From the Worldwide Faith News archives www.wfn.org
[UMNS-ALL-NEWS] UMNS# 033-Dance of kings helps inner-city youth
From
NewsDesk <NewsDesk@UMCOM.ORG>
Date
Thu, 19 Jan 2006 17:06:15 -0600
Dance of kings helps inner-city youth
Jan. 19, 2006
NOTE: A UMTV report and photographs are available at
http://umns.umc.org.
By John Gordon*
WASHINGTON (UMNS) - Something more than dancing is taking place as
Barbara Gaskill teaches a ballet lesson at an inner-city elementary
school.
In the shadows of the poverty of a largely immigrant neighborhood,
Gaskill introduces her students to the dance of kings.
"It just changes their whole self-image. You know, they're doing
something special," says Gaskill, who teaches dance history and
appreciation at the University of Maryland-College Park.
Gaskill started The Ballet Studio in 1992 as a ministry of her church,
Metropolitan Memorial United Methodist. She wanted to make it possible
for children to learn ballet regardless of their nationalities or their
families' financial challenges.
She now offers the classes at Brightwood Elementary in Washington. Many
of the families of Brightwood students came to the United States from
Ethiopia, El Salvador, Mexico, Peru and other countries.
"I like ballet because ballet is elegant, and I like ballet because it
was invented by a French king," says Erica Hodge, 7, a second-grader.
Ballet's origins actually can be traced back to Italy during the 1400s.
Under French leadership, the art form developed and became popular in
courts throughout Europe.
Erica's mother, Rosa Santos, is from the Dominican Republic. She
describes the free ballet lessons as a "wonderful opportunity."
"It helps us a lot," Santos says, "because she will have more
opportunity in a lot of places since she learned how to dance ballet.
And our family is really, really proud."
Gaskill's nonprofit organization also offers scholarships to children.
Some have moved on to prestigious high schools and colleges.
"What they learn really is that it doesn't matter what your heritage
is," she says. "Yes, you keep that. Yes, you cherish it. Yes, you bring
it with you and it enhances what you're doing in the classroom and on
the stage, if we ever get there. But it's not something that has to
isolate you."
The lessons they learn in ballet are reflected in the dreams of her
students.
"When I grow up, I want to be an ice skater," says Joselin Flores, 8,
who is from El Salvador.
"I think it might help me because it's kind of like ballet, because
sometimes you have to jump and curtsy and other things," she says.
Gaskill started her program long on heart and short on budget.
The Ballet Studio operates with a budget of about $10,000 a year.
Donations come from Metropolitan Memorial United Methodist and the
United Methodist Women at her church. She also receives support from the
United Way and the Combined Federal Campaign of the National Capital
Area.
Gaskill donates her time to the program and has no other staff. She has
taught dance in the Washington area for three decades and has worked at
George Washington University, United Methodist-related Wesley
Theological Seminary and other schools.
She would like to find a larger home for The Ballet Studio because of
the limitations of operating from a public school.
"We're limited in the number of hours that we can have, the size of the
room we can have, and so we can't reach nearly as many children as I'd
like," she says.
Another goal is to start a summer program this year. Gaskill says the
children of immigrant families seldom venture outside their own
neighborhoods.
"All summer long, they stay cooped up in their own little apartments,"
she says. "So we're working toward doing a summer program."
Meanwhile, Erica Hodge has set her sights on becoming a doctor - and a
ballet teacher.
"I can make other children's dreams come true," she says.
Those kinds of dreams make the effort worthwhile for Gaskill.
"When you walk back into that school in September and you think, 'Oh, I
don't have the strength to do this again, I'm too tired,'" she says,
"and one of the little kids sees you walk in and breaks out of her
teacher's line and just screams 'Miss Barbara' and just flings herself
at you, I mean, it's worth every second."
*Gordon is a freelance producer and writer based in Marshall, Texas.
News media contact: Fran Coode Walsh, Nashville, Tenn., (615) 742-5458
or newsdesk@umcom.org.
********************
United Methodist News Service
Photos and stories also available at:
http://umns.umc.org
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