Students who organized relief included in KOCE spot
Michael Miller
Children in Phuket, Thailand, are not a world apart from those in
Corona del Mar. They live by the ocean in areas popular among
tourists. They, on occasion, enjoy water fights with their friends --
although in a Buddhist country, such as Thailand, getting wet is a
symbol of spiritual cleansing as much as a way of beating the
weather.
After the tsunami in December, however, the two cities had a
significant difference: One had just been leveled by tragedy, and the
other was eager to give. When Sarah Weiland, a graduate of Corona del
Mar High School, visited Phuket in February, she made a connection.
“It was luck,” said Weiland, who works for the nonprofit
Leadership Institute for Teens in Newport Coast. “It was fate. I was
just there and researching, filming a bunch of areas where the
tsunami hit. I began talking to a man who owns the Andaman Holiday
Resort in Krabi, and we began to discuss how students at Corona
really wanted to have an ongoing contact with where they were
donating their money. He had just received a message from a school
that had lost a huge amount of money and supplies.”
Weiland rode across Thailand to investigate, and in March, Corona
del Mar High students raised $4,000 in an all-day charity concert for
the Dow Roong Wittaya School in Phuket. Since then, the community on
the south tip of Thailand has taken steps to rebuild -- and the media
have taken notice. On Monday, KOCE-TV premiered “Calming the Waters,”
a half-hour documentary about Thailand featuring a segment on the
Corona del Mar High students.
“We appreciate it,” said Santi Chudintra, director of the Tourism
Authority of Thailand, at a premier party at the KOCE studio Monday
evening. “The people who live in that area lost many things. Some
lost their parents; some lost their school. The assistance provided
to them is a great thing.”
About two dozen people, including Weiland, her family and several
representatives from the Tourism Authority, gathered on Monday to
watch the program and enjoy Thai cuisine. On display around the tiny
room on the Golden West College campus were pamphlets promoting
tourism -- Thailand’s biggest industry before the tsunami hit.
“Calming the Waters,” directed and narrated by KOCE’s Peter
Murphy, concentrates on Thailand’s culture more than its recent
tragedy, but it also devotes several minutes to the drive at Corona
del Mar High. Along with footage of the benefit concert on the campus
quad, the documentary includes scenes shot at the Dow Roong school in
which students talk about their lives following the tsunami.
In all, Corona del Mar High donated funds to 66 youths who had
suffered major losses.
Weiland, who shot some of the footage and served as associate
producer, went to Thailand with a specific mission in mind. Her
mother, Denise Weiland, advises the Anthro Club at Corona del Mar
High, and students at the school had begun plans for a charity
concert to benefit the tsunami victims.
“When I came back to school after winter break, I was bombarded
with students coming into my office from all different clubs,” Denise
Weiland said. “They all said, ‘We want to do something for the people
in Asia.’”
In February, Sarah Weiland and Leadership Institute founder Lucy
Steinberg ventured around the world in search of a recipient for the
concert revenues. Members of the Anthro Club, which sponsors and
holds charity events in Southern California and abroad, were thrilled
with the eventual choice.
“When the idea was presented by Mrs. Weiland and Sarah and Lucy,
we were blown away by how perfect it was -- a high school helping a
high school,” said Zan Margolis, 16, the Anthro co-president. “The
whole world was donating to places like the Red Cross, and we wanted
to do something a little more personalized.”
Zan, who is interviewed briefly in “Calming the Waters,” had the
experience of watching herself on TV for the first time.
“I thought it was a cool project, and I’m honored to be a part of
it,” she said.
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