moving to

http://robt.shepherd.tripod.com/lift.html

from the ashes, we rise


Michelle Rhee
Though unrelated to Coach Reese, Rhee's forceful
resolve to make a difference in education has
been a challenge to systemic inertia



Helping Kids

Someone who made a difference
This article was written 7-29-01, before Coach Reese died

BERLIN, Ohio (AP) - When this community learned its beloved high school basketball coach had a cancerous brain tumor, the news hit hard.

Within days, hundreds of people crowded hospital corridors waiting for a chance to talk to Perry Reese Jr., known affectionately as "Coach."

Former players flew in from Atlanta, Chicago, South Carolina, even Germany. And a prayer vigil drew 800 people, many who quietly cried as they reflected on the man who inspired their children.

"Other than God, he's probably the most loved person in Holmes County," said Doug Klar, whom met Reese 16 years ago while selling athletic equipment to Berlin Hiland High School.

The outpouring of love and support for Reese would be out of the ordinary in many communities. But what makes the display even more noteworthy is that the 47-year-old coach is the only black living in the middle of the world's largest settlement of Amish, a deeply religious group that shuns modern conveniences such as electricity, telephones and cars.

"From the very start, the community has been accepting of him," said Dave Schlabach, coach of the high school girls basketball team. "Here you've got a black Catholic man in a white Amish/Mennonite area - that didn't matter."

Reese fits in as coach and social studies teacher because he extols the virtues of the community: hard work, discipline and respect, said Schlabach. He called Reese the perfect match for a high school where about half the roughly 250 students' backgrounds are Amish or Mennonite, a less strict sect of the Amish.

Reese, who is also a social studies teacher, turned the small farming town of about 1,000 into a basketball community. Over the past 16 years, he has compiled a 304-85 record and led Hiland to its only state championship in 1992. The Hawks advanced to their third consecutive semifinal this past season.

"Hiland was put on the athletic map because of Perry," said Schlabach as he walked through the new high school gym that was funded by $1.3 million in private donations.

Basketball is so hot that 900 of the gym's 1,600 seats are for season-ticket holders and some people put in their wills who will get the tickets.

Reese, who had been suffering from memory loss, found out June 28 that doctors found an inoperable malignant tumor behind his left eye socket. His prognosis is bleak, and it is unclear how long he may live.

Jason Mishler, 18, who was one of the team's stars last season and considers Reese a "second father," was devastated. "When you have someone who wants you to succeed, you can't help but admire him," Mishler said. "Everything about him is so sincere. That's what makes him so unique. I would do anything for him."

Klar admires Reese's courage in his battle against cancer.

"To this day he says, 'You guys go home and go on about your life and don't worry about me,"' he said. "He doesn't want us to worry about him."

Reese, speaking from his farmhouse in nearby Mt. Hope on Thursday, feels uncomfortable about all the attention. He wouldn't talk about his life other than to thank the hundreds of people who have visited him and sent cards.

"There's been a lot of community support and I appreciate and respect that," he said




Who can forget a wonderful teacher . . . .  

his love remains
When God Created Teachers

First Black to Head a College



Want to help? Would you send a gift to
Perry Reese Jr. Foundation, c/o
the Hiland Academic Boosters
P.O. Box 275, Berlin OH 44610


Someone who made a difference - nearly 200 years ago

To be a hero - some dreams linger still

Compassion : can it be taught?

The Amish, Mennonites, and Plain People

Ohio's Amish Country - Official Site & Helps

Amish Heartland - Ohio - Shopping link

Conrad Lindes: JOY, a Quaker Witness


We have an obligation and a responsibility to be investing in our students and our schools. We must make sure that people who have the grades, the desire and the will, but not the money, can still get the best education possible.

Barack Hussein Obama II
44th President of the United States





Put Children First

Mother Teresa Two Souls
Heartland/Woods




The New Martyrs