
They come from classrooms filled with tests, sports, and teenage worries, yet step into a role most adults never face. Students from University of Detroit Jesuit High School and Academy volunteer to carry the caskets of homeless military veterans who die alone. No cameras follow them. No crowds cheer. They simply walk in slow, measured steps, honoring strangers whose names they may only hear once at the graveside.
In that brief, sacred walk, they shoulder more than wood and metal. They carry the weight of promises a nation did not fully keep, of uniforms traded for hardship and isolation. Through this quiet duty, they learn that respect is not a performance but a presence, especially when no one is watching. Their service becomes a final act of mercy, ensuring that those who served are not erased, but escorted home with dignity.