Rachel's Challenge: Grieving the Death of A Child, Cultivating Hope
I wasn't familiar with the movement called Rachel's Challenge until recently, when the public high school where I work sponsored a speaker from the nonprofit organization. The father of Rachel Scott, the first victim of the Columbine High School shootings on April 20, 1999, started the group to promote his late daughter's two-page Code of Ethics, which she wrote a month before her murder. The code challenges people to be kind.
Priest friends and psychologists have told me that the death of one's child is a loss that is impossible to "get over." It is hard to consider how Rachel Scott's father feels, knowing his 17-year-old daughter was gunned down for no reason except she was sitting outside eating lunch in the sunshine with friends.
Priest friends and psychologists have told me that the death of one's child is a loss that is impossible to "get over." It is hard to consider how Rachel Scott's father feels, knowing his 17-year-old daughter was gunned down for no reason except she was sitting outside eating lunch in the sunshine with friends.
Thanks for the info on this Allison. Our high schools have Rachel's Challenge groups and I haven't really known much about it.
ReplyDeleteThe children were very moved by the presentation. I think "getting" them emotionally can be the first step to reflecting on how they treat others. It can be a powerful thing!
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