An inspiring message welcomed students to the BLI Retreat. Photo by Reba Saldanha.
鈥淎ccompaniment鈥 isn鈥檛 a buzzword at the Boston College School of Social Work鈥攊t鈥檚 a philosophy that guides how students, faculty, and staff learn, lead, and serve.聽
That philosophy came to life this fall at three key gatherings: the Social Work, Latinx Leadership Initiative, and Black Leadership Initiative retreats.
Through storytelling, shared meals, and bonding activities, BCSSW community members embodied the School鈥檚 theme for the year, 鈥淎ccompaniment in Action,鈥 which emphasizes walking alongside others, sharing their burdens and hopes, and being renewed by genuine relationships.
On Cape Cod, more than 60 participants at the Social Work Retreat explored student formation, self-care, and professional discernment. At the Connors Center in Dover, Massachusetts, the LLI focused on identity, belonging, and radical kinship, while the BLI centered Black leadership, wellness, and collective empowerment.聽
成人每日大赛s at the SSW Retreat participated in hands-on activites. Photo by Tim Correira.
Activities at the Social Work retreat included group discussions, hands-on craft projects, and walks along the beach. The pace balanced structured sessions with quiet reflection and free time, letting students connect with each other and the environment around them.
鈥淭he objective was graduate student formation,鈥 said Teresa Schirmer, associate dean of student experience, who helped organize the retreat. 鈥淲e wanted to foster and support holistic formation through intentional programming that incorporated intellectual, social, and spiritual dimensions.鈥
First-year student Ella Berdan praised faculty-led sessions on self-care, community, and Jesuit values in social work, saying that they made accompaniment less abstract and more tangible.
成人每日大赛s at the SSW Retreat participated in hands-on activities. Photo by Tim Correira.
鈥淚 really enjoyed hearing the faculty presentations,鈥 said Berdan, who studies in the Mental Health field of practice. 鈥淚 think they helped to make accompaniment in action a more concrete goal, rather than just a theme for the year.鈥
After the retreat, Berdan vowed to take intentional steps in her studies and fieldwork to embody the spirit of accompaniment in her day-to-day practice. In particular, she wants to foster community with the neighborhoods and populations she serves, building connections that honor their experiences and perspectives.
鈥淥ne step I plan to take is learning more about the communities I am working within,鈥 she said. 鈥淓specially as someone new to Boston, I think an important step to embodying accompaniment is learning more about the city and the people within it.鈥
Fourteen students, faculty, and staff participated in the LLI Retreat. Photo by Bob Durling.
A few weeks later, the spirit of accompaniment continued at the LLI Retreat, which opened with a storytelling icebreaker, where students shared the histories behind their names鈥攁 simple act that sparked deep reflection on identity, culture, and family.聽
鈥淭here was laughter, learning, and a palpable sense of belonging,鈥 said Ximena Soto, assistant director of the LLI, a cohort-based program that prepares bilingual and bicultural social workers to accompany Latinx communities in creating solutions to complex social problems.聽
成人每日大赛s also traced their personal and professional journeys through collage-making, walked through the Center鈥檚 forest, and gathered in a circle to share questions, anxieties, and wisdom鈥攁 space to be heard and seen.
成人每日大赛s at the LLI Retreat participated in hands-on activities. Photo by Bob Durling.
Beverly Burgos, a part-time student in the Latinx Communities field of practice, said that the exercises clarified what accompaniment looks like in practice.
鈥淥ne moment that deepened my understanding of what it means to accompany others in their struggle and healing was when my cohorts shared their stories of resilience and how simply being seen and heard made a difference in their journey,鈥 said Burgos, one of 15 students who participated in this retreat. 鈥淭hat moment reminded me that accompaniment isn鈥檛 about fixing someone鈥檚 pain, but about creating a safe and compassionate space where they can feel supported in their own process.鈥
Burgos connected the retreat to BCSSW鈥檚 Accompaniment in Action kickoff event with Fr. Gregory Boyle, who urged students to embrace 鈥渞adical kinship,鈥 a mutual relationship where the distinction between 鈥渟ervice provider鈥 and 鈥渟ervice recipient鈥 dissolves.
鈥淗is take on radical kinship set the tone for the summit,鈥 Burgos said. 鈥淚t felt like there was no better way to start a weekend centered on compassion, kinship, and transformative leadership.鈥
成人每日大赛s in the BLI pose for a group photo at the initiative's annual retreat. Photo by Reba Saldanha.
That same weekend, the BLI welcomed 22 students to the Connors Center for activities rooted in Afrocentric principles, Black cultural traditions, and collective leadership.
The retreat opened with an ancestor acknowledgment and closed with a 鈥渨eb activity,鈥 which mapped the network of support among BLI members.
During the web activity, participants stood in a circle and took turns sharing affirmations while passing a ball of yarn. Each strand connected them, forming a web that represented their support, connection, and shared experience.
Milan Smith, a second-year student in the Mental Health field of practice, said that the exercise reshaped how he thinks about accompaniment.聽
鈥淚t became clear how deeply we are all linked through our struggles, our hopes, and our shared commitment to this work,鈥 said Smith, a member of the BLI, a cohort-based program designed to support, develop, and prepare MSW-level practitioners to address issues facing the Black community. 鈥淭hat moment helped me understand accompaniment not just as being present for someone鈥檚 pain, but as holding space for their full humanity.鈥
BLI Program Coordinator Lujuan Milton echoed Smith, saying that the weekend exemplified accompaniment through stories, mentorship, and collaborative community activities.聽
鈥淔rom the ancestor acknowledgment to the student-led workshops,鈥 she said, 鈥減articipants experienced accompaniment not as a concept but as a lived practice rooted in shared community, mutual learning, and collective accountability.鈥
Across all three retreats, accompaniment wasn鈥檛 just a theme鈥攊t was a practice of being with peers, colleagues, and future collaborators. Whether through the reflective community at the Social Work Retreat, the storytelling circles at the LLI Retreat, or the web of solidarity at the BLI Retreat, participants experienced accompaniment as action: walking with, not ahead of, one another.
As one student who attended the Social Work Retreat put it in an anonymous survey: 鈥淭his was a special time to make connections and have time for reflection. Thank you, all, for an excellent retreat experience; it was a special, thoughtful, and intentional way of beginning our BCSSW journey together.鈥
