This is not a feel-good story.
Of course, it’s easy to see why it has been positioned as one. Certainly, it contains all the elements: vulnerable people, heart-rending need, someone going above and beyond.
But this is not a feel-good story.
Not to mock or cast aspersions on the noble thing that has brought Henry Darby to national attention in the last few days.
For those who missed it, he is the principal of North Charleston High School in North Charleston, S.C., where the median household income is $45,000 against a national average of $68,000 and it is said that 90 percent of the student body lives below the poverty line.
As might be expected from those numbers, life is a struggle for many of Darby’s students. “I get a little emotional,” he told NBC’s “Today” show, “because when you’ve got children you’ve heard sleep under a bridge or a former student and her child that’s sleeping in a car or you go to a parent’s house because there’s problems, and you knock on the door, there are no curtains and you see a mattress on the floor. . . . And these people need, and I wasn’t going to say ‘No.’ ”