Student Tribune
Calling For Unity In The Face of Tragedy
As a college community, we are heartbroken over the tragic loss of life that
we continue to experience in our country. In just the last two weeks we have
experienced the senseless murder of two African-American shoppers at a Kroger's
grocery store in Kentucky and the massacre of eleven parishioners who were
attending service at the Tree of Life Synagogue in Pennsylvania. As a society,
we cannot accept hate in any form or allow it to overshadow the freedoms that
we value deeply in our country. It is only when those freedoms are exercised
with a commitment to humanity and dignity for all that we can live in peace
with respect for our differences and our connections.
Let us take a moment to reaffirm Monroe Community College's commitment
to diversity and inclusiveness, which includes freedom of religion. To
students, faculty and staff who have been impacted not only by these tragedies,
but by any others that have occurred, please remember to seek assistance so
that you are taking care of your personal and emotional well-being. Students
can seek counseling services at the Counseling and Disability Services Center
on the Brighton Campus, and at the Student Services Center on the Downtown
Campus. Employees can seek assistance through the Employee Assistance Program
at 1-800-451-3281.
As we move forward and strive to both heal and learn from these
tragedies, I encourage you to join the Holocaust, Genocide, and Human Rights
Project's 27th annual Kristallnacht programs Monday, Nov. 5, featuring
historian James Waller Ph.D., author of "Confronting Evil: Engaging Our
Responsibility to Prevent Genocide" (Oxford University Press, 2016). The
programs are at noon and 7 p.m. Monday, Nov. 5 at MCC's Downtown and Brighton
campuses, respectively.
Gantt, Calvin
President's Office
10/30/2018