YORK —
Hannah Cunningham stood in front of Lauren Piersol's fourth-grade classroom Tuesday morning to deliver a message.
It's a message the 11-year-old from Manchester Township had already shared with her fifth-grade classmates at Sinking Springs Elementary School, and one she hopes to share with all the school's students, one classroom at a time.
"My name is Hannah, and I have a little sister with Down syndrome," Hannah told the boys and girls in the Central York district class, her voice clear and direct. Down syndrome means a person has an extra chromosome, Hannah explained. It doesn't mean that person is retarded, she said.
"Retarded" is not a good way to describe someone, Hannah continued. "It definitely makes me sad" when someone uses the "R-word."
"It doesn't just hurt me, but the rest of my family," Hannah said.
Hannah said she heard some children at Sinking Springs using the R-word when she was in fourth grade. Then she heard people in public places, like the grocery store. She talked to her mom after going to a Down syndrome convention over the summer, and decided she could do something to spread awareness.
Hannah talked to her guidance counselor, Julie Carson, and to the school's principal, Joel Gugino, and she got approval to talk to her classmates.
The words "retard" and "retarded" were once accepted medical terms. But, Harlow Flory, the executive director of The Arc of York County, said it has become a derogatory term.
"The use of the term retardation is not a good thing because people will use it in a way that puts the individual down," Flory said. "We've all heard it, and there are lots of people who use the word."
Hannah knows some people aren't aware that the "R-word" is hurtful.
But the pain the word causes is personal, because her sister, Leah, may be different, but she's not worth less than others.
"I love her a lot," Hannah said. "It's impossible to describe."
Not unlike most children her age, Leah loves to paint, she loves ice cream, and she plays several sports, Hannah said.
Leah is a little different, though.
Sometimes it takes Leah longer to learn something, doctors say she will always have low muscle tone, and she recently got hearing aids. Many people with Down syndrome have problems with their hearing and their eyesight, Hannah explained.
Although Hannah knows how smart and capable Leah is, she worries her little sister will be teased for being different.
Krista Cunningham, the girls' mother, worries, too.
"We love Leah so much and she works so hard to try and be typical and try to fit in and be just one of the kids," Cunningham said. But she knows it's only a matter of time before Leah gets hurt.
"Because of all of her therapies, Leah reads, she writes and she knows," Cunningham said. "She will know. The day that she hears that (the R-word) will be one of my hardest days."
But Hannah makes it easier.
"Leah is so blessed to have Hannah as her sister," Cunningham said. "As a parent, it just makes me feel so blessed to have Hannah."
Hannah feels the same way about Leah.
"She's definitely an amazing little girl," Hannah said.
Gugino, the Sinking Springs principal, said the same thing about Hannah.
"She is doing this out of a genuine love in her heart," he said. "I think (the other students) are really listening to her."
___
Online:
http://bit.ly/15yfVY4
___
Information from: York Daily Record, http://www.ydr.com
Homepage
Student aims to end use of the 'R' word
- Tribune-Democrat News Slideshow
- Latest News
-
-
Pa. police hope to catch 'green thumb’ bandit
Pennsylvania State Police are hoping to catch a bandit with a green thumb red-handed.
-
Police: Muslim threatened mom over 'poison' pork
A western Pennsylvania man has been jailed on charges he threatened his mother with a 10-inch kitchen knife because he believed she was trying to “poison” him with pork in violation of his Muslim beliefs.
-
FBI ends hunt for Hoffa’s remains
A search of a rural field in suburban Detroit has failed to turn up the remains of former Teamsters union leader Jimmy Hoffa, an FBI agent announced Wednesday as authorities ended the dig.
-
5 things to know for today in Pennsylvania news
Your look at late-breaking news, upcoming events and stories that will be talked about in Pennsylvania on Wednesday.
-
10 things to know for today
Your look at late-breaking news, upcoming events and the stories that will be talked about today:
-
Pa. police hope to catch 'green thumb’ bandit
- Local News
-
- District Deaths June 20, 2013
-
Firefighters respond to Munster Township house fire
Firefighters responded to a house fire at 10:22 p.m. Tuesday in the 900 block of Spinner Road in Munster Township. The Red Cross is assisting the family. The state police fire marshal has been called to investigate. Fire companies responding were Cresson, Loretto, Dauntless and Nanty Glo.
-
Senate plan would expand liquor sales
Republicans in the state Senate on Tuesday announced a plan that would replace the existing state store system by allowing beer distributors and businesses that sell six-packs to begin selling wine and liquor.
-
New medical facility coming to Meyersdale
A new state-of-the-art building for primary care physicians and specialists is expected to be opened at Conemaugh Health System’s Meyersdale Medical Center by the fall of 2014.
-
Windber Medical Center goal: Stay independent
Hospital leaders knew there were those in the audience who expected to hear an announcement that Windber Medical Center would close or merge with a larger system.
“What you heard, I hope, was just the opposite,” Chairman David Klementic said after the hospital’s annual community meeting on Tuesday.
- Sports
-
-
Martella's Pharmacy fashions six-inning victory over Rail Birds
Through three scoreless innings at Point Stadium, the Altoona Rail Birds held their own against Martella’s Pharmacy in a AAABA League interleague contest.
But Martella’s patience at the plate and aggressiveness on the base paths turned a close game into a 10-run mercy rule affair on Tuesday. -
Pirates ruin Latos’ winning streak
Pedro Alvarez singled home a pair of runs in the first inning, and the Pittsburgh Pirates ended Mat Latos’ streak of 21 regular-season starts without a loss, beating the Cincinnati Reds 4-0 on Tuesday night.
Latos (6-1) hadn’t lost a regular-season game since last August, setting a club-record streak of avoiding defeat. He couldn’t overcome Pittsburgh’s three-run first inning. -
Checkered flag falls at Dog Hollow
There will be no more howling in the hollow.
Through social media, Dog Hollow Speedway in Strongstown - located close to the Indiana/Cambria county line - announced on Monday evening that it would no longer be in operation. - Local baseball in brief 6/19/2013
-
Four solo home runs lead Reds past Pirates
Todd Frazier wasn’t going to let left-hander Francisco Liriano get another fastball by him. He guessed right and hit one a long way.
-
Martella's Pharmacy fashions six-inning victory over Rail Birds
- Features
-
-
Symbolic images | Exhibit will feature banners celebrating legends, customs of China
East will come West for the first time in a new exhibition at St. Francis University in Loretto. “Stories Joyfully Embroidered: Shaanxi Folk Textiles from Northern China” will be on display from June 28 through Oct. 12 at Southern Alleghenies Museum of Art at Loretto.
- 'Asian Fusion' theme for SAMA's 35th annual gala
- Religion in brief | Church to observe pastor's anniversary
-
Symbolic images | Exhibit will feature banners celebrating legends, customs of China
- Lifestyles
-
-
For pastors, tattoos as symbols of faith
As the spiritual leader for two United Church of Christ congregations, the Rev. Richard Lindsay-Bignell found a way to combine his love of the ministry and his passion for art.
- ‘Kinky Boots’ struts off with most Tony Awards
- 'Boy or Girl?' Gender a new challenge for schools
-
- Multimedia
-
-
US gov't collecting huge number of phone records
The government is secretly collecting the telephone records of millions of U.S. customers of Verizon under a top-secret court order, according to the chairwoman of the Senate Intelligence Committee. The Obama administration is defending the National Security Agency's need to collect such records, but critics are calling it a huge over-reach.
- When nature invades: Deer where they don't belong
- Google flirts with what chairman Eric Schmidt once called 'the creepy line'
-




