Thursday, February 3, 2011

An Act of Kindness

Kendall Levy and Marvin Voltaire, students at Valley Stream North High School, were 20 minutes late for class because of their good deed: They helped an older couple push a car so that one of them could get to work.


This was no quick and simple push, mind you; the young men ended up knee-deep in an icy water puddle as cars whizzed by, during an icy rain, on one of the busiest and most dangerous roads in the community.

Levy and Voltaire refused the North Valley Stream couple's offer of cash for helping to push the dead car out of the driveway, through that monster puddle and up a steep bump onto the side of Dutch Broadway to free the couple's other, working car.

And then the pair helped push the dead car from the street back into the driveway again.

Elaine Treske, 70, a retired nurse, who graduated from the same high school in 1958 and was a member of its first graduating class was thrilled to have the extra help..

The young men said they didn't tell a soul at school why they were late; or why they were soaked through to the skin, with sopping wet shoes But while Levy sat in philosophy, and Voltaire was off at Spanish class, Elaine Treske called the principal's office. "I wanted them to be excused for lateness," she said. "I also wanted to be sure they got dry clothes and dry shoes."

The young men were called to the office of Principal Cliff Odell. "I wanted to check on them and to tell them how proud we are of them," Odell said. Later, an assistant principal would seek them out to shake their hands.

Even then, Levy and Voltaire would say later, they didn't tell their friends about doing a good deed. "I don't know," Kendall said. "It was what we are supposed to do, I didn't think it was a big deal."

Levy, 17, is a junior who plays, and, he said, loves, football. He was walking to school when Mark Treske asked for help. Levy and Treske had been working to move the car for more than 10 minutes when Voltaire, 18, a senior whose dream is to attend John Jay College in Manhattan and study criminal law, drove by. "I thought there was an accident," said Voltaire, who also plays sports at the school. "I stopped to help."

"I tried to give them money," Elaine Treske said. "They aggressively waved me away and said, 'This is kind of what we are supposed to do.' "

Odell said the two would be recognized by the school. And, he said, he's grateful that Treske called to let officials know what had happened. "I know these two and they would do something like this and never say a thing about it," Odell said. "It's a testament to them as fine young men, and to their parents."

Levy said the pair never thought about accepting money.

"It would diminish a good deed and why would you want to diminish a good deed?" he said. "There comes a time when everybody needs help, and everybody deserves to get help."

"When you do something good, it comes back, like karma," Voltaire said.

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