tragedy Archives - News and Media /news/tag/tragedy/ Augsburg University Wed, 24 May 2017 15:40:27 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.5 A personal perspective on Haiti /news/2010/01/20/a-personal-perspective-on-haiti/ Wed, 20 Jan 2010 20:39:32 +0000 http://inside.augsburg.edu/news/?p=1561 For eight summers, Bob Stacke has directed the band and taught percussion at the Ecole Musique Ste Trinite in Port-au-Prince and Leogane, Haiti. In addition, he spent time last summer working with percussionists at the Centre Vocationel Cite Soleil Non-Violence where they were giving music classes. Stacke is the Augsburg College music department chair and ...

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Haitian man plays a drumFor eight summers, Bob Stacke has directed the band and taught percussion at the Ecole Musique Ste Trinite in Port-au-Prince and Leogane, Haiti. In addition, he spent time last summer working with percussionists at the Centre Vocationel Cite Soleil Non-Violence where they were giving music classes. Stacke is the Augsburg College music department chair and director of the Augsburg Concert Band as well as the Jazz Ensemble and Gospel Praise.

Stacke shares his thoughts about the devastation caused by the recent earthquakes and photos of the people he has met while teaching in Haiti. Included in this collage are Stacke’s photos of life at Holy Trinity School in Port-au-Prince, Leogane and Cite Soleil. He will also share reflections in daily chapel on Tuesday, Jan. 26 at 11:20 a.m. All are welcome to chapel.

He writes, “The tragedy and devastation in Haiti are beyond my comprehension. I see news reports of thousands of bodies being bulldozed, thrown into dump trucks and buried in mass graves. I’m frightened that people I know are among them. The structures of schools where I taught for the last eight summers do not exist any more. I do not know who has survived. The day after the earthquake, I brought to my office a collage of photos I had taken of students and friends, so that I would see them as individuals and not statistics.”

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Community response to tragedy — meeting today at noon /news/2008/09/25/community-response-to-tragedy-meeting-today-at-noon/ Thu, 25 Sep 2008 16:39:08 +0000 http://inside.augsburg.edu/news/?p=2290 Tuesday, we gathered in the chapel to remember our student Ahmednur Ali, who was tragically killed on Monday night as he was leaving the Brian Coyle Center. Later in the afternoon, we held a special community time during which we shared information with faculty, staff and students about the incident and the ongoing investigation. We ...

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Tuesday, we gathered in the chapel to remember our student Ahmednur Ali, who was tragically killed on Monday night as he was leaving the Brian Coyle Center. Later in the afternoon, we held a special community time during which we shared information with faculty, staff and students about the incident and the ongoing investigation. We heard from the Somali community police liaison, Ahmed Hassan, and Augsburg director of public safety, John Pack. We continue to express our deep sympathy to the Ali family and friends and to attend to the needs of the Augsburg community.

I want to reiterate the many resources that are available to all of you on campus: Center for Counseling and Health Promotion, Campus Ministry, student activities and services staff, residence life staff–any of us who can be a conversation partner. Please take advantage of these services.

We cannot minimize the impact this kind of violent event has on a college community and, for that reason, we are responding proactively in several ways. First, we have been especially vigilant about our students who have internships or service learning or volunteer opportunities out in the neighborhood–we know folks may be frightened and we want to be sure that all students know that they have permission “not” to participate now and in the future–even as we encourage the ongoing support that our presence and service in the community means to all of our neighbors. Second, the Faculty Senate will have a conversation this week about the role of community engagement in our curriculum, as we remain sensitive to both the issues that it can raise around safety and liability and the central place it has in our educating students. Third, we are participating with the community in conversations about how to ensure the safety of our entire neighborhood. Specifically, along with Pillsbury United Communities, Confederation of Somali Organizations, and the Oromo Community, we are co-hosting a Community Meeting at 12 noon on Thursday, September 25 at the Brian Coyle Center to address specific community concerns in the Currie Park/Brian Coyle Center area. Those of you who are interested are invited to join me and other members of the administration at this meeting today. Fourth, in the near future, we will provide information about how contributions may be made to a special scholarship fund in honor of Ahmednur. The Pillsbury United Communities has established a fund to help Ahmednur’s family with funeral expenses. If you would like to contribute, you can send donations to Jennifer Blevins, Brian Coyle Center director, at 420 15th Avenue South, Minneapolis, MN, 55454. Make checks payable to “PUC – Ahmednur Ali Funeral Fund.”

As we continue to deal with these difficult last few days, I want to remind all of us that part of our life in this urban setting, where we have been for 140 years, is to navigate the terrible messiness of situations like this even as we honor how our presence and role in this neighborhood and beyond are part of our mission and character as a college. Most of us are here because of where we’re located, and yet we have incidents like this that hit too close to home and are frightening for all of us. This terrible tragedy wounds us even more profoundly because it hits at the heart of Augsburg’s identity as a college of the church in the city. I encourage all of you to remember that, at the time of his untimely death, Ahmednur was living this mission.

Paul C. Pribbenow

President

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