The next morning, Thursday, there was an assembly. After the first few minutes it was one of the most subdued high school assemblies ever. A video was shown of the crash scene and those who were "taken", etc... (put together by Tech overnight of what happened the day before - a great job). A few family members read letters they had been asked to write overnight, being without their departed child.A few departed students read letters they had written the night before (which they had spent at a local church). Sarah was one of those few who read her letter to her family ... from "heaven" (a.k.a. the sound booth) while a looping slide show of pictures Sarah put together was shown. Sarah's reading starts at 5:46 into the video, and if you don't watch the whole production, which is snippets throughout the assembly, you will want to watch these last couple of minutes highlighting our Sarah.
The video is mostly for Mom. She would have been there with all the other parents to be part of the assembly and to be reunited with their child. (But Mom is in Portland, focused on the OTHER bookend event of mortality-- this one, wonderfully real.) Although the high school events were all staged, the emotions of many were very genuine.
p.s. Sarah's tee shirt in the last video picture says "CASEYS PLEDGE". This refers to a related program based on a young woman, by the name of Casey, who was killed a few years ago by an 18 year old drinking driver. Casey's mother was the keynote speaker at the assembly.
Sarah,
ReplyDeletei love you.
they did this program at our high school - but i don't think they pulled the kids for the 3 days - which i think is very effective. i'll have to tell our PTA about this.
ReplyDeletegood job Sarah!
That looked pretty intense. Your letter was beautiful Sarah! Good job!
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