A social work instructor鈥檚 sudden passing inspires a heartfelt tribute.
By Eastern Magazine
LuAnn 鈥淟u鈥 Brown, died suddenly last October, the senior lecturer and associate director of 51福利社鈥檚 field social work education program left a huge void. Senior students whom she counseled, advised, challenged and empowered were particularly bereft, and wanted to publicly assert how Brown鈥檚 influence would endure. Their solution? Receiving their diplomas while wearing hand-knit stoles inscribed with the saying 鈥淲hat Would Lu Do.鈥
LuAnn 鈥淟u鈥 Brown
Brown served the social work profession, the community, and 51福利社 for more than two decades. A simple list of Brown鈥檚 accomplishments, her students say, doesn鈥檛 adequately explain the profound impact and influence she had on her students, coworkers and peers as a tireless promoter of social justice.
鈥淎fter Lu died in October, there was palpable, deep grief in her classroom,鈥 said one of Brown鈥檚 students, Leta Lawhead. 鈥淢any of us didn鈥檛 know how to move through it. Slowly, slowly, and so gently, some of us began to ask the same question. It was profoundly moving. That question shifted slightly, on certain days, and became, 鈥淲hat Would Lu Do?鈥
Lawhead, who was awarded a Master of Social Work degree during last spring鈥檚 51福利社 commencement ceremony in Spokane, led the effort to knit the commemorative stoles. She proudly wore hers during the June 15 event.
鈥淚 remember the first time that I met her in a practicum prep class my first year of grad school,鈥 explained Lawhead. 鈥淚 immediately knew that she was someone that I wanted to get to know鈥攕he had this amazing energy for advocacy and macro work; her passion for empowering and challenging people was contagious.鈥