I moved back to my hometown, Shenandoah,
Pennsylvania, in 2002, after being away for nineteen years. The
transition of moving back then was quite difficult for me because the
town I remember from my youth is quite different from the town as it is
today.
My hometown is in the heart of the Pennsylvania coal region.
When the coal industry was booming, Shenandoah’s population was
approximately thirty thousand. The mines, however, are no longer open;
they closed in the early nineteen-fifties. The closing of the mines
caused the population in Shenandoah and the coal region as a whole to
decline. Today, fewer than 5,000 people live in my hometown. The average
income is somewhere around seventeen thousand per year, and the
majority of the people are on public assistance. The town’s poverty has
also resulted in higher crime and drug use among the youth.
Forty-four percent of our town’s population is made up of
senior citizens. The seniors are very vocal and negative about the
town's decline as well. However, I enjoy listening to their stories of
what the town was like before I was born, when various Department stores
lined the main street. I was very shocked and saddened by the number of
vacant lots and vacant buildings in my town.
What bothers me the most is that the majority of our town’s
teenagers congregate on the main street out of boredom. Most if not all,
of our town’s youth will move out of the coal region once they graduate
high school or college. They will move to where there are high-paying
jobs and better employment opportunities. This is the main reason why
the outward migration is greater than the people moving into our region.
I was contemplating moving away from the area once again, but
I decided to stay to cultivate ways of teaching the history of our town
to the younger generation. Some of the friendships I have made over the
last five years have also helped me become more involved in my
community.
I have always been intrigued by our town’s history. The
history was mostly passed down to me orally by some of the miners'
widows and my grandparents. They were proud to live in the coal region
because of its rich ethnic diversity and heritage.
I was very bitter about the change I saw in Shenandoah
because I felt people were losing touch with our town’s past. I tried my
best, however, to accentuate what is positive in our community rather
than dwelling solely on the negative.
It wasn’t until a tragic event occurred on August 4, 2006,
that my perception of the region changed in a very dramatic way. On that
date, a fifteen-year-old boy, Aaron Kegolis, was severely injured in an
auto accident. His girlfriend, who was driving the vehicle, lost
control of her car after a blowout of one of the tires. The car rolled
over an embankment, and Aaron Kegolis, who was a passenger in the car,
was thrown from the vehicle. He suffered a severe head injury. While he
lay in a coma, I witnessed the entire community reach out to his family.
That auto accident was truly tragic it changed not only
Aaron’s life but his family and friends' lives as well. His family told
me that he has a long road of recovery ahead of him. The difficult road
that Aaron is on is being made a bit easier, though, by the outpour of
love and affection from his family, friends, and the entire community.
The coal region is known for being economically depressed
from lack of jobs and resources, but the community’s concern for Aaron
only goes to show that the coal region is still rich with heart and
soul.
The entire community has come together and organized
fundraisers for Aaron's family. There were softball tournaments -
twenty-five teams played each other which raised a lot of money for
Aaron. There were dances organized by the high school students. Concerts
were held and t-shirts with - “Aaron bringing a community together” -
were sold. Along with various other events that were organized over the
last six months.
These fundraising events did much more than raise funds for
Aaron. They brought our entire community together out of compassion for
one of our own.
We have a tendency to judge one's generosity in terms of
dollars, and there is no doubt that a lot of money has been raised to
help Aaron's family. Those monetary donations are truly needed to aid
Aaron with his recovery. What will never be forgotten, though, in the
hearts and minds of our community are the small acts of kindness,
because this kindness has a profound effect on the giver and the
receiver, but most of all on our entire community.
Most people think that little acts of generosity are
insignificant, but every little kind act resonates through our
community. When we reach out to enhance the life and well-being of a
person in need, we in turn enhance our own lives.
Aaron has shown everyone that he has a loving family and a
lot of friends who truly care for him. It was their collective
collaboration of love that brought the entire community together in a
way that I have never seen before, which is truly heartwarming. It makes
one proud to live in a community that cares.
Our community, with its outpour of love and affection, has
shown Aaron and his family that you can measure the true worth of a
person's character not by what they amassed over the years but by what
they give to others. Our greatest gifts in the coal region are not
measured monetarily because they come from the heart. Those heartfelt
acts of generosity for Aaron resonate through our community like
enlightening words of love, which are far more precious than monetary
gifts.
The truest heroes in our community are the ones who reach out
to those of the least influence - the ones who do not have the means to
return the favor. The coal region has a lot of heroes, and they are the
ones who have the profoundest effect on our community. It is through
their kindness and love that they will always be remembered.
Always with love,
Thomas F O'Neill
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