College Sample Essays: Rite of Passage
"Sarah, we need your help in the Ukraine this summer. Can I count
on you?" This question changed my life profoundly. I was asked to be a
counselor on JOLT, Jewish Overseas Leadership Program, an opportunity to
interact with young campers in an impoverished country and positively
influence their lives. Little did I realize that this experience would
impact mine so greatly.
JOLT, an outreach program, runs an annual overnight summer camp in the
Ukraine with counselors from the United States and Israel. These counselors
are carefully selected because of the rigorous programming and the many
physical hardships of living in the Ukraine. Over one hundred local children
come to Charkov to learn about their Jewish background. As one of the
counselors, I had the privilege and extraordinary task of exposing them to
the beauty of our religion and heritage.
I remember the anxiety and excitement that I felt as I exited the plane
with twenty other high school students, embarking on my summer teaching
experience, wondering if I was fully prepared. The moment the busloads of
children arrived, I attached myself to a group of kids and started singing
and dancing with them. Despite my initial fears, we began to form a bond. My
role changed from that of a teenager to that of a responsible counselor. Not
only was I here to teach them about Judaism through classes and activities, but
more importantly I was acting as a role model. For the majority of Ukrainian
children, we were the first Americans they had ever met and, therefore, were
watched vigilantly and constantly emulated. This humbling realization made me
feel rather self-conscious at first. However, their desire to imitate also
heightened the impact of that which we taught them. They wanted to learn.
Although an immense language barrier lay between the campers and me, we managed
to communicate through translators, hand signals, songs, and broken English and
Russian.
With the help of a book that contained both the Hebrew and Russian, I taught
Hebrew to a group of ten children who had never before been exposed to Judaism.
Glieb, a ten-year old boy rapidly rose to the top of the class. In addition to
the mandatory hours of daily learning, he was motivated to extend these sessions.
So often at night after the fun and entertainment, he and I would practice reading
Hebrew and we discussed, in simple terms, aspects of Jewish ritual that fascinated
him. It was with Glieb that I formed the deepest bond, one that relied not only on
talking, for he spoke only a minimal amount of English, but rather on demonstrating
our fondness through actions.
A few days before the end of camp, in broken English, Glieb explained that he
had been working endlessly on a present for me. Similarly I had been trying to decide
on something that I could give him. After hours of pondering, I decided to give Glieb
what was most dear to me, my siddur (prayer book), which I had received upon
entering sixth grade. I felt it appropriate to present him with his very first prayer
book. For hours I decorated and transliterated the main prayers and on the last day of
camp, before the kids left, we exchanged presents. He gave me his favorite key-chain of
the "Sylvester" cartoon with an attached lanyard that he had made. Never had a
gift had such a startling effect on me; I burst into tears. I handed him my siddur,
and he stood there for a moment staring at his gift, and I at mine. Tears welled in his
eyes as he continued to look at the siddur. I knew that he truly understood the
significance of our exchange. We hugged goodbye, and I will never forget the feeling of
his arms entwined around me with the siddur pressed against my back.
Who would have thought that I would go to the Ukraine, make such a strong
impression on the lives of a group of children and impact my own? The campers' naive
yet deep questioning took me on a journey of self-discovery as I reexamined my own
beliefs and practices in a foreign environment, spiritually void and materially
deprived. This defining experience also taught me that I can make a difference. By
continuing to work with people in my professional life as a nurse, I will be extending
the passions I discovered during my summer experience. Just as I answered the call for
help in the Ukraine, I intend to respond to future calls for help with action,
kindness, and caring.
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