Students Honor Founders With Service

February 01, 2010

Twenty five students provided service to St. John the Baptist Parish in Brooklyn on Saturday, January 30 in honor of St. Vincent and St. Louise.  To begin their day of service, the students gathered in the St. Thomas More Church for reflection and prayer.  The students bonded together and braved the elements in order to assist the parish in cleaning out offices. 

Florine Smolinski, sophomore biology major states, “The best part of the day was when we all decided to work together and created an assembly line to take everything down the stairs.” The service included moving furniture, dismantling the furniture for trash, and destroying old documents.  The students organized themselves in a way that would truly have made St. Vincent proud – they formed assembly lines and worked together to carry the furniture and items down four flights of stairs. 

Students ended their service with reflection and discussion about their experiences.  Their dedication and concern for the community were evident in the thoughts they shared.  Claire Cilento, freshman economics major shared, “The day was made particularly memorable for me when I learned that this site was the site of the former St. John’s University.  Now, not only were we helping a fellow Catholic community, we were helping what used to be the location of our University family.”

Volunteers wanted to make sure that the pieces thrown out were not going to be useful to anyone in need.  One student even carried home a box of children’s books to bring them to the Oncology unit at Long Island Jewish Hospital.  The students truly came to realize the Founder’s Week theme, “Vincentian Legacy and Destiny: Changing the World with Charity and Justice” by their acts of charity and carrying on the Vincentian legacy.  Christina Walters, Senior Psychology Major and Ozanam Scholar sums it up by saying, “This service challenged us to do a hard task for the sake of people that will benefit from it not that day or the day after but farther in the future.  Being less familiar with this type of service, I stepped out of my comfort zone to truly appreciate that it is not making myself feel good that counts, it is about serving those who are in need, even if that service is challenging.”