jueves, 3 de marzo de 2011

International Day Banquet Address, March 1, 2011



Welcome to Baylor School’s International Day banquet. I’m Elijah Anderson Barrera, and I teach both Spanish and English as Second languages.



As a lifelong student myself, I have always enjoyed traveling and meeting travelers, because I think that there is something extremely valuable in the act of faith that travel demands: in intentionally scrambling our own assumptions about the world, and by extending ourselves to deeply appreciate people who have a different point of view from our own.



When I was younger, I had the good fortune to travel a bit, to see different parts of the world, learn new languages, and meet people who experienced a very different world than I had known growing up in California. I can say without a doubt that the experience of living and traveling abroad has made my life a richer one, and the reason has much to do with the people that I met along the way. As James Baldwin once said after a trip abroad, “I met a lot of people in Europe. I even encountered myself.”



Tonight, as we celebrate the international at Baylor, we will get to know some of the international students who have traveled so far to study here. We may also learn something new about the local students and faculty who, after having studied foreign languages and cultures, have taken the further step of interacting in the world outside of the gates of this school, to breathe life into Baylor’s most sacred mission: to make a positive difference in the world. I am grateful to these students for traveling beyond their comfort zones tonight to share their experiences with us.



Thanks also to the staff of the dining hall who go out of their way, not just today, but every day, to sustain our bodies, and to every member of the Baylor community who came out tonight to show our appreciation for and value of Baylor’s place in this ever shrinking world. Thanks for being here.

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