My Turn: Memory of Challenger must live on

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Today marks the 30th anniversary of the Space Shuttle Challenger disaster, which took the lives of seven NASA astronauts, including Kona’s own – Col. Ellison Onizuka.

Today marks the 30th anniversary of the Space Shuttle Challenger disaster, which took the lives of seven NASA astronauts, including Kona’s own – Col. Ellison Onizuka.

For many individuals, Jan. 28 will come and go as any other day, but for many in the West Hawaii community, it will bring back memories of: Where were you when you heard/witnessed the accident? For a large number of students, teachers, families and community members, it was viewed live — some at home, some at school and some surrounding the monitors at KTA.

As an educator, having spent three decades in Kona’s schools, I had the difficult task of consoling and debriefing middle schoolers who had witnessed the televised tragedy in 1986. It was my first year of teaching, and no university program could have prepared me for dealing with the shock, anxiety, confusion and grief experienced by those young learners, peers and colleagues, or even me.

As the community and nation mourned, and U.S. citizens began to come to terms with the incredible loss, days turned to months, months turned to years, and small glimmers of hope began to emerge in remembrance of the STS-51 astronauts. Through the dedication and determination of families of the Challenger crew numerous scholarships were created, the “Challenger Center” was established, and NASA’s “Day of Remembrance” was instituted. However, for the West Hawaii community, it was the creation of a local museum – Col. Ellison Onizuka Space Center at the Kona Airport in the early 1990s, honoring Col. Onizuka as a way to come together, celebrate and remember a local boy’s legacy.

While teaching at Konawaena Middle School in 2011, I reminded my classes about the pending 25th anniversary (at the time) of the Challenger accident, only to be met by blank stares. This new generation of learners was born between 1997-1999, over a decade after the tragedy occurred and had little knowledge of the disaster or the man behind the name on the school’s gymnasium.

It was during that school year, a most rewarding service learning project spearheaded by 12 and 13 year olds was imagined, and implemented. Commemorated through a video documentary entitled “Dear Ellison” — available on www.SchoolTube.com — Konawaena Middle schoolers researched NASA’s archives, collected oral histories from family members who remembered the disaster, and invited Ellison’s surviving siblings – Claude Onizuka and Shirley Matsuoka – to the school to share their appreciation project. (https://www.schooltube.com/video/ebaa467c0f50cc5d25d9/Dear%20Ellison)

Additionally, the Association for Middle Level Education (AMLE.org) published the experience in its magazine entitled “Dear Ellison – a Service Learning Project.”

So as the month of January in the year of 2016 comes to a close, I reflect upon an epic tragedy that shook my community 30 years ago. I will remember an airport museum that opened its doors, and the minds of visitors from near and far, sadly closing to future guests. But mostly, I remember the students who weren’t old enough to experience encounters by a local role model, but will be guided by his messages and memory in their own future endeavors.

Mahalo Ellison for the opportunity to grow as an educator, and an individual, over the last three decades in Kona’s public schools.

Dr. Sandy Cameli, author, is the HIDOE Educational Specialist in Honolulu.

My Turn opinions are those of the writer and not West Hawaii Today