HEALING THE WOUNDS
OF WAR
TENAFLY STUDENTS RAISE $15,000 TO RID BOSNIAN VILLAGE OF
MINES
By Richard Cowen

A slide of an Angolan girl injured
by a land mine was part of a presentation in Tenafly
on Thursday by a State Department official.
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One step is all it takes.
All it takes to be killed, if you happen
to live in any of the 90 strife-torn countries where land
mines mark the boundary between peace and
war, love and hatred.
Or one step is all it takes to begin
healing the wounds of war, if you are a student at Tenafly
Middle School committed to breaking down the barriers. In
September 1999, about 25 students got together and called
themselves the Landmine Awareness Club. They adopted a village
in Bosnia called Podzidz and pledged to rid that little
town of every land mine still stuck in the soil
from the recent war.
On Thursday, they made good on the promise
by handing a $15,000 check to the U.S. State Department
and the Slovenia International Fund. As part of the federal
government's mine-removal policy, the State Department
matched the donation and will use the money to hire private
contractors to sweep the mines from Podzidz.
"I don't think we've changed the
world, but I do believe we will change one village,"
said Ashley Woolsey, 14, the club president. "And
I'm sure the people in Bosnia will be thankful that someone
cares about them." The latest statistics point to
a deepening global crisis. There are now 110 million live
land mines in the ground; one blows up every 22 seconds.
Of those injured, 90 percent are civilians - and more
than one-third are
children.

Gillian Bader, left, and Dolma
Chen, center, were among chorus members who sang
John Lennon's "Imagine" at Thursday's
mine-related events at Tenafly Middle School.
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Members of the Landmine Awareness Club
presented the check during a ceremony in the middle school
auditorium, as about 600 students cheered. The money was
collected from the community by the students; the poetry
that club members read to the audience was an even more
personal contribution.
"One step. All it takes to kill," read Jian
Lann Chang, a sixth-grader. "One step, and a piece
of humanity is taken. You are the 'Apocalypse' itself.
You
possess the 'END.'"
As Chang read his poem, the audience
could see the club's logo, a big, gaily decorated butterfly,
hanging on the right side of the stage. Less clear to
the audience was a sinister message: The butterfly is
also a type of landmine, small enough to fit in the palm
of a child's hand.
To raise the money, club members set
up a non-profit corporation, Global Care Unlimited Inc.,
to solicit donations. Students then created a video and
made presentations to community groups, such as the Tenafly
Rotary Club. The students - boys and girls in Grades 6
though 8 - did all the work themselves, researching the
land mine issue and producing a video to accompany the
presentations. The project was the type of interdisciplinary
learning experience that schools favor these days.
But the students say teacher Mark Hyman,
the club moderator, was the driving force behind the project.
Hyman taught the students they could make a difference
if they believed they could.
Most times, the necessary action was
routine: writing the club newsletter, making phone calls
to prospective donors, setting up appointments with the
leaders of community groups. Along the way, the group's
original 25 members dwindled to around a dozen.
"From the beginning Mr. Hyman
stressed commitment and what it would take to get this
done," said student Max Rosmarin, 14. "There
was a lot of sweat and blood that went into this."
Then he stopped and thought again.
"We didn't lose any blood," he said.
Hyman called the project "an
ongoing experiment in compassion," which he said
"showed the capacity of children to make a difference
in the world." "These children dared to imagine
that they could educate Tenafly and the surrounding communities
about the worldwide land mine crisis," Hyman said.
Donald F. "Pat" Patierno, the director of the
State Department's Office of Global Humanitarian Demining
Programs, recalled traveling through the Balkans and seeing
minefields next to schools. And Patierno said the civil
war in Angola has left so many fields littered with mines
that the country
cannot feed itself.
"Right now, there is not enough
money to remove all the mines," Patierno told the
students. "But you are saving lives and alleviating
the suffering of others through your efforts."
Tenafly students plan to follow the
money all the way to Bosnia this summer. Plans are now
in the works for a student delegation to travel to Podzidz
to make sure the mines have been removed.
Woolsey said the next step is to keep
the land mine crusade going. "We hope that other
schools or organizations want to get involved," she
said. Staff Writer Richard Cowen's e-mail address is cowen(at)northjersey.
The Record (Bergen County, NJ)
Staff Photographer: Danielle
P. Richards