty, administrators, staff and alumni participating, including those studying abroad in Dublin, Ireland, Salamanca, Spain, Rome, Italy and Paris, France. 

Queens Photo Gallery
Staten Island Photo Gallery
Manhattan Photo Gallery
Oakdale Photo Gallery
Rome Photo Gallery
Salamanca Photo Gallery
Paris Photo Gallery
Alumni Photo Gallery

In keeping with its Vincentian mission of helping those in need, St. John’s holds Service Day each year in honor of the feast day of St. Vincent de Paul, founder of the Congregation of the Mission. 

St. John’s University alumni were also called back to their alma mater to help make a difference on this special day, with four big-city American chapters (Atlanta, Miami, Orange County, CA and Washington, D.C.) organizing events.

The day began with a morning prayer service before volunteers went out to their designated service locations.  Activities this year included park clean-ups, visits to nursing homes and hospitals, fundraisers, and other community assistance projects. 

Rev. Patrick J. Griffin, C.M., Executive Vice President for Mission and Branch Campuses, said that the 350th anniversary of the deaths of Saints Vincent de Paul and Louise de Marillac provides a unique opportunity to showcase St. John’s commitment to service.

“Gathering together in prayer and service is the best way in which we can remember these heroes of the Vincentian mission,” Rev. Griffin, C.M. said.  “We as a St. John’s community throughout New York and in Rome, Paris, Dublin, and Salamanca, symbolize our commitment by real service to real people.”

In Manhattan, volunteers worked the breakfast and lunch shifts at a local soup kitchen, while participants from the Oakdale Campus, who have been collecting books for those ages 5-8 years old, delivered the books to the Little Flower Children and Family Services of New York.

At Cunningham Park in Queens, members of the University’s Honors Program volunteered at the Fall Invitational for the Special Olympics of New York, rallying for the athletes during a competitive softball game and other sporting events. 

The School of Education sponsored the “Tour de St. John’s,” where bicyclists road a 25-30 mile route from the Queens campus to Fort Totten Park in Bayside, and back, to support St. John’s Bread & Life, Inc.  And in Brooklyn, at St. John Baptist School on Lewis Avenue, volunteers painted and cleaned classrooms for students, and organized the library.

The School of Pharmacy participated in “Project Immunization,” where forty faculty members and students were dispersed to four libraries in Queens, Brooklyn, Manhattan and on Long Island, to educate the public on influenza and H1N1 immunizations.

Other groups hosted parties and clinics for children or took part in the “Friends of the Poor” walk with an aim to combat hunger and homelessness.

In Staten Island, over 250 participants headed out to give back in various communities throughout the island.  Five nursing homes were visited where volunteers read with patients and worked on arts and crafts projects together; food pantries and local parishes were visited where the shelves were stocked, meals were served and other cleaning and maintenance projects were performed.  Several participants visited  Lemon Creek Park and Woodland Cemetery for landscaping and beautifying projects, while at Hospitality House, volunteers entertained young children with coloring projects and games and also tackled painting and other projects.   

In Dublin, St. John’s students began their day attending Mass at All Hallows Chapel and having a breakfast with guest speaker Father Jim McCormack.  The students also served food in a soup kitchen and assisted in the operation of a wet hostel. Later that evening, the students discussed their Service Day experience over a traditional Irish supper.

In Salamanca, St. John’s students were at a food bank cleaning crates of jam before they were to be distributed to the needy. They later joined together for reflection.  In Rome, undergraduate students spent the day visiting with the elderly, while graduate students helped service food in a soup kitchen.

Students in Paris helped also worked in a soup kitchen and in the operation of a hostel. Others participated in “Midnight Run Paris,” where students prepared dinner bags and distributed them to the homeless throughout the city. The day ended with an on-campus reflection.

In Washington D.C., alumni and members of the University’s Office of Alumni Relations, cleaned up and worked on maintenance projects at an elementary school for disadvantaged children, while across the country in Orange County and Los Angeles, members of those alumni chapters sorted clothing and shoes for distribution to the needy.  In the South, the Miami chapter volunteered in soup kitchens, nursing homes and schools and the Atlanta chapter donated art items to a school that lost its art program due to budget cuts. 

Interested media members should contact Elizabeth Reilly, Assistant Director of Media Relations at St. John’s, by calling (718) 990-5789, or by e-mail to reillye@stjohns.edu