{"id":217,"date":"2002-06-01T18:43:07","date_gmt":"2002-06-01T22:43:07","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.trinitydc.edu\/president\/"},"modified":"2010-10-19T18:44:50","modified_gmt":"2010-10-19T22:44:50","slug":"remarks-merion-mercy-academy-commencement","status":"publish","type":"page","link":"https:\/\/www.trinitydc.edu\/president\/remarks-merion-mercy-academy-commencement\/","title":{"rendered":"Remarks: Merion Mercy Academy Commencement"},"content":{"rendered":"<span id=\"Remarks:_Merion____________________Mercy_Academy_Commencement_2003\"><h1>Remarks: Merion                    Mercy Academy Commencement, 2003<\/h1><\/span>\n<p>Sister Regina Ward, Sisters of Mercy, members of the Faculty                    and Staff of Merion Mercy, Parents and Friends of the graduates,                    and you, the Class of 2003: Congratulations on this great day!                    You, Merion&#8217;s Class of 2003, are a remarkable group of young                    women and I am proud to welcome you into the distinguished ranks                    of alumnae of our alma mater. Thanks as well for asking me to                    share this great occasion with you.<\/p>\n<p>Wonderful memories flood my mind today as I look around this                    gymnasium and remember so many important, solemn, fun and festive                    moments here. My own link to the tradition of Mercy actually                    started a few years before I was born, in 1948, when my mother                    enrolled my older sister Mary Carol in kindergarten here at                    what was then known as Mater Misericordiae Academy. My sister                    also served for a number of years as a Sister of Mercy, and                    several of my brothers attended Waldron for part of their elementary                    education. So, Mom&#8217;s been a Mercy Parent for at least 55 years!<\/p>\n<p>As a college president, I have the good fortune to work with                    one foot always firmly planted in the land of the young. But                    as the years go by, and as I greet new classes of young women                    enrolling at Trinity College, I find myself wondering with increasing                    frequency how to establish some common bond across the wide                    span of our years. What can someone from the Analog Era have                    to say to the Digital Generation?<\/p>\n<p>I learned many valuable lessons here at Merion &#8212; the love                    of language, the ability to write and speak very well, the sense                    of leadership and responsibility for others. But the other day,                    as I was thinking of all the noble skills and values that Merion                    instilled in me &#8212; like the ability to sight translate Virgil                    and Cicero better than most other mere mortals in 1970 &#8212; and                    I was pounding these thoughts out on the keyboard of my laptop,                    it suddenly struck me as both ironic and iconic that one of                    the most valuable skills that Merion taught me was the ability                    to type. And not just on any old typewriter &#8212; certainly not                    a computer keyboard, since such items did not exist, at least                    in our universe back then. No, one of the required courses in                    this fine college preparatory school was Typing, learned on                    good old-fashioned Remington manual machines. Not electric.                    With cloth ribbons. No self-correcting tape. With a return bar                    that you had to keep pushing back to move forward on the page.                    Good heavens! How did somebody who grew up on a Remington learn                    to beam instant messages across the sky with a PDA?<\/p>\n<p>This is the whole point of education at Merion: the empowerment                    of students to keep on learning, even when modern invention                    outstrips the imagination of the previous age. This is an education                    that has ingrained in each of us the knowledge and skills that                    are timeless &#8212; the structure of language, the discipline of                    research, the large view of history, even the mundane, but necessary,                    ability to type. At the same time, our Merion education has                    prepared us well to be lifelong learners, able to adapt our                    knowledge and skills continuously, to keep on learning well                    beyond the days of formal education. This is true liberal learning                    at its best.<\/p>\n<p>Now, in spite of the obvious differences between the Class                    of 2003 and the Class of 1970, we have also had remarkably similar                    high school experiences. We both attended high school in an                    age of war and terrorism. The arc of war from Vietnam to Iraq                    is not that long. In the 1960&#8217;s, the assassination of leaders                    (John and Bobby Kennedy, Martin Luther King) was its own demented                    form of terrorism, but we did not name it as such in those days.<\/p>\n<p>We have both been witness to the great American struggle with                    the issue of race &#8212; the civil rights movement in the 1960&#8217;s,                    the debate over affirmative action today.<\/p>\n<p>We both reaped the benefits of being young enough to enjoy                    the courageous hard work of older generations of women, pioneers                    who blazed trails for us. Like you, my classmates and I believed                    that we had the right to do anything we wanted to do, without                    regard to gender, a great and liberating thought. This was a                    very different thought from the women who graduated in decades                    before us.<\/p>\n<p>We both came of age wondering about the dangers ahead. In the                    spring of 1970 our danger seemed more domestic than international,                    symbolized in the National Guard shootings of students who were                    demonstrating for peace at Kent State University. Your danger                    may be summarized in the phrase &#8220;Homeland Security,&#8221;                    a danger that is both domestic and foreign.<\/p>\n<p>When we started high school, whether 1999 or 1966, neither                    you nor I could have imagined the concept of September 11, and                    how the echoes of that day will reverberate through our lives                    for years to come.<\/p>\n<p>When I had the pleasure of meeting you a few weeks ago, I was                    delighted, but not surprised, to find you as self-possessed,                    as ambitious, as well-spoken and as high-minded as every group                    of young women who have sat on this stage before you. There&#8217;s                    a certain timeless mystique, a charisma that comes with being                    what we used to call the &#8220;Mater Girl,&#8221; the Woman of                    Mercy. You, Merion&#8217;s Class of 2003, you wear this tradition                    of Women of Mercy very well. You are deeply caring; you put                    your good intentions to work in the spirit and practice of service.                    You have honored the heritage of Catherine McAuley and the Sisters                    of Mercy.<\/p>\n<p>You asked me not to be trite, so, if today I say that you are                    marking a major moment of transition from one stage of life                    to another, please do not roll your eyes too much. It happens                    to be true. I promise not to use the words &#8220;setting sail,&#8221;                    &#8220;embarking,&#8221; &#8220;new journey,&#8221; or &#8220;crossroads&#8221;                    &#8212;- at least not intentionally!<\/p>\n<p>You are taking your leave of a place that has been both challenging                    and comforting for you, a source of growth and sometimes frustration,                    a time of discovery and hard work and occasional boredom with                    the roteness of certain kinds of learning. Merion is a place                    where you learned about love and trust; perhaps you lost a few                    friends but gained better ones; won some respect and earned                    the right to sit on this stage today. You cannot stay here in                    this familiar habitat, that&#8217;s one of the great rules of human                    life. You have to graduate from high school and move on. Your                    eagerness to do so, whether admitted or not, is not any lack                    of love or respect for Merion, but rather, a natural result                    of the good job that Merion has done in preparing you for the                    next stage of your lives. If you weren&#8217;t somehow eager to leave,                    deep down, then Merion has not done its job properly.<\/p>\n<p>Merion has done a great job in preparing you for higher education.                    You are about to enroll in a marvelous list of colleges and                    universities, and your list of acceptances and scholarships                    is a great tribute to your excellence and Merion&#8217;s fine education.<\/p>\n<p>When you get to college, you will really begin the test of                    how well Merion has done its job with you. College is a time                    of many discoveries, and the test of your Merion education will                    be found in how well you are able to cope with and master the                    new learning you encounter.<\/p>\n<p>Long experience has shown me that there are five great discoveries                    for students in college. First, you will discover great freedom.                    Second, in freedom, you will find many choices. Third, with                    choice comes risk. Fourth, the greatest risk will be your journey                    far into the life of the mind. Fifth, through that journey,                    you will enlarge and illuminate the core values of your life,                    those ideas and passions that will give meaning to the rest                    of your days.<\/p>\n<p>Let&#8217;s consider each of these discoveries.<\/p>\n<p>First: freedom.<\/p>\n<p>By freedom, I do not mean the absence of rules that indulges                    so much bad college student behavior. Indeed, the misunderstanding                    of the fundamental idea of freedom has given more than one college                    freshman a major headache, while giving deans full employment                    and keeping parents well supplied with Alka-seltzer.<\/p>\n<p>Rather, the real freedom that you will discover in college                    is a serious taskmaster, because it is the freedom of the well                    educated mind, true liberal learning. This is a freedom that                    liberates the human mind from stereotypes and prejudices; this                    is a freedom that drives the search for truth that questions                    old assumptions on the way to new hypotheses. But letting go                    of old ideas can be painful; exploring new and unfamiliar territories                    can be frightening. You will learn things about yourself you                    may not like; and you will discover parts of your soul you never                    knew existed. This is the real meaning of freedom: the freedom                    to discover yourself and what makes you whole, so that you can                    give so much more of yourself to others.<\/p>\n<p>To secure this freedom, take every learning opportunity that                    comes your way. Go to that lecture, that concert; study abroad,                    go to museums; play sports &#8212; varsity or intramural, no matter,                    get out there and play. Ask questions, always. Do not sit through                    a single class in silence. Speak up! Do not copy everything                    down &#8212;- listen to the whole, take it all in, challenge what                    you hear, debate the premises and assumptions of your instruction.                    Yes, debate your teachers! College is a dialogue, not a monologue.                    Your faculty will expect you to be thoughtfully feisty and rigorous                    in your challenges to them.<\/p>\n<p>Take every course that you can, especially in subjects that                    you might never study again. Don&#8217;t limit your study to your                    major program and required core. Explore! You&#8217;ll have plenty                    of time in life to become the world&#8217;s leading authority on the                    decline of nation states, or the rise of bio mechanics, or the                    sociology of Phillies fans. You may never again have the chance                    to study the physics of music or to excavate old graveyards                    or snorkel through a Florida swamp to understand environmental                    destruction. But one daring course may inflame your mind for                    decades &#8212; might even change the course of your life. This                    is the freedom of college: the moment belongs to you; take full                    advantage! Give yourself the opportunity to change your mind                    about everything, from the clothes you wear to the friends you                    choose to the course of your life, forever.<\/p>\n<p>With such freedom, you will discover choices. Learning to make                    choices wisely, ethically and in a disciplined manner is the                    roadmap through the territory of freedom. If it is any good                    at all, your college should be a place that teaches you how                    to draw this map properly, how to make choices well.<\/p>\n<p>Learning to make good choices is an integral part of developing                    your sense of ethics and integrity both professionally and personally.                    Your Merion education has provided you with a superb foundation                    for the many temptations that will come. One of the great scandals                    of our time, made easier by the presence of so much research                    on the Internet, is the casual acceptance, among college students                    and young professionals, of the practice of presenting someone                    else&#8217;s work as your own. In academic terms, this is plagiarism,                    cheating, a thoroughly disreputable act. But as we have recently                    seen in the case of Jayson Blair, the New York Times reporter                    who plagiarized and fabricated scores of stories, it&#8217;s very                    easy to do this and somewhat hard to be stopped. His tragic                    story should be a clear warning for every student and teacher:                    nobody wins when somebody cheats.<\/p>\n<p>An ethical person does not think about getting caught, the                    ethical person chooses what is right, all the time, regardless                    of whether anyone else is in the room to see you.<\/p>\n<p>With choice, comes risk.<\/p>\n<p>If you never take risks, you will not become well educated.                    A college education that does not pose certain risks for you                    is not worth the price. What do I mean by risk? Risk is not                    about doing stupid things (like some of the stunts performed                    on a certain MTV show whose name is a synonym for donkey). Risk                    is about having the courage to reach farther than you might                    have done previously, but with knowledge and skill. Eleanor                    Roosevelt described it well: &#8220;You gain strength, courage                    and confidence by every experience in which you stop to look                    fear in the face&#8230;You must do the thing you think you cannot                    do.&#8221; (Eleanor Roosevelt, We Learn By Living)<\/p>\n<p>You have a wonderful example of this kind of risk-taking ingrained                    in your Mercy heritage. Catherine McAuley was a great risk-taker.                    She built the foundation for some of the largest Catholic educational                    and medical systems the world has known. In a recent study of                    Catholic nuns in America entitled Sisters, the author John Fialka                    describes the magnetic attraction that Catherine McAuley had                    for many young women and girls in her native Ireland: &#8220;It                    seems clear that some were drawn by McAuley&#8217;s sense of freedom:                    she made business deals and took risks, much like a man. There                    was a palpable, driving force behind McAuley &#8220;. [which]                    may stem from the strength of her faith and her feeling that                    the human soul&#8230;had incalculable value and beauty.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>You can use your freedom to take big risks like Catherine McAuley,                    to focus your passion, which is driven by your faith, on building                    the means to take action for the great causes of your lives.<\/p>\n<p>Now, with all this talk about freedom and risk, I see some                    parents rustling in their seats. At some point, if the educational                    process is really working, you will become very scared for your                    daughter, and perhaps very angry. Maybe even she&#8217;ll come close                    to breaking your heart, or so it will seem, because her ideas                    and customs and direction will seem quite strange at times.                    Do not abandon her. She is on a great adventure. Be there for                    her. This does not mean that you should indulge her collegiate                    excesses. Do not under any circumstances give her a gold American                    Express Card! Do not let her use you to solve her problems.                    Do not call the dean for her.<\/p>\n<p>The experience we call college is deliberately constructed                    as a journey deep into the life of the mind, the intellectual                    life that you will live in your college days. You will learn                    about the commonality of human experience; by studying the lives                    of others, you will learn how to make your own choices. You                    will turn to the voices of literature and the arts to understand                    more completely the behavior of human beings. You will weep                    with Shakespeare&#8217;s King Harry on the bloody plains of Avignon,                    and you will feel Portia&#8217;s passion for the quality of mercy;                    you will contemplate the beauty of the Grecian urn and the silence                    of the alabaster chambers; you will taste the dust of Steinbeck&#8217;s                    Oklahoma plains, and Toni Morrison&#8217;s maiden aunts will envelope                    the corners of your mind.<\/p>\n<p>You will seek clues to your own soul in the movements of Mozart                    and the brush strokes of old masters and new women artists.                    And still driven by the desire to understand the humanity that                    will be yours to lead and to change in the future, you will                    peer deeply into the microscopes and beakers of the science                    laboratories, listening for the voices that emerge in the codes                    and symbols of the components of human life.<\/p>\n<p>Through this journey, as you listen to the old and discover                    the new, you will find within yourself the core values that                    will guide your life, the values of integrity, justice, love                    and service that will excite your passion for those causes that                    will be your life&#8217;s work. You will discover your own voice,                    and you will learn how to speak up and speak out with confidence,                    advocating on behalf of justice for those who have no voice,                    speaking the truth in rooms that echo with deception. You will                    learn to be leaders of integrity and compassion, servant leaders                    who know that true justice is not about &#8216;getting mine, too,&#8217;                    not about vengeance, but rather, about giving to others because                    that is what we owe to God for the gift of our lives and talents.                    You will come to understand more completely why peace is essential                    for justice to thrive.<\/p>\n<p>You will develop a philosophy of living, which is the whole                    idea of the university according to the framework established                    a long time ago by the famous priest and philosopher Cardinal                    Newman. Your philosophy of living will help you to develop the                    myriad roles that a woman in the 21st Century must fulfill:                    executive, professional, civic activist, volunteer, good consumer,                    wife, mother, caretaker of aging parents and relatives, neighbor,                    friend, peacemaker.<\/p>\n<p>You will learn that there is no such thing as only one life&#8217;s                    work for a woman, one singular pathway. A woman&#8217;s life is consumed                    with the idea of service and support through a wide web of relationships                    and actions. The writer Anne Morrow Lindbergh wrote of this                    in her beautiful meditation Gift from the Sea:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>&#8220;For to be a woman is to have interests and duties raying                      out in all directions form the central mother-core, like spokes                      from the hub of a wheel. The pattern of our lives is essentially                      circular. We must be open to all points of the compass; husband,                      children, friends, home, community; stretched out, exposed,                      sensitive like a spider&#8217;s web to each breeze that blows, to                      each call that comes&#8230;<\/p>\n<p>&#8220;&#8230;When we start at the center of ourselves, we discover                      something worthwhile extending toward the periphery of the                      circle. We find again some of the joy in the now, some of                      the peace in the here, some of the love in me and thee which                      go to make up the kingdom of heaven on earth&#8230;.&#8221;<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>Women of Mercy, Class of 2003, with this education may you                    be faithful stewards of the kingdom of heaven on earth.<\/p>\n<p>As you go forth from this beautiful graduation day, may you                    never be far from the friends you have now, sitting beside you,                    who have been so much a part of your learning and living in                    your days at Merion.<\/p>\n<p>May the lessons of this education go with you, always, giving                    you the intellectual, moral and spiritual center around which                    to weave that web of activity that will be your contribution                    to society.<\/p>\n<p>May you know the joy of achievement and the reward of work                    well done.<\/p>\n<p>May you grow each day as women of leadership and faith, living                    the example of Catherine McAuley and the Sisters of Mercy, knowing                    the great gifts of hope and charity that are the breath and                    life of God within us.<\/p>\n<p>Congratulations, Class of 2003!<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Remarks: Merion Mercy Academy Commencement, 2003 Sister Regina Ward, Sisters of Mercy, members of the Faculty and Staff of Merion Mercy, Parents and Friends of the graduates, and you, the Class of 2003: Congratulations on this great day! You, Merion&#8217;s Class of 2003, are a remarkable group of young women and I am proud to welcome you into the distinguished ranks of alumnae of our alma mater. Thanks as well for asking me to share this great occasion with you. Wonderful memories flood my mind today as I look around this gymnasium and remember so many important, solemn, fun and &hellip;<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"parent":0,"menu_order":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"open","template":"","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"footnotes":""},"class_list":["post-217","page","type-page","status-publish","hentry"],"acf":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.trinitydc.edu\/president\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/pages\/217","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.trinitydc.edu\/president\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/pages"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.trinitydc.edu\/president\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/page"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.trinitydc.edu\/president\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.trinitydc.edu\/president\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=217"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.trinitydc.edu\/president\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/pages\/217\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.trinitydc.edu\/president\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=217"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}