Erickson Tribune

Ann's Choice

UPDATED: Wednesday, April 30, 2008

Giving to others

Posted on Wednesday, April 30, 2008
 

By Colleen Wald
ANN’S CHOICE RESIDENT

I first met Lil (Lillian) Griff when I took up knitting, again.

I dropped in on the Ann’s Choice Sit and Stitch Club to plead for some help in unraveling the purls where I should have knitted the dropped stitch that left a hole ten rows back. This sweater was becoming a real “oy vey!”

After asking for help, all the fingers pointed to Lil, the club’s maven, whose grandmother taught her to knit and crochet when she was just seven years old.

An answer and a lesson
She quickly and quietly remedied the “boo-boos” I had made, while I chattered away about a sweater pattern book I had purchased and the design I couldn’t wait to try—would she help me?

Looking me in the eye as her fingers flew over the yarn with the needles, she said in an authoritative tone, “Finish this one first, then we’ll talk.”

I thought of all the knitting projects I had started and neglected to complete— scarves that fringed or still needed binding off , a quarter of an afghan, the front of a too-small sweater. The list went on. But her valuable lesson stuck. After all, you’re never too old to learn. And while it may take me a year, I will complete the sweater.

Reaching out to accomplish good
Lil carries the same attitude to her classes at Bishop-McDevitt High School where she volunteers to teach math, chemistry, and physics for two hours, three days a week. Her main concern is with students who have no incentive to learn.

One day she walked to the parking lot with a young man who only showed up to school twice a week and asked him what kind of grade he expected to get. He said a C.

“That’s totally unacceptable,” Lil said.

He asked, “What is acceptable?”


Ann's Choice
Image
More Ann's Choice

What's your reason for moving?

Community transit system sees rise in ridership

Sitting in Socrates Circle

Confessions of a charitable man

Read or Add a Comment?

A call to end Erie Pa.'s relationship with "sister city" Zibo, China, and all Chinese imports.

No URL for Riderwood Blog

Laughter Yoga

Happy hour hot spots?

Model yacht clubs

Your thoughts on Reflexology

Tools

Write a Comment on Story

Print

Email Story

Add to Favorites

She told him B+ or A. And for the next two years he buckled down and received Bs and B+s. As Lil says, “If you reach out, you accomplish something. You see that someone is learning. You fill in where someone tried but the kids weren’t interested. You turn someone on. And if you can do this, my God, isn’t it wonderful! You’ve saved a soul!”

The roots of ‘Menschdom’
Lil was born in Brooklyn of Russian immigrant parents in a home where great emphasis was placed on doing the right thing and being a mensch, a good person. The best way to achieve menschdom is to help people who cannot help you; help with no expectation of return; help many people (if only in small ways); do the right thing the right way; and pay back society.

This is Lil’s credo.

She learned to help others when she was a child. Her father had an automotive supply business, and on weekends when he called on customers who owned service stations (many from the “old country” that he had helped set up in business), Lil would accompany him and give out free glasses when the station had a promotion.

She was the first woman to graduate with a Ph.D. in chemical engineering from Ohio University and worked for Shell Oil in Texas for five years. When her father died, she returned to New York, worked part time for Shell, married a dentist from Philadelphia, raised a family and tutored kids in the neighborhood, then taught math at the Abington Penn State Campus for 20 years.

Word from the wise
“My greatest pleasure,  besides Sit and Stitch and Shmaltz, is doing things with and for other people,” Lil says. “If you’re just sitting in your apartment watching the ‘boob tube,’ and worrying about yourself and wondering when your children are going to invite you to their house, you’re just wasting your time.

“You have to be involved in something that involves you, and everybody knows how to do something (besides going out clothes shopping, which I hate to do).”

In addition to Lil, we extend kudos to the following Ann’s Choice residents who volunteer in the Centennial School District and may be that one person who changes a youngster’s life: Miriam Beswick, Howard Bennett, George Schneider, Richard DeKalb, Mary Longman, Doris Kalan, Lydia Gooding, Gussie Chudnoff, Phyllis Donzanti, Gerald Connell, and Manual Miller.

As Winston Churchill said, “We make a living by what we get and a life by what we give.”



 Other Community News

    

'); } -->
Click Here to Order Now!