Eastern Mennonite University students on spring break Y-trips traveled to Puerto Rico, West Virginia, Florida, Georgia and Alabama to volunteer as construction workers and tutors, learn about immigration, and visit key sites of the civil rights movement. (Courtesy photos)

Spring break Y-trip groups serve and learn

Y Serve 7

For more than 30 Eastern Mennonite University students, spring break wasn’t just a chance to get away from classes for a week. Instead, it was a chance to make a difference – and learn.

Y-trips traveled to Puerto Rico, West Virginia, Florida, Georgia and Alabama to volunteer as construction workers and tutors, learn about immigration, and visit key sites of the civil rights movement.

“It was a really intense week,” said Alexa Lahr, who was part of a group that served at Casa Alterna, a Christian outreach to immigrant families from Latin America located in LaGrange, Georgia. “I learned so much.”

Y-trips are coordinated by Y-Serve, formerly known as the Young People’s Christian Association, the longest-running student organization at EMU. It aims to “serve others as the hands and feet of Jesus.”

Alabama and Georgia

Celeste Thomas, director of multicultural student services at EMU, led a civil rights tour in Alabama and Georgia that was attended by Ivan Harris, Jourdyn Friend, Hailey Holcomb, Hannah Nichols, Ezrionna Prioleau, Jakiran JD Richardson, Alex Rosenberg and Precious Waddy.

In Selma they attended the annual Bloody Sunday church service at the Brown Chapel AME Church (as did U.S. Senator and Democratic presidential candidate Cory Booker and former Secretary of State and presidential candidate Hillary Clinton). Members of the group then joined a march with Clinton, Booker, Jesse Jackson and Sheila Jackson, and students participated in a “Dead In” on the Edmund Pettus Bridge.

Throughout the week they also visited museums and sites such as Tuskegee University and the Washington Carver museum in Tuskegee; the Dexter Avenue King Memorial Baptist church and Rosa Parks Museum in Montgomery; Kelly Ingram Park and the 16th Street Baptist Church in Birmingham; and Ebenezer Baptist church and the Center for Civil and Human Rights in Atlanta.

In Birmingham they met Sarah Collins, whose sister was one of the four girls killed when the 16th Street Baptist Church was bombed in 1963.

“It was amazing to see her and hear her story,” said Harris – but he found the trip valuable also because it provided him with an understanding of how history continues to live on in current events.

“When I was growing up, when I was first taught about the subject of black history, I thought that everything that happened in the past just stayed in the past, and I grew up thinking that it really isn’t that much of a problem anymore,” he said. Over the years as he became more aware of racial injustices, however, he decided he wanted to learn more – and this trip was a chance to study in-depth.

“It turned me into a woken state, and helped me to wake up a lot and realize the reality that we’re really living in,” he said. “Back then, during the civil rights movement, the youth are what helped to spark the movement. …. We need that same energy today, because the movement’s not over. There’s still a lot more to be done.”

Florida

Jonas Beachy, Reuben Peachey-Stoner, Andrew Reimer-Berg, Jonathan Reimer-Berg, Joshua Schlabach and Andrew Schunn served with Mennonite Disaster Service (MDS) in Florida, installing drywall, building walls and more at different worksites.

They had time to relax, too: they went birding and swam at Sanibel Island. But most fulfilling for Peachey-Stoner, he said, was living and working with the MDS crew of retirees.

Georgia

Working on homework. (Courtesy photo)

At Alterna, Lahr and her group mates – Benjamin Canizales, Anton Flores, Joshua Gomez, Bekah Mongold, Maria Saucedo, Kayley Scottlind and co-leaders Ariel Barbosa and Otoniel Suero Escalante – stayed with host families and tutored elementary school students in the afternoons. Lahr noticed that in spite of the difficulties they faced, the families in the community exhibited happiness.

“It was a reminder to me that you don’t need to be wealthy to be happy,” she said.

If the group was outside working on a service project, she said, families would bring food or drinks. “It showed how welcoming they were, even though America isn’t that welcoming towards them. … We came there to help out, but really, they were showing support for us. It was really cool to see.”

The group also visited people being held in an immigration detention facility, and on another day went to Alabama to walk the last leg of the Selma-to-Montgomery civil rights march and visit the Legacy Museum: From Enslavement to Mass Incarceration and the National Memorial for Peace and Justice. Lahr said the lessons she learned were important.

“I feel like everyone needs to go there,” Lahr said.

Puerto Rico

The MDS Puerto Rico group. (Photo by Katie Wenger)

Katie Wenger, Silas Driver, Erin Brubaker, Jonah Short-Miller and Maria Yoder volunteered with MDS in Puerto Rico, where they tore down a house destroyed by Hurricane Maria. Future MDS groups will construct a new house in its place.

What was most significant for Wenger and Driver was time spent building relationships with people there.

“Our group was shown an enormous amount of hospitality and kindness over the course of this trip,” Wenger said. “I had never been to Puerto Rico before, but felt welcomed as soon as I stepped off the plane.”

Puerto Rico. (Photo by Silas Driver)

That welcome included home-cooked meals for lunch and dinner: “One thing that stuck out to me this trip was the generosity of the families that cared for us during our time there,” said Driver, who over the week-long stay grew close to his host brothers.

West Virginia

A final team went to Kimball, West Virginia, where one of their tasks was preparing a new location for the headquarters of Sharing with Appalachian People (SWAP).

Time to take a break for a hike to see waterfalls in West Virginia. (Photo by Lydia Haggard)

The group – Lydia Haggard, Jack Hummel, Lydia Musselman, Christian Nwankwo and Christiana Nwankwo – hung drywall, painted, installed flooring, and moved lots of furniture and supplies. But like other groups, the relationships they formed and strengthened were most valuable.

“It was refreshing to be less anxious about getting things done on a checklist and to instead prioritize investing in relationships,” said Haggard. “As a bonus, I got to learn how to put up drywall!”