Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

REMAKING THE PLUNGE

Students get creative after pandemic causes cancellati­on of Chicago tradition

- BY PAT NABONG, STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER pnabong@suntimes.com | @pat_nabong

The COVID-19 pandemic has forced many to reimagine traditions, and that includes the Polar Plunge, an annual rite that usually sends thousands of people jumping into the freezing waters of Lake Michigan to raise money for Special Olympics Chicago.

Instead, teachers and students took the tradition inland Saturday morning to the campus of St. Patrick High School in the Belmont Central neighborho­od, where they ran across a football field, threw rubber chickens through hula hoops, did pushups and plunged into a pool filled with snow and water.

The Northwest Side school, which has been participat­ing in the Polar Plunge for the past five years, raised about $10,700 for Special Olympics Chicago and Special Children’s Charities this year, according to Christophe­r Perez, St. Patrick’s assistant principal.

“We have to stay safe. That’s the No. 1 priority, especially during a pandemic,” said Dominic Sabella, an alumnus who took part. “If they have to change, they have to change to the new safety protocols, but being able to still participat­e in the tradition is really big and important.”

Students did likewise earlier in the week at Marist High School, running through an elaborate obstacle course with a “polar cannon” shooting out water like a fire hydrant.

Organizers of the citywide Polar Plunge called off the in-person event earlier this year, opting instead for a virtual fundraiser which runs through Sunday at www.chicagopol­arplunge.org. They encourage participan­ts to “plunge safely in a setting of their choosing, whether it be jumping in the snow or running through a sprinkler.”

 ?? PAT NABONG/SUN-TIMES ?? ABOVE: A student jumps into a wading pool filled with snow and water on Saturday for St. Patrick High School’s version of the Polar Plunge.
PAT NABONG/SUN-TIMES ABOVE: A student jumps into a wading pool filled with snow and water on Saturday for St. Patrick High School’s version of the Polar Plunge.
 ?? TYLER LARIVIERE/SUN-TIMES ?? LEFT: Marist High School students run through a specially-designed “polar cannon” as a coronaviru­ssafe Polar Plunge alternativ­e on Tuesday.
TYLER LARIVIERE/SUN-TIMES LEFT: Marist High School students run through a specially-designed “polar cannon” as a coronaviru­ssafe Polar Plunge alternativ­e on Tuesday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States