EQUINUNK, Pa. — A summer-camp symphony of dribbling basketballs, screaming leaps into the spring-fed lake and bugled reveille floated into a pavilion where boys sat cross-legged in a circle, whispering to one another. Some wore white plastic masks, to hide the feelings their words conjured up. Some just stared at their shoes. One small, skinny boy took a deep breath, then spoke.
“Well, um, when my teachers and friends and family were all at my dad’s funeral, it felt really nice,” he said, pushing his glasses up his nose. “They were all really nice and helped me, and that felt good.”
Some of the boys looked up and nodded. Others looked away.
“We see you,” they said in unison with counselors and volunteers, acknowledging his pain.
This is not your typical summer camp. For one week each year, Camp Equinunk for boys and the neighboring Camp Blue Ridge for girls, 145 miles straight north of Philadelphia in Wayne County, undergo a slight transformation, from 400 acres of fun to something with a more serious purpose, perceptible only if you lean and listen, or notice the tears that sometimes fall.
“Man, I came here thinking, ‘I’m going to bring my light to camp,’ but I have to carry Kleenex with me at all times,” said Abraham “A.B.” Torres, 23, a volunteer from Coachella, Calif. “I’m a very stoic, positive individual, but being here this week has really opened a floodgate of emotions for me.”