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Woolman Semester Email Update
– July 12, 2009
Dear Friends,
I last sent out an update on April 6, and
I was planning to send the next one out on
April 25 or 26. I was going to write more about
the Peace Studies documentary we were producing
and tell you about our upcoming Food Intensive.
As most of you know, however, my father passed
away unexpectedly on April 22. I got the news
of his death before breakfast, and I was in
Philadelphia that night.
We buried my father the next day and held
a memorial service for him on that Sunday.
I flew back to Woolman the next day. I wanted
to return to this program where I had been
for the last three months, and I knew
that my father would have wanted me to do the
same. Losing a parent is extremely difficult,
and at Woolman, I found the support I needed.
I was able to continue my studies and process
my feelings. I apologize for not sending out
another update from Woolman, but I was going
through so much. In this update, I will discuss
the major parts of the semester that did not
make it into my previous updates and attempt
to give some closure to this life-changing
experience.
In my last update, I briefly described the
Peace Studies documentary we were creating.
I was in a group that was looking at how eating
locally benefits communities and the environment.
We shifted our focus a bit and produced an
exposé on the local food movement in
Nevada County (the county Woolman is in). We
interviewed the mayor of Nevada City, two farmers
in the area, someone who teaches local food
cooking classes, and the Garden Manager at
Sierra Friends Center. Other groups made documentaries
on the prison system in California, the disparities
in public education based on economic condition,
and the proposed reopening of a gold mine in
downtown Grass Valley, CA. Each documentary
was roughly ten minutes long, and we presented
them to the Woolman community on May 8.
The week after my father passed away was our
Food Intensive. This does not mean that we
spent the week eating as much food as possible.
Like our World Issues Intensive when we went
to Mexico to look at border politics, we traveled
throughout northern California looking at the
agriculture industry. This Intensive was for
both Environmental Science and Peace Studies.
We toured the packaging plant of Amy's Organics
and saw workers preparing meals on assembly
lines. We talked with someone at FarmLink –
an organization that connects young, aspiring
farmers with available land. In one morning,
we saw the UC Davis student-run organic garden,
the UC Davis feedlot, and the UC Davis biotechnology
lab – where research on genetic modification
is done. We were also going to witness a slaughter
at the UC Davis meat processing plant that
day, but they canceled on us. As with some
days in Mexico, we were hit with so much conflicting
information that day. It was hard to take it
all in. On our way back to Woolman from the
Bay Area / Davis, we stopped at Full Belly
Farm for a tour. The week culminated on Friday
night with a Locavore's Dinner at Woolman.
Local food was donated from many farms in the
area, and people came from the wider community
to hear from us about what we had learned during
the Food Intensive and to support the school.
The end of the semester quickly flew by after
that. We presented our Peace Studies documentaries
the next Friday, and graduation was the week
after that. The night before graduation was
called Bachelorette. Each student shared something
from the semester that was important or meaningful
to him/her. Some presented their Commodity
Chain Analyzes, water and population projects,
or artwork they had done while at Woolman.
Another student and I presented our Peace Studies
documentary.
The next day was graduation – a time for celebration,
reflection, and farewell. My mother and grandmother
came out from Philadelphia, and some family
friends came up from Berkeley. Each of us delivered
a speech. There was a song and a short meeting
for worship. Then it was over. I remember commenting
afterward at how odd it felt not to be a student
at the Woolman Semester anymore.
I want to close this update by asking you
to read my graduation speech. I can think of
no other way to summarize the experiences I
had while attending the Spring 2009 Woolman
Semester. I want to thank my teachers and fellow
students for facilitating my growth and learning.
I want to thank the Woolman Semester for being
a place where people can go to discover who
they really are. And, I want to thank you,
my friends and family, for supporting me in
this journey. So, with that, here is my speech.
Enjoy.
My Speech at the Woolman Semester
Graduation
May 23, 2009
I want to begin today with three images. The
first is of the main room of a college athletic
fieldhouse. Fluorescent lights are buzzing
in my ears and the bright green artificial
turf is a shock to my eyes. The second image
is of the hills of the Nova Scotia coastline.
Fog is settling over distant mountains as my
mother and I drive south. The third image is
of an enormous tree. The branches, once full
of flowers, now bear fruit.
So, what do these three images have in common?
The answer is this school. I learned about
the Woolman Semester at the 2006 Friends General
Conference Gathering in Tacoma, Washington.
Kathy Runyan, the Admissions Director, gave
a presentation at the high school business
meeting. The meeting took place, of course,
in a large athletic fieldhouse. Lights were
buzzing in our ears and the artificial turf
was uncomfortable to sit on. I clearly remember
Kathy's presentation. We learned of a school
in the Sierra Nevada foothills where students
study peace, justice, and sustainability. I
was in awe of the curriculum and what the school
had to offer, but I never expected that I would
attend. California is far away from my home
in Philadelphia.
After I first learned of the Woolman Semester,
I was reminded of it on several occasions and
dismissed it each time. Then, my mother and
I were visiting friends in Nova Scotia. As
we were leaving, one of our friends, who happens
to be here today, asked me if I had ever heard
of Woolman. I told him that I had. Knowing
that I was into peace and social justice, he
encouraged me to consider attending. That was
all it took. As my mother and I drove down
the Nova Scotia coastline, with the mountains
in the distance, I saw that attending the Woolman
Semester was a unique opportunity that I could
not turn down.
Kathy's presentation at the 2006 FGC Gathering
was when the seed was planted. The seed was
watered in Nova Scotia, and today it has become
a giant tree, bearing fruit and contributing
to the earth's ecosystems. But, as we learned
in Environmental Science this semester, agriculture
is not perfect. Fruit trees don't contain many
correction enzymes. When you plant a seed,
you can never know what the tree will look
like. You can never know how many flowers the
tree will have or how juicy the fruit will
be.
Well, I'm here today to tell you that my
tree flowered like crazy this semester. With
each piece of information we leaned, with each
research project, with each moment, new petals
grew. New petals grew as we formed community
on the Mendacino coast. New petals grew as
we saw the effects of globalization in Mexico.
New petals grew as we leaned what it means
to be white in America. And, new petals even
grew when, on a Wednesday morning one month
ago, I learned that my father had passed away.
New growth is new life, and the flowers on
my tree have grown into beautiful fruit, holding
the knowledge of the entire semester. Some
of the fruit will be picked by those who recognize
its value. Other fruit will be picked by those
who stumble upon it and taste it before knowing
what is inside. I will pick some of the fruit
when I need a remainder of this extraordinary
program. The rest will fall to the ground and
feed the earth where, on a summers evening
three years ago, my seed was planted. Thank
you.
My speech is also readable
here.
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