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Commencement Ceremonies Celebrate Resilience and ‘Small Acts of Courage’

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grads in sunglasses in line
grad with hands adjusting cap
dean and banner bearers
woman grad in cap
spectators cheering
graduates carrying another grad
Student speaker at Commencement podium
Board chair Bob Daleo and his wife, Linda, flanking their nephew how graduated
parents waving banners and taking photos
Grads in line
Student speaker at Commencement podium
Father McShane at podium with flowers
grad in line pointing at camera with diploma
student speaker at podium
Grad scholar with Toppetas
student speaker at podium
Dean Donna Rapaccioli at podium in purple robe
Grad and woman
Fitzmaurices hugging their grad son
Father McShane with students
student in line-up with caps and gowns
two grads and family
two grads hugging

With a week of sunny diploma ceremonies on the Rose Hill campus and a University-wide Commencement videocast on May 22 that honored graduates for their bravery and resilience, Fordham flipped the script on an unprecedented year and offered the Class of 2021 a chance to celebrate and look forward with hope.

At that videocast ceremony, Joseph M. McShane, S.J., president of Fordham, officially conferred nearly 5,500 degrees upon graduates from nine Fordham schools. He acknowledged that it was not the commencement anyone had expected for them. Fordham’s traditional celebration on Edwards Parade was replaced by smaller diploma ceremonies and online broadcasts, with some graduates celebrating only virtually. It was one of many aspects of college life curtailed by the global pandemic “at a time when the whole world has been haunted by fear and overshadowed by loss.”

But, Father McShane said, Commencement was a day to celebrate. While some might have given in to despair, he said, the Class of 2021 persevered.

“You never surrendered,” he said. “Rather, you rose to every challenge that the world threw at you. You gave yourselves to a more than usually intense search for answers and for meaning.”

Small Acts of Courage Matter

Michelle Howard
In a remote address, Michelle Howard told the class of 2020 that they have acts of courage within them.

In her keynote address broadcast during Saturday’s ceremony, retired Navy Admiral Michelle Howard, the first woman to become a four-star admiral, harkened back to Martin Luther King Jr.’s observation that the ultimate measure of a person is not where they stand in moments of convenience and comfort, but where they stand in moments of challenge and controversy.

She cited the experience that Lieutenant Commander Wesley Brown, the first African American to graduate from her alma mater, Annapolis, relayed to her in conversations.

When Brown enrolled in the mid-1940s, segregation isolated him in every capacity—in the classroom, the cafeteria, and in his room. His classmates actively tried to sabotage his progress. Keeping one’s quarters spotless was of utmost importance in the naval academy, so when he returned to find them trashed, he braced for the worst when the white officer arrived for inspection.

“This officer is just looking around, and there’s silence. Finally, he says, ‘Midshipman Brown, I suspect this room did not look like this this morning.’ And Wesley Brown said, ‘No sir.’ So, the officer said, ‘Carry on,’ and he left,” she said.

That officer’s actions inspired Brown to continue his studies, she said, and showed that even small acts of courage can make a difference in other’s lives.

“Whether in times of comfort or convenience, times of challenge and controversy, you know you have it within you. You can do these small acts of courage,” she said.

A Week Like No Other

FCLC student speaker Aaron Silver told graduates, “Our education is the mechanism to shift the narrative.”

While many of the themes of the 176th Commencement felt familiar, events also reflected the fact that the pandemic is beginning to ease, but not entirely over. Pairs of seats dotted Edwards Parade in socially distanced configurations. Masks were required at Rose Hill on Monday and Tuesday, but by Wednesday the mandate was lifted for outdoor use in accordance with evolving state health guidelines.

The victory bell that marks the beginning of a University-wide ceremony that in normal times draws thousands to the Rose Hill Campus was put into service several times for smaller diploma ceremonies. More than 1,500 seniors from Fordham College at Rose Hill, Fordham College at Lincoln Center, and the Gabelli School of Business arrived with two guests for ceremonies that ran from May 17 to May 20.

A Moment of Shared Victory

In his speech during the main videocast on Saturday, Father McShane acknowledged the unusual times, and shouted out to the parents and families for their role in a day of “shared victory, shared triumph, and shared accomplishment.”

He noted that the class of 2021 is finishing its studies in spite of living through a year that featured a global pandemic, an economic downturn, a reckoning with racism, a bruising presidential election campaign, and an assault on the U.S. Capitol and the democratic principles upon which our nation has been built and sustained.

“The toll that these cascading plagues has taken on all of us, and on you in a special way, has been enormous,” he said.

“With ease and grace, you became one another’s keepers, and in the process, you became ministers of cura personalis to one another,” he said.

A Return to Campus Brings Flood of Emotions

Emily Raff, Beatiz Barraclough-Tan and Grace Mulligan-Tick
Emily Raff, Beatriz Barraclough-Tan, and Grace Mulligan-Tick

The return to the Rose Hill campus brought forth a range of feelings, some bittersweet.

After a fall of remote learning from her parent’s house in Rochester, New York, Beatriz Barraclough-Tan, an anthropology major at Fordham College at Rose Hill, was grateful to return to campus in January, where she was able to share on-campus housing with her friend, Grace Mulligan Tuck, who she was walking with on Monday.

She was also thankful that she was able to continue to sing with the Scola Cantorum choir. When the pandemic hit, they recorded themselves singing alone for an online project, but eventually, they were allowed to sing in the University Church, behind plexiglass, in limited numbers.

“At the Baccalaureate Mass, we had nine seniors who were able to sing,” she said. “I almost cried yesterday when we were coming out.”

Marla Louissaint and Julia Zecchina
Marla Louissaint and Julia Zecchina

Nearby, Marla Louissaint, a Founder’s Scholar who earned a degree in computer science from Fordham College at Rose Hill, was sporting a custom-made mask with “Claim Our Space Now” and “BLM” on it; the former being the name of a nonprofit she started in May that aims to dismantle white supremacy and save Black lives.

Having come to the United States from Haiti as an undocumented immigrant—she became a U.S. citizen when she was 6—Louissaint said she felt proud, but also felt the weight of her ancestors who were denied education.

She credited her father for pushing her to finish her degree even as she pursued opportunities such as a role in the Broadway show Beautiful: The Carole King Musical, which she toured with in 2018.

“He was like, ‘Yes, you’re an artist, but we came to the States to give you this life. Please finish your degree no matter what.’ It took six years, but we’re here today!” she said.

A Celebration for Parents

Lori and Tim Considine
Lori and Tim Considine

On Tuesday, Lori and Tim Considine were soaking in the atmosphere on Edwards Parade and reflecting on the past four years. To make it to a 9 a.m. diploma ceremony, the Highland, New York residents caught a 5:15 a.m. train from Poughkeepsie. They were there for their son Samuel, who was graduating from the Gabelli School of Business with a bachelor’s degree in finance.

“We were just looking at pictures of when we dropped him off, and I am just so proud of him. This is the happiest I’ve been in a long time,” Lori said.

Both Samuel and his sister Celeste, a junior at SUNY Plattsburgh, opted for remote learning for this year, and to mark the occasion of his return to campus, Samuel wore a pair of hiking shoes that he’d purchased the day that Fordham suspended in-person instruction in March 2020.

Olivia and Anthony Quartell
Olivia and Anthony Quartell

For Anthony Quartell, FCRH ’64, Wednesday was the best day of his life, because his daughter, Olivia was also graduating from Fordham College at Rose Hill.

“I dreamed of this. We have five children,” he said, and finally one was graduating from his alma mater. “It’s a day I wasn’t sure I was going to get to have.”

Olivia, a double major in political science and communications and culture, said Fordham has had a special place in her heart since her first trip to campus.

“Getting to come here after hearing about it from him—he grew up around here—made that very special for me,” she said.

Savoring One Last Swing Through Campus

Sophia Zehler
Sophia Zehler

The person inside the Ramses mascot isn’t often known, but on Thursday, Sophia Zehler decided to reveal her identity, with a cap decorated with a photo of her and the mascot head, and a line that reads “It was me.”

When she transferred to Fordham her sophomore year, Zehler heard about an opening for the mascot position and decided to give it a shot. Her favorite Fordham memory was appearing as The Ram on The Tonight Show with Jimmy Fallon that year.

“It’s exciting to be here. It’s not how I wanted it to end, but I’m happy I got a lot of experiences like this,” she said.

Nel Patel
Nel Patel

For Nel Patel, a Rockaway, New Jersey, native who majored in applied accounting and finance at the Gabelli School of Business, just being on Edwards Parade on a warm spring day on Wednesday was reliving his fondest memory.

“After four years, I can say this place is probably one of my favorite places in the world,” he said.

“I’m glad I could share this moment with my classmates and friends. It will definitely be special to reminisce about this down the line.”

The Celebration Continues

Virtual diploma ceremonies for the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, the Graduate School of Religion and Religious Education, and the School of Professional and Continuing Studies were held immediately after the ceremony. The School of Professional and Continuing Studies will also confer diplomas in a ceremony at the Rose Hill campus on Sunday, May 23.

The Graduate School of Education will hold an in-person diploma ceremony on Sunday, May 23, and will hold a virtual ceremony on Monday, May 24.

The School of Law will confer diplomas in a virtual ceremony on Sunday, May 23, that will feature an address by former Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton. An in-person ceremony will be held at the Rose Hill campus on Monday, May 24.

The Gabelli School of Business will confer diplomas to its masters and Ph.D. students in a virtual ceremony on the morning of Tuesday, May 25, followed by an in-person ceremony in the afternoon at the Rose Hill campus. The Graduate School of Social Service will confer diplomas in a virtual ceremony on Tuesday, May 25.

In addition, the University will hold in-person ceremonies for members of the Class of 2020 the weekend of June 5.

Additional reporting by Adam Kaufman and Kelly Kultys

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