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Campus & Community University, SUNY ESF Hold 10th Annual Service of Commemoration

Service of Commemoration attendees place white carnations on the Hendricks Chapel stage at the conclusion of the service. (Photo by Amy Manley)

University, SUNY ESF Hold 10th Annual Service of Commemoration

The 115 honorees included current students, faculty and staff, emeriti faculty, retirees, trustees, advisory board members and honorary degree recipients from both campuses.
Kelly Homan Rodoski March 18, 2026

The candles were lit, and then the names were read. White carnations and stones were laid upon the Hendricks Chapel stage one by one, each flower and stone a quiet act of devotion, a life made tangible. On Tuesday afternoon, members of the Syracuse University and SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry communities came together to honor and remember individuals from both communities who passed away from Jan. 1, 2025, to the present.

A woman with curly brown hair and glasses lights white pillar candles on a wooden table in a church, using a long match or candle lighter, with a floral arrangement visible in the foreground.
Heather Coleman, associate professor of biology in the College of Arts and Sciences and chair of the University Senate agenda committee, lights a candle in memory of University faculty, staff, emeriti, retirees, trustees and honorary degree recipients. (Photos by Amy Manley)

During the 10th annual Service of Commemoration, recently deceased students, faculty, staff, emeriti faculty, retirees, Board of Trustees members, advisory board members and honorary degree recipients were remembered. The 115 individuals honored included two World War II veterans; longtime faculty members who devoted careers to the classroom, their research and the mentorship of countless students; and staff members who kept students nourished, supported and cared for and who worked behind the scenes to keep campus running smoothly. Each made their respective campus鈥攁nd their world鈥攁 better place.

Chancellor Kent Syverud offered remarks and read the names of the faculty, staff, emeriti, retirees, Board of Trustees members and honorary degree recipients remembered by the University. Student Government Association President German Nolivos 鈥26 read the names of the students who had passed.

Joanie Mahoney, president of SUNY ESF, read the names of faculty, staff, emeriti, retirees and advisory board members remembered by SUNY ESF.

The service began in 2017 and was inspired by the Remembrance Scholars mission to 鈥淟ook Back and Act Forward.鈥

"A man in a dark suit and burgundy tie speaks at a Syracuse University podium during a formal ceremony, surrounded by potted plants and flowers."
Rohan Bangalore, a 2025-26 Remembrance Scholar, offered remarks about remembrance.

Rohan Bangalore 鈥26, a 2025-26 Remembrance Scholar, offered remarks on the theme of remembrance.

鈥淩eflecting on loss reinforces for me the importance of public service and responsibility toward one another,鈥 Bangalore said. 鈥淚t reminds me that the people we honor today each played a role in shaping this community鈥攊n ways both visible and unseen.鈥

Musical selections were provided by the Hendricks Chapel Choir, directed by Jose “Peppie” Calvar, professor and chair in the Setnor School of Music, and University Organist Anne Laver, associate professor in the Setnor School. Those selections included a performance of “Danny Boy” by Calvar.

At the conclusion of the service, a light reception was held in the Noble Room for family, friends and chaplains to gather.

"Five people stand on stage at a Syracuse University formal ceremony while a woman with gray hair speaks at the university podium, flanked by orange and white floral arrangements."
University chaplains, from right, Sensei JoAnn Cooke, Rabbi Natan Levy, Pastor Devon Bartholomew, Father Gerry Waterman, OFM Conv., and Imam Hamza Gursoy offered blessings from their faith traditions.