Dear SLUH Community,
Like any organization, SLUH strives to remain focused on mission. Incorporating our Ignatian tradition, we find that being reflective and deliberate in our decision-making process helps us to hold course. One way that we reflect on our tradition is to designate an over-arching theme for each academic year. For the past decade, we have been dedicating each year to a principle from either the Profile of a Jesuit Graduate at Graduation or Catholic Social Teaching. This year, we have taken the mantra of The Common Good as our framing device.
In the 1963 encyclical Pacem in Terris, the Common Good is defined as "the sum total of social conditions which allow people, either as groups or as individuals, to reach their fulfillment more fully and more easily.” Such good is common as it is achieved only together as a community, and not simply as isolated individuals. All people are obligated to work towards making the common good a greater reality.
Working with our young men at SLUH, we realize the importance of framing an accountability for our neighbors and our polity. While students are bombarded by the same negativity we experience in social media and toxic conversations, we seek to promote a more positive environment for dialogue and relationship with others. In that regard, I’d like to share some of the projects we’ve undertaken recently at SLUH.
- Many of our students, faculty, and parents joined thousands of others at the Bicentennial Mass on the Arch grounds on September 23. The liturgy celebrated the cultural, historical, and educational legacy of the Jesuit presence in the City.
- For the Great American Eclipse on August 21, SLUH students helped plan educational events for both their peers and throughout the city. In one project a group of sophomores presented protocols for the measurements of eclipse data to the 4,000 attendees of the Eclipse Expo at Greensfelder Recreation Complex at Queeny Park.
- On the day of the eclipse, after many educational programs, the SLUH community observed the event from their neighborhoods. Those living outside the range of totality were provided partners located within. In experiencing this awesome phenomenon in our communities, we strove to both widen our perspectives and share our experiences. St. Louis Public Radio featured SLUH in its story regarding innovative eclipse education projects.
- Following the Jason Stockley verdict and subsequent regional unrest, SLUH held multiple opportunities to model civil discourse for students and adults alike. Some of the programs included the sharing of experiences surrounding the events, and a panel of alumni legal experts discussing some of the complexities of the case. While a number of area schools saw student walkouts and divisive actions, SLUH has been able to model a respectful and conversant climate.
- Responding to the recent Hurricanes in Houston and Puerto Rico, SLUH raised and distributed over $23,000 to displaced families of Jesuit schools in those impact zones. We will be sending a delegation to San Juan during senior projects to further assist in recovery efforts.
Our hope is to weave a culture of concern for The Common Good. Over time, the experiences of our students will lead to a focus transcending the limitations of perspective so pervasive today. In the words of Pope Saint John Paul II, such a higher view is “more than a feeling of vague compassion or shallow distress at the misfortunes of so many people, both near and far. On the contrary, it is a firm and persevering determination to commit oneself to the common good. That is to say to the good of all and of each individual, because we are all really responsible for all.”
We hope you enjoy our theme of working for the Common Good in this and future SLUH Magazine issues, as together we explore how it inspires much of what we achieve at SLUH.
AMDG
Ian Gibbons, SJ
Principal