It goes without saying that Yo Han’s death two years ago, at
the end of his sophomore year, left a big hole in his class. The 25 of them have spent countless hours
together both in and out of school. Like
Yo Han, a number of his classmates arrived at Logos in first grade, the first
year Logos existed. His class was
especially unified in grades 9 and 10, thanks largely to Yo Han and his mixture
of goofiness, warmth, and sincerity.
Junior year, his absence was glaringly obvious. Like the whole Logos community, his peers have needed time to grieve and heal.
Valentine's Day serenades by Yo Han (with the guitar) and his 9th grade peers |
One student who was already serious about his faith realized
that he hadn’t made enough room for other people. He started visiting the preschool lunch
tables (since Logos preschool and high school lunchtimes overlap) to give kids high fives
and smiles. Another has been reading the
Bible more consistently and was baptized last month. In his testimony at the baptism, he mentioned
Yo Han as a critical impetus in his spiritual journey. At least another two re-dedicated their lives
to God because of Yo Han. Their class
didn’t magically switch back to their united, happy selves, but individuals
helped each other grapple with questions and come out stronger. Last year in the yearbook, their class verse
honored him: John 12:24. “Very truly I tell you, unless a kernel of
wheat falls to the ground and dies, it remains only a single seed. But if it dies, it produces many seeds.” Their class has truly illustrated that verse.
Yo Han's picture is shown on the left, next to the verse |
As his class prepared to leave Logos, students found ways to honor Yo Han within school traditions.
At the banquet organized by juniors, seniors all received class rings. The ring store happened to throw in an extra
for free, which the juniors decided to present to Dae Han in memory of Yo
Han. The new senior class mural out by the soccer field includes his favorite phrase, “Carpe
Diem.”
He wasn't forgotten at graduation, either. They all went to visit his grave together after graduation practice. The salutatorian, Stephen Roberts, basically dedicated his graduation speech this weekend to crediting Yo Han for his inspirational example. Yo Han was probably Stephen’s best friend, and while it wasn’t all due to Yo Han, Stephen didn’t exaggerate how much he’s grown in the last couple years. Here’s a clip from it:
CARPE DIEM pages are flipping like summer days it's the new chapter I'm being chased |
While I'd been apprehensive about graduation, it wasn't heartwrenching like I'd feared. There were touching moments: my eyes certainly welled up as we sang “Ten Thousand Reasons,” but overall it felt joyful and affirming. We were celebrating what these students have learned and accomplished, and Yo Han’s role in that was overall positive. I know they miss him and they’ll never forget him, but I’m so glad they were able to celebrate wholeheartedly as a community.
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