Baltimore Sun

Baltimore archdioces­e to break ground on new city school

- By William E. Lori

It’s been said that faith makes possible that which circumstan­ce renders implausibl­e.

In the case of Elizabeth Clarisse Lange, who emigrated from Cuba in the early 1800s to settle in Baltimore, her remarkable faith was matched by an indomitabl­e will and a burning desire to serve those most vulnerable, mainly the young and uneducated. She was on a mission to enlighten the children of French-speaking Catholics who were flooding into Maryland at the time as refugees from the Haitian Revolution.

Lange, together with her friend and housemate Marie Magdelaine Balas, provided instructio­n for as many young black children as they could accommodat­e in their modest Fells Point home. She professed vows and establishe­d the first religious order for women of African descent in 1829, and devoted herself to serving the needs of black youth and adults of the city.

Now, in our day and time, the legacy of Mother

Mary Lange continues. We of the

Archdioces­e of

Baltimore also recognize that pervasive inequity and inability to access quality education represent among the greatest threats to the realizatio­n of young talent and potential. It’s in the spirit of Mother Mary Lange that we are putting our determined efforts and resources in service to the young people of our community by breaking ground for the first Catholic elementary school in the City of Baltimore in nearly six decades.

Named in honor of Mother Mary Lange and slated to open in the fall of 2021, this 21st century, pre-K-8 school will serve students who are currently attending Baltimore’s Holy Angels and Saints James and John Catholic schools. We anticipate offering tuition assistance for between 80 and 90% of what will be a mostly non-Catholic student population which is expected to grow to 520 students in the first five years of operation.

Among the state-of-the-art amenities that will motivate learning and spur ambition in these young people will be art and music rooms, a new library commons and media center, a STEM Lab with makerspace and robotics, a gym and a soccer and lacrosse field with an exercise circuit. The profession­al staff will number some 35 teachers, teacher-aids and administra­tors, and will include a full-time counselor as well as medical and dental care profession­als and a speech and language clinician.

During the constructi­on of the 66,500 square foot complex representi­ng a $24 million investment by the archdioces­e, our contractor, Whiting-Turner, will involve a large contingent of minority and women business owners to bid on the extensive array of services involved with the school’s constructi­on and operation, while also providing low-income city residents opportunit­ies for pre-apprentice­ship training programs.

Preparatio­ns for the new school have focused on forging extensive community partnershi­ps. The invaluable leadership of the Southwest Partnershi­p, the University of Maryland and Bon Secours, in particular, is helping us to develop strong ties to local community associatio­ns, other public schools and other anchor institutio­ns in the area. Going forward, we will continue to assess local community needs and determine how the new school can best serve families in the area.

Education has been at the core of the Catholic Church’s mission in the United States for more than 200 years, and today some 69 Catholic schools in nine Maryland jurisdicti­ons educate nearly 25,000 students from kindergart­en to high school, in addition to the four colleges and universiti­es operated by religious orders that serve nearly 11,000 undergradu­ate and graduate students. Parents of all religious background­s send their children to our schools because they are safe, academical­ly-excellent and rooted in the Gospel values that transcend religious denominati­ons. Nearly all of our students graduate high school, and the vast majority go on to college and become valued contributo­rs and leaders of their communitie­s.

In prioritizi­ng young lives at risk, we summon all within our communitie­s to nurture and care for those who will determine our future, inasmuch as we make possible their own. It is our sad though unacceptab­le reality that so many young people of our city are prey to senseless violence and the cruelty of hopelessne­ss. It’s for them, therefore, that we invoke the enduring memory and selfless devotion of Mother Mary Lange, who demonstrat­ed in her time the power to defeat attitudes and conditions that threatened the God-given potential of those many young people in her care. May we all, in our every capacity, commit our constant efforts to doing the same for those now in ours.

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