“When you have guns pointed at your head, your thoughts are very clear. The fat of doubt is trimmed away.”

Richard Engel, NBC News chief foreign correspondent, addresses the Class of 2013.Richard Engel, NBC News chief foreign
correspondent, addresses the Class of 2013.Photo by Chris TaggartView the high res image.

On a balmy Bronx morning, NBC News Chief Foreign Correspondent Richard Engel did not mince words at Fordham’s 168th Commencement, held May 18 at the Rose Hill campus.

Engel, a New York City native and one of the nation’s foremost chroniclers of Middle East wars, revolutions, and political transitions, used his commencement address to reflect on being captured and held hostage for five days last December in Syria.

“As I sat there and thought, many times, ‘OK, now I’m about to die. It will come very soon, and it will be a bad death,’ I also thought, and this is critical, ‘At least I tried. At least I got part of the way,'” he said.

“‘I had my 50 years to accomplish something, and unfortunately,’ I thought, ‘I’m not going to get all the way, because these people in ski masks are about to cut my life short.’ I was angry, I was annoyed, but at least I knew I was going to die trying to be myself.”

Joseph M. McShane, S.J., president of Fordham, hands a graduate his diploma. Photo by Chris Taggart View the high res image.

Along with Engel, singer Dion DiMucci; Paulette LoMonaco, R.G.S., executive director of Good Shepherd Services; John Tognino, PCS ’75, former chair of the Fordham University Board of Trustees; and Patricia E. Harris, first deputy mayor of New York City, received honorary degrees. A total of 3,445 degrees were conferred at the ceremony.

Preet Bharara, U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York, and Sally J. Bellet, Esq., LAW ’76, former vice president of real estate development for Amtrak, will each receive a doctorate of humane letters, honoris causa, at the School of Law diploma ceremony on Sunday, May 19, at Radio City Music Hall, where Bharara will address the Law School’s graduating class.

Kaushik Basu, Ph.D., chief economist and senior vice president for development economics at the World Bank, will receive a doctorate of humane letters, honoris causa, and give the keynote address at the diploma ceremony for the Graduate School of Business Administration, to be held Sunday, May 19, at Avery Fisher Hall.

Peter Vaughan, Ph.D., who is retiring as dean of the Graduate School of Social Service, will speak at that school’s diploma ceremony on Monday, May 20, also at Avery Fisher Hall.

John Tognino, PCS ’75, former chair of the Fordham University Board of Trustees, flanked by Barbara Porco, Ph.D., Fordham Schools of Business, and Robert D. Daleo, GSB ’72, current chair of the Board of Trustees. Photo by Chris Taggart View the high res image.

Engel told graduates that if they subtract the 20 years of life they’ve lived so far and the 10 final years they can expect to live, that leaves them with roughly 50 years to make the most of their lives.

Engel, speaking about four archetypal personalities, said it is of the upmost importance that graduates of the Class of 2013 have the guts to pick their path now, be it as a hedonist, commander, nurturer, or explorer. He said the type of the explorer fit him best. Only when graduates know for sure what suits them will they be able to truly accomplish something great. The good news, he noted, is they have those choices.

“Most people don’t. I’ve been in warzones for a long time. I’ve met nurturers, hedonists, commanders, and explorers who, because of where they live and the famine and poverty and violence all around them, don’t have options. If you are living in Aleppo, Syria, today, you don’t have the luxury of sitting around and wondering, ‘What’s my true nature, and what can I do that will allow me to experience it?'” he said.

Singer Dion DiMucci and Patricia E. Harris, first deputy mayor of New York City. Photo by Chris Taggart View the high res image.

“If you live in Aleppo, Syria, today, your main concern is staying alive. You have choices. Don’t squander this opportunity. Have the guts to take a chance.”

Joseph M. McShane, S.J., president of Fordham, told the Class of 2013 that although their academic careers might be coming to a close, their transcripts for life were now going to be updated via “take-home,” “open-heart” tests that will emerge from everyday situations.

“Strangely enough, when all is said and done, all of these heart and life tests will consist of only two frightening questions: Whom do you love, and what do you love? These questions will, in turn, invite and challenge you to identify, embrace, and nurture the values that will define and direct your life,” he said.

“My friends, as you prepare to confront these questions and thus begin the work of compiling the transcript of your lives, I hope that you will always be haunted and guided by the challenge and the dream that stands at the heart of Jesuit education: To educate men and women for others, men and women whose lives will always be marked by competence, conscience, compassion, and a deep commitment to justice and the cause of the human family.”

Paulette LoMonaco, R.G.S., executive director of Good Shepherd Services, receives a congratulatory handshake from Father McShane. Photo by Chris Taggart View the high res image.

Father McShane also thanked the Class of 2013 for raising $1.046 million the night before, the largest class gift in the University’s history. Be conspicuous in compassion rather than in consumption, he implored them, and live lives of bold, daring love. He said that if they allowed themselves to be bothered by injustice, embrace suffering, and champion the poor, they would be true sons and daughters of Fordham.

“When I see you on Fifth Avenue, and you call out to me and tell me what you have done, I promise that I will throw open my arms and say, as I listen to what you have achieved in love, ‘You are, all of you, as you are today, my great heroes.'”

See the full video of the ceremony here.

 

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