Catholic school students in Bahamas show resiliency after Dorian

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HURRICANE DORIAN RECOVERY BAHAMAS
Joye Ritchie-Greene, principal at Mary, Star of the Sea Catholic Academy in Freeport, Grand Bahama, poses outside the school Oct. 8, 2019. While local public schools had still not reopened a month after Hurricane Dorian, Ritchie-Greene successfully navigated preparations and response to the historic disaster at the Catholic middle and high school. (CNS photo/Tom Tracy)

FREEPORT, Grand Bahama (CNS) — While many public schools in Grand Bahama remain closed some five weeks after Hurricane Dorian’s landfall, Mary, Star of the Sea Catholic Academy is back in session with a new daily schedule and newly refurbished spaces.

Principal Joye Ritchie-Greene said her school opened first, followed by other private schools and some public schools in the area. The academy also picked up a few students who transferred from local public schools along with at least two students who transferred from a Catholic school in Abaco that was demolished by the September hurricane.

Although it suffered storm-surge flooding damage, Mary, Star of the Sea Catholic Academy was able to get a jump on post-Dorian renovations with restored electrical power Sept. 23 based on a provisional agreement with the electric company, allowing water-damage repairs to begin immediately, the principal said.

The academy’s high school resumed classes Sept. 17, with earlier starting and ending times and the primary grades returned the following week.

Ritchie-Greene pointed out that hurricane preparedness and lockdown plans are a part of life in the Bahamas, but there also has been a bit of a learning curve in the aftermath of such a powerful storm.

To accommodate the many challenges students and their families are facing right now, the school adjusted its schedule to begin and end a little earlier each day and teachers have said the students are more productive with the changes.

“The shift in our schedule was originally to accommodate children who didn’t have electricity at home, who didn’t have running water, who were still living with family members and needed extra time to do personal things — but we realized that they were more attentive at school,” the principal said.

And while there were no hurricane-related fatalities among the faculty or student body, many have relatives or close friends who experienced these tragedies.

At least three faculty members and about seven or eight student families reported total loss of their homes and personal possessions. Several have taken some time off, and many took short trips off the island to regroup.

“In terms of the social-emotional aspect, we had counselors and psychologists on campus the first two days and we have had counselors speak at our general parent-teacher association meeting last week sharing with parents coping skills for themselves as well as for the children,” Ritchie-Greene told the Florida Catholic, newspaper of the Miami Archdiocese.

In addition, three primary teachers attended special training sessions for trauma and have been incorporating what they learned in their music and art classes. When the students came back, they were also greeted by a stack of pen-pal letters from students at St. Cecilia’s School in Dallas.

“What we have found is that the children have been very resilient, sharing and talking,” Ritchie-Greene said. “We thought it would have taken longer for them to settle in.”

However, she added, soon after the school reopened, “it was as though the storm had not happened: Geography was being taught, history was being taught, physics was being taught — teaching and learning was going on and so I was pleased with that sense of normalcy.”

Ritchie-Greene said the schools in the Bahamas have clear hurricane guidelines and staff teams making sure everything is in place.

“You need to have a plan, you need to have members of the team knowing what is expected of them, but once the storm has happened, it also helps if you have persons above you who also know how to manage and act quickly,” she added.

The aftermath of a hurricane forces you to put your life in perspective, Ritchie-Greene said, adding: “It really causes us to pause and think about what is most important and there is a somberness to people’s moods (now) and people’s emotions are raw. We need to be sensitive to that.”

Put another way, she said: “I recognize that how I respond to what a parent is saying to me is so important because I recognize that we are just out of a very traumatic experience and people aren’t thinking rationally.”

Catholic News Service

Catholic News Service has reported from the Vatican since the founding of its Rome bureau in 1950.