4 minute read
Once an Eagle Always an Eagle
MSD Alumni come together to support the Coral Springs and Parkland community
Tragedy often brings people with a similar past together. With a common desire to make a difference after the deadly shooting in their hometown on Feb. 14, many Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School alumni found themselves getting in touch with one another, each eager to lend their support to the Parkland/Coral Springs community.
Just hours after the news broke out, friends Judith Danovitch (class of 1996), Rachel Nyswander Thomas (class of 1998) and Kim Moscaritolo (class of 1996), created a Facebook group titled Mobilizing MSD Alumni. They hoped to get in contact with other MSD alumni to figure out a way to help their former beloved city.
Mobilizing MSD Alumni, which now has over 11,500 members, has three main objectives: outreach, advocacy and building alumni community.
According to the group’s website, outreach initiatives deal with providing support to MSD students and teachers, as well as organizing recovery and advocacy projects with the school and the Parkland community.
Advocacy is a much broader initiative, which involves taking action to demand policy change, encouraging voter registration on a national scale and amplifying the voices of student activists and victims’ families.
The community aspect correlates to strengthening alumni connections, finding new alumni and maintaining strong ties to MSD.
One alumnus, Jesse Lapin-Bertone (class of 2000), who still lives in Coral Springs, mainly focuses on the outreach pillar. Through his membership, Lapin- Bertone has had countless opportunities to work with MSD students and teachers.
Lapin-Bertone has aided his help in many service projects; he helped produce the “Shine” music video, supported campus events, such as Dance Marathon and the Feis Bowl, and even brought modulars and furniture on campus so therapy could occur in a private setting during the last few months of the school year.
Recently, Lapin-Bertone helped bring suicide intervention training to staff and students over the summer and wrapped up the installation and training of Stop the Bleed kits for MSD classrooms for the upcoming year. According to the alumni, none of these changes would have been made possible without the overflow of support from the organization.
Another MSD alumna, Nicole Sloan (class of 2007), now lives in New York City, after graduating from Indiana University. With a background in marketing and social media, Sloan contributed her skills to help run Mobilizing MSD Alumni’s social media accounts.
According to many alumnae like Sloan and Tori Ford, who graduated from MSD in 2013 and then from Elon University in North Carolina in 2017, their favorite part about being included in a group like this is that they have been granted the opportunity to connect with so many alumni they did not know existed or lived by them.
Whether receiving their high school diploma recently or years ago, the MSD alumni will forever hold onto their fond memories from when they attended the school. From being president of a club, going to nationals with the band, traveling for Mu Alpha Theta math competitions or sharing MSD school spirit, each alumni has a vivid and unique memory of the high school, remembering the high standards that shaped them into who they are today.
Though the Feb. 14 shooting at MSD gave additional meaning to the school, the perception of the alumni has not changed. They will hold onto their adored memories as they support the Parkland and Coral Springs communities and fight for change in the country in honor of the 17 victims. As new eagles leave the nest year after year, Mobilizing MSD Alumni encourages them to find a place in their organization and join the effort in supporting their hometown.
Story by Zoe Gordon