Southwest students work to build school half a world away
Monday, February 20, 2006
Lincoln Journal Star
By Matthew Hansen
A month-long volunteer trip last summer prompted Alyssa and Alex Martin to help the world’s poor, even after they returned to Lincoln.
The Nebraska teenager massaged the elderly Indian woman’s shoulders and back, trying to ease the pain of tuberculosis.
Then they sat in silence, separated by language, age, culture and money, connected only by their interlocked hands.
The old woman they called Mary then took the Lincoln Southwest senior’s head in her hands.
She looked her straight in the eye and made the sign of the cross.
“I realized she was blessing me,” Alyssa Martin said. “I realized right then that maybe it doesn’t take a whole lot to make a difference.”
That experience and others during a month-long volunteer trip to India this summer prompted Martin and her younger sister Alex to continue helping the world’s poor even after they returned to Lincoln.
They helped convince the school’s National Honor Society to raise money for the most unique of senior gifts: A new school in Sierra Leone, a war-torn African nation where two out of every three people live in poverty.
The group’s goal is to raise $5,500 by the end of the year, enough money to build the school, and then rely on future Southwest senior classes to raise more money for things like teachers, books and upkeep.
“We were just thinking, ‘what a great gift,’” Martin said. “We can give children in another country an education.”
The sisters, whose mother is Indian, decided to take the month-long journey to Calcutta, India, partly to learn about their heritage and partly to help others through a group run by the North American charity, “Free The Children.”
Alyssa volunteered in a center for the elderly. Alex worked with severely deformed children. Both centers were started by Mother Teresa. A little of her giving spirit rubbed off on the Martin sisters.
“It’s really easy to be removed (in Nebraska). Now we’ve seen the disparity between the United States and India and that inspired us,” Alyssa said.
After returning to Nebraska in August, the sisters started convincing friends and classmates that they should do something to help students in another country.
About 20 Southwest students in National Honor Society eventually pitched in, said Alyssa, who, along with Leena Pahdye, is the society’s co-president.
They have sought out corporate donations by walking into area businesses and telling them about the project.
Businesses like First National Bank, the Nebraska Heart Hospital and Williamson Honda have already contributed, she said.
At Southwest, they’ve made what Alyssa calls “shock statements” and placed them around the schools.
One such statement: Three billion people in the world live on less than $2 a day.
“That’s pretty shocking to me. I don’t think very many people realized that,” she said.
The students made $600 by holding a fund-raising contest in which the winning fourth period class got a free in-school pizza party.
The largest fund-raiser, a senior night, will likely take place in May. The group hopes to raise thousands by selling raffle tickets and charging admission to the dance.
The goal, which at one point seemed impossible, is now within reach, says Karen Ward, Southwest High’s National Honor Society sponsor.
“It’s such an ambitious group,” she says. “If there’s any class that can pull this off, this is the class that will.”
The $5,500 the group hopes to raise will go to a school building program partly administered by “Free The Children.”
The long-term goal is to turn the senior gift into an annual charity event that benefits the students of Sierra Leone, Alyssa said.
“If you think about it, the only way to get out of poverty is to get education,” she said. “It seems like this is the sort of thing Lincoln should be doing.”
For more info
Contact Karen Ward at Lincoln Southwest High School at 436-1306
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Xbox players help hurricane victims
Dundas Star News
Feb 24, 2006
Staff Writer
At least 27 child victims of Hurricane Katrina will be a little better off thanks to a bunch of Parkside high school students who played some video games.

Fundraising event organizers Lexi McCann (background) and Kyle Childerley (right) present an Xbox video game console to tournament winner Kyle Benoit. Parkside students raised $551 to help young victims of Hurricane Katrina. [PHOTO BY CRAIG CAMPBELL]
An Xbox video game tournament organized by Grade 12 students Lexi McCann and Kyle Childerley raised $551 for Free The Children's hurricane humanitarian project. The money will send health and school packages to already marginalized children overwhelmed by the hurricane.
Ms. McCann came up with the idea after seeing an Oprah Winfrey show about Katrina's effect.
"I was moved to tears," she said. "I wanted to do something."
She brought the project to her school's award-winning DECA business club. Fellow club member Kyle Childerley joined in to help set it up. More than 100 students paid a fee to participate in the school-wide Xbox video game competition in November. The top four competitors, representing Grades 9 through 12, gathered in front of a small but energetic crowd last Wednesday, Feb. 15 for the finals.
Kyle Benoit took the top prize - a brand new Xbox game console. Nick Neal earned second place and a Future Shop gift certificate. The other finalists were Mike Gillie and John Hardy.
Ms. McCann wrote a paper about the fundraising event and will present it to her DECA club. She might be able to present it at an international DECA competition later this year.
"It's because of youth like you that we are changing the world," said Free The Children's international youth coordinator Theresa Karsner after she received the $551 cheque.
Free The Children was founded by Toronto's Craig Kielburger in 1995, when he was 12 years old. It was sparked by his interest in fighting against child labour around the world and has grown into an organization based on children helping children in a variety of ways.
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