Chattanooga Times Free Press (TN)
Monday, January 28, 2008
Helping hands a world away
By Kelli Gauthier
NASHVILLE — As
Elizabeth Wray prepared to step in front of a crowd of thousands Sunday to give
away the biggest gift of her life, it was not public speaking jitters that had
her concerned.
The Girls Preparatory School senior simply didn’t want the $60,000 check she
was there to present to overshadow the humanitarian work the money was going to
support.
“I just don’t want to make a big deal about us and GPS, and ‘Look what we
did,’” the 18-year-old said.
Along with GPS sophomore Alizeh Ahmad, Ms. Wray
presented the money to New York Times-bestselling author Greg Mortenson, who
spoke at an independent schools conference in Nashville.
Mr. Mortenson, who wrote “Three Cups of Tea: One Man’s Mission to Promote Peace
… One School at Time,” directs the Central Asia Institute, a nonprofit
organization dedicated to building schools to educate children, especially
girls, in the most remote regions of Pakistan and Afghanistan.
Image courtesy Greg Mortenson, Central Asia Institute -- Students read books at
the Torghu Balla Girls
School in the Gol Valley of northern Pakistan. Before
the girls’ presentation, Ms. Ahmad timed Ms. Wray as she practiced, so the
short speech would not go over her allotted three minutes.
A man in an olive-colored suit walked by the front of the
conference room, causing Ms. Wray to stop midsentence.
Putting her head in her hands, she closed her eyes and laughed.
“I cannot believe that’s Greg Mortenson,” she said.
An ambitious goal.
Students and faculty at GPS decided to join Mr. Mortenson’s
efforts last fall, after many of them read his book, either on their own or for
required summer reading.
For the past 25 years, GPS has held a festival called Robin Hood, where
students raise money for one week to support various charitable causes.
Typically the event raises about $14,000, which is distributed to 30 or so
organizations around Chattanooga.
This year, the girls decided they wanted to raise the $50,000 it would take to
build and endow one of Mortenson’s schools with
furniture, textbooks and school supplies for five years.
“When they proposed it, I kind of chucked and said to myself, ‘There is no
chance that you can raise that much money,’ but I figured if they wanted to
try, I wouldn’t rain on their parade,” GPS Headmaster Randy Tucker said.
But
by doing things such as selling trinkets from around the world and giving up
paychecks from their after-school jobs, the girls exceeded their goal by
$10,000.
“They certainly set a record,” Mr. Tucker said. “In 21 years, that was probably
the most proud I have been of the school and the kids.”
Biology teacher Jenise Gordon, faculty sponsor of
Robin Hood week, said seeing her students give of
themselves was inspiring.
“To see the kids tear up about what they’ve accomplished; to know that
somewhere halfway around the world in a war-torn country girls can go to school
for the first time, it’s overwhelming,” she said.
Midway through Robin Hood week, GPS officials realized Mr. Mortenson would be
speaking at the joint Council for Advancement and Support of Education and
National Association of Independent Schools conference in Nashville.
They
secured a spot for two students to present the gift.
“All the stars aligned, and everything just fell into place,” Ms. Gordon said.
Education is the key
Mr. Mortenson’s passion for his cause came about
after a failed attempt in 1993 to climb K2, the second-highest mountain in the
world, located along Pakistan’s border.
Villagers in the Pakistan town of Korphe nursed him
back to health after he retreated from his mountain adventure, exhausted and
emaciated, he said.
After watching the children in the small town writing their school lessons with
sticks in the dirt, Mr. Mortenson said he made “a rash promise” to a little
girl that he would come back one day and build her a school.
By 1997, he had fulfilled that promise by selling his car and many of his
possessions to raise money. To date, Mortenson
has built more than 60 schools in Pakistan and Afghanistan that educate tens of
thousands of children, many of them girls.
“If you educate a boy, you educate an individual. If you educate a girl, you
educate a community,”Mortenson said Sunday.
“Education, especially of girls, is what will change the world.”
The African proverb has guided him through death threats from mullahs and hate
mail from Americans after the terrorist attacks on Sept. 11, 2001, he said.
And despite the original subtitle on the first edition of his hardback book:
“One Man’s Mission to Fight Terrorism,” Mr. Mortenson said the current subtitle
is much more fitting.
“I do this to promote peace,” he told a capacity crowd at the Renaissance
Nashville hotel.
After Mortenson finished speaking, Ms. Wray and Ms. Ahmad left their front-row
seats and made their way to the stage, oversized cardboard check in tow.
“My family is from Pakistan, and because I’ve visited numerous times and seen
the northern areas, Mortensen’s work has really touched and inspired me,” Ms.
Ahmad, 15, said. “As a Pakistani, I feel like we owe a lot of things to this
gentleman for what he’s done for the country.”
Applause broke out as both girls beamed and shook the author’s hand.
Mortensen said he was humbled by the GPS gift, especially because it came from
an all-girls school.
“He’s coming to Chattanooga and said he wants to visit our school,” Ms. Wray
said later, as she stood in line to get her copy of the book signed.
Even after receiving many hugs from GPS faculty and parents, and
congratulations from strangers at the conference, Ms. Wray, the Robin Hood
chairwoman, took no credit.
“I was really honored to hear Mortenson speak,” she said.
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