Guatemala Service “Plunge” Sparks Student Interest in Helping Others

March 21, 2012



Guatemala Service “Plunge” Sparks Student Interest in Helping Others

Fifteen St. John’s students spent their spring break in the lakeside village of San Lucas Tolimán, Guatemala. But they weren’t on some exotic vacation. They were working to improve people’s lives by participating in the University’s first Campus Ministry Plunge in that Central American nation.

“The kids learned a great deal not only about service, but about another culture,” said Kate Giancatarino, Resident Campus Minister for Vincentian Service at the Queens campus. “The experience also sparked their interest in participating in future service opportunities.”

Giancatarino and Melissa Gibilaro, Vincentian Service Coordinator and Resident Minister at the Staten Island campus, led the students on their week-long service trip. Spending each day at a different site, they painted a medical clinic, cleared rocks for a playground at a women’s center, pulled weeds at a coffee farm and helped build a family’s home.

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Each night, after dinner, the group gathered to reflect upon that day’s experiences. “Our discussions were very thought provoking,” said Sean Caltabiano, a junior at the Queens campus. “I don’t often open up to others easily, but hearing my fellow students express their feelings made it much easier for me to talk about how inspired I was by what we were doing.”

The villagers also were supportive, said Sean. “The other workers were so giving of themselves. They made us feel comfortable and welcome.”

The Campus Ministry Plunge Program holds service trips throughout the metropolitan area and at three international sites. The trips allow students to help those in need while reflecting on issues of poverty and injustice.

The Guatemala Plunge was held in partnership with the San Lucas Mission, led by Rev. Greg Schaffer. Founded by the Franciscan order in the 16th century, the Mission came under the jurisdiction of Rome in 1958. Its goal is to address poverty’s immediate effects on the native Maya population, as well as the underlying causes of their circumstances.

St. John’s connection to the San Lucas Mission began with the efforts of Josiah K. Mooney ’02C, ’03G, whose history of community service is extensive. He spent several years after graduation working with Fr. Schaffer at the Mission, and in 2011, he became the youngest person to receive the University’s St. Vincent de Paul Medal.

Fr. Schaffer, who is from Minnesota, has directed the San Lucas Mission since 1962. He has enhanced students’ learning experience by teaching them the history of the Mission and the struggles its people endured — especially during Guatemala’s civil war in the 1980s and 1990s.

“Father Gregory brought the community together,” said Julee Chavda, a senior at the Queens campus. “I learned a lot about Guatemala’s history and the importance of the San Lucas Mission.”