Taking a Chance on Someone: #IamVincent @SJUMission
To “take a chance” on someone is profoundly Vincentian. Vincent and Louise did it when they said yes to Marguerite Naseau. Vincentian institutions need to focus on the possibilities within each human person. To do this is to say #IamVincent, and allow the person to say the same thing! When Joseph De Jesus â16C marched at St. Johnâs 146th Commencement Exercises last May, he knew exactly where he was headed in the fallâHarvard Law School.
âIf I hadnât gone to St. Johnâs,â he said, âthereâs no chance I wouldâve wound up accepted to Harvard.â Joe also gained entry to other top-tier law schools.
As an Ozanam Scholar, a St. Johnâs program that focuses on social justice issues, Joe graduated summa cum laude with a double major in English and government and politics. His high grades are especially impressive in light of his many other activities, including the Mock Trial Team, the Universityâs Ronald H. Brown Law School Prep Program, and the Presidentâs Society, St. Johnâs top honor for undergraduates.
Encouraged to Do More
Joe excelled at St. Johnâs even though he is legally blind. He was born with a rare hereditary eye disease called Leber congenital amaurosis (LCA), which affects 1 in 80,000. His older brother Christopher also has it. Mostly blind in his left eye and unable to see at night, Joe hopes medical advances may be able to treat the condition before his vision completely slips away.
âI didnât understand my situation when I was younger, and it used to really trouble me,â he said. âBut donât feel bad for meâI consider my life an adventure.â
That optimism has helped him to overcome challenges posed by the condition. His high school teachers had told him he couldnât enter Advanced Placement (AP) English because the reading would be too arduous. But at St. Johnâs, he achieved success in English and every other subject he studied. âEveryone at the University encouraged me to do more,â he said.
âJoe is an energetic intellectual, a meticulous student, and a respectful and generous peer to his fellow students,â said Kathleen Luby, Ph.D., Associate Professor of English. âHis intelligence and hard work make him entirely deserving of his truly remarkable success.â
Making a Difference
St. Johnâs also offered opportunities to assist those in need. Joe volunteered as a case worker for Project ID, a program that helps homeless people to obtain vital identification papers; strengthened his interest in immigration advocacy after attending a seminar in the Ronald H. Brown Center for Civil Rights and Economic Development at St. Johnâs School of Law; and conducted research and service in Ecuador, Puerto Rico, Rome, and Washington, D.C.
Beyond the University, Joe counseled visually-impaired youth at Camp Helen Keller and served with the Long Island Bombers âbeepâ baseball team, a competitive version of the game for visually impaired players. âIt teaches young people with visual impairments that there will always be obstacles in life,â he said. âWith accommodation and perseverance, thereâs always a way around them.â
Joe is the first person in his family to attend college. His parents immigrated to the United States from the Dominican Republic. Joe learned much of his work ethic and commitment to service from themâespecially his father, who has worked overtime to help pay for his sonâs education. âI hope my first day of work will be my fatherâs last day of work,â he said.
St. Johnâs, Joe said, brought him closer to realizing those dreams. âItâs changed me permanently in a very positive way. I realize now that success is not about bringing yourself upâitâs about bringing up the person next to you.â It’s “taking a chance” on someone. You can be assured that Joseph De Jesus will live this out in his life and future. It’s living and saying #IamVincent.
What an inspiring and courageous young man Joseph is for us all! He models how a positive outlook on life (which he sees as adventure) and hard work in spite of personal challenges can bring happiness and personal fulfillment!
I wish him the best in all he does. May God continue to bless him in every new venture.
Joe,your life is a story of God’s grace from the One who stands ready to empower each one of us. Your life as youth and young man manifests authentic ministry. May you continue ministering as a law student and as an attorney! Moreover,I feel that you will do so.
My Dad,brother and son are attorneys possessing Christ-like servant hearts. I see that quality in you!
Ed Ambrose
St. Joe’s,AA,1957