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Texas teacher’s legacy of kindness lives on after her death

By JAMIE STENGLE, Associated Press
Published: August 23, 2021, 6:00am
7 Photos
In this Dec. 18, 2018, photo, Zelene Blancas, a first-grade bilingual teacher at Dr. Sue Shook Elementary School in El Paso, Texas, shows the Twitter video she posted of her students hugging one another after class that went viral. Blancas died of COVID-19 in Dec. 2020.
In this Dec. 18, 2018, photo, Zelene Blancas, a first-grade bilingual teacher at Dr. Sue Shook Elementary School in El Paso, Texas, shows the Twitter video she posted of her students hugging one another after class that went viral. Blancas died of COVID-19 in Dec. 2020. (Rudy Gutierrez/The El Paso Times via AP) Photo Gallery

DALLAS — Searching for a way to honor Texas teacher Zelene Blancas after her death late last year from COVID-19, a fellow educator over 2,000 miles (3,200 kilometers) away relied on the kindness of others to get a painted, heart-shaped rock to her school.

After almost five months on the road, being transported by a handful of people, the rock arrived as school started this month at El Paso’s Dr. Sue A. Shook Elementary, where Blancas taught and was remembered by her principal as someone who “embodied kindness.”

“The legacy that she’s leaving of being kind to others, making everybody feel special, taking the time to get to know someone and letting them know you’re special,” principal Cristina Sanchez-Chavira said, “that was her.”

It was a fitting tribute to the 35-year-old whose video of her bilingual class of first graders in El Paso charmed Twitter users in 2018. The clip showed students hugging each other as they streamed out of the classroom — a ritual they carried out to start and end each day.

“She wanted them to know that they were loved when they arrived, there was somebody waiting for them,” Sanchez-Chavira said. “And then as they left: This is your place, we love you here.”

After the video went viral, Pinksocks Life, a nonprofit that works to promote human connections, reached out. Through that initiative she linked up on Twitter with Brian Aikens, a third and fourth grade special education teacher in Royersford, Pennsylvania, outside Philadelphia.

In early 2020, before the pandemic upended life in the U.S., Blancas and Aikens introduced their students virtually, with Aikens’ students reading to hers.

After Blancas’ death on Dec. 28, Aikens said he talked with his students about what they could do in her memory.

During the pandemic shutdown, he had begun delivering painted rocks to his students at home to help them still feel connected. Now he thought of a heart-shaped stone, big enough to fill an adult’s open hand, that had been gracing his front porch since his young son found it on a hike. On it he had painted the words “love more fear less” — a Pinksocks slogan.

“When Zelene passed I just felt like, you know what, this is the time to pass this rock on, this is where it needs to go,” Aikens said.

The rock began its journey in March, when the daughter of Aikens’ assistant had a hockey tournament in North Carolina.

Pete Metzgar, who is active with Pinksocks, had also agreed to take it, and a colleague from Raleigh picked it up and got it to him weeks later when they met up for work in Alabama. From there it went back to North Carolina when Metzgar took it to his home in Charlotte.

Metzgar, who travels frequently for his work in telemedicine, started posting online to find someone to take it West, but finally when he traveled to Phoenix in June, he arranged to leave it with a friend.

The stone’s journey stalled there, and it looked like it wasn’t going to make it out of Arizona in time for the start of school in El Paso. So Monica Aguilera, whose job at Shook Elementary is to help connect students with outside resources, made a weekend road trip to retrieve it. She had dinner in Phoenix with Metzgar’s friend and returned with the rock — seeing “rainbows everywhere” on the drive home.

As Aikens’ students followed the rock’s journey online, they met virtually with Shook Elementary teacher Lindsay Taylor’s first grade class and learned about each other’s cities.

Taylor said the exchange was a ray of hope in a trying year that inspired her students to come up with their own gestures of kindness.

“It kind of gave them this, ‘Oh, we can make the best out of a bad situation,’” Taylor said.

The kindness rock will visit each classroom before being placed in a case alongside a picture of Blancas and a plaque.

Mario Blancas said part of his sister’s drive to help students came from their own struggles with English after moving to El Paso from neighboring Juarez, Mexico, when they were young.

“She enjoyed every single day with her students. She was a teacher, but at the same time, she was advocating for her students,” he said.

Zelene Blancas also looked out for her own family and doted on her two dogs. She enjoyed a special bond with her young niece, with the two spending time doing everything from baking cookies to having relaxing spa days.

“For her short life, she left so much behind,” great-aunt Martha Contreras said. “Unforgettably beautiful footprints.”

Associated Press writer Acacia Coronado contributed to this report from Austin, Texas.

“One Good Thing” is a series that highlights individuals whose actions provide glimmers of joy in hard times — stories of people who find a way to make a difference, no matter how small. Read the collection of stories at https://apnews.com/hub/one-good-thing

Associated Press religion coverage receives support from the Lilly Endowment through The Conversation U.S. The AP is solely responsible for this content.

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