The anticipation built as the wind whipped the faces of 16 female Viterbo students and three faculty members as the
March 24-28, the Viterbo Honors class, "City as a Text," traveled to
After traveling seven hours from
Emily Aerts, freshmen social work major from
"No matter how crunched people get on the subway, no one really talks to each other," Aerts said. "New Yorkers kept to themselves; either sleeping, reading or listening to music."
Stepping off the subway in Brooklyn, the group was greeted by heckling teenagers, Aerts said, reminding the all-white female group that they stuck out like a sore thumb in the neighborhood.
Dykman used connections with the North American Conference of Associates and Religious (NACAR) to set up a visit to a youth program in
"I was looking for some way to focus students on the social justice issue at stake in
The group met with Father Jim O'Shea, pastor of Our Lady of Montserrat church in the Bedford-Stuyvesant area, who helped run an afterschool program for youth in the neighborhood to give them a positive environment in which to grow.
Fr. Jim set up a tour with a group leader who had spent time in prison for drug trafficking, and upon release dedicated his life to trying to better the neighborhood he grew up in. The group leader gave the Viterbo students a tour of the neighborhood that was high in high school drop-outs, crime and drug-trafficking. Following the tour, the Viterbo group interacted with the youth of the neighborhood during the afterschool program.
Jessica Hassing, freshmen nursing major from
"They were so willing to help each other as well as others even though they may have been struggling financially themselves," Aerts said. The youth were working on a t-shirt fundraiser to raise money for

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