“Miss Sarah, what does justice mean?”

Aug 5, 2013

intern1a

Cristóbal, a rising sixth grader, asked this question of one of our summer interns after reading and acting out the story of Jack and the Beanstalk during their tutoring session. Ironically, he had asked the very question that our interns had come to explore.

For the past four years, Casa Chirilagua has accepted college interns for the summer from Intervarsity Christian Fellowship, an on-campus ministry that seeks to disciple students in the midst of their college years. The summer internship program goes by the name Bridge DC, but it mostly looks like this: college kids meandering around the neighborhood looking lost for two weeks, followed by two weeks of the same college kids meandering around the neighborhood getting swarmed by kids who have grown to love them.

These students come to explore what the gospel has to do with life on this earth, and particularly what His words and life say about how to address justice in our society. During the seven weeks of the program, we invite them to experience how Casa Chirilagua has answered God’s call to seek justice. This summer our interns lived in the same apartment buildings that our Kids Club students inhabit. They survived on thirty dollars a week. They shared their lives together. They went house to house in the neighborhood for reading lessons with the kids four days a week.

intern1

Sarah answered Cristóbal’s question by explaining that “justice is when you treat people according to who they are so that everyone has an equal chance at good things. It’s about balance, even though sometimes it does not seem fair.”

Cristóbal seemed confused by this answer. We illustrated by saying that in a game, for example, we treat younger and smaller kids differently than older kids, so that both stay safe and still get a chance to play the game.

“Oh, because if you push the little one he’ll fall, but the older one will be ok,” he said, seeming to understand.

“Exactly,” she said, “so that even though they’re being treated differently, and so it’s not ‘fair,’ it’s justice so that each of them get an equal chance at having fun.”

Cristóbal paused for a moment, then nodded. “I think I get it.”

intern2

Each year, the summer passes quickly, but the mark that the Bridge-DC program leaves on both the interns and our students lingers. Our kids’ reading ability improves, giving them a much needed boost for the fall. Our interns return to their Colleges and Universities having walked a mile in the shoes of our families.

As a staff, we close this summer of reading intervention and Bridge-DC smelling the scent of justice as Cristóbal learned about it in the air. For more than anything, the summer partnership takes people out of their normal routine and brings them together.  Through this yearly collision, God can treat our families and our interns according to who they are, so that everyone has a better chance at a very good thing: seeing a piece of His kingdom on earth.

intern3

Casa Chirilagua 2013 Summer Interns

 

We are a community of people “learning together to love our neighbors as ourselves” in a Latino neighborhood in Alexandria, Virginia.

As a faith-based Christian non-profit with a small staff and over 100 volunteers, we serve alongside more than 100 families and their children (1st-12th grades) each week through our community programs.

Learn More

Get Involved

Our relational network of volunteers and donors reflects a diverse group of individuals from all over the Washington, D.C. metro area. As a non-profit, we rely on the community for assisting program directors on-site, being mentors, supplying the needs of our food pantry, and everything in between. Each member of our Casa community holds a unique gift, whether time, talent or treasure.