World champion gymnast Suni Lee returned to St. Paul's East Side Thursday, this time with no gold medal around her neck, just a simple silver necklace with Olympic rings on it.
She was back at her alma mater, Battle Creek Elementary School, celebrating its shift to E-STEAM learning and a $50,000 Amazon donation, and there in the gym were reminders of where and with whom Lee first displayed her athletic prowess.
There was a net with yellow ropes tucked high in a corner. Rock-climbing wall panels. And in the crowd, along with the kids and their parents, and the district and school leaders, was her former gym teacher, Scott Richards.
"She was by far the best student I ever had," he said. "She hit the rocks so strong — from when she was tiny, just in kindergarten."
An arch of red, white and blue balloons served as a reminder of Lee's gold medal performance in Tokyo a year ago. She made history then as the first Asian woman to win the gymnastics all around, and she came home that summer to a parade where fans waved signs reading "Suni is #1" and "I'm a Hmong girl and I can be anything I want."
On Thursday, Lee was the surprise guest at a back-to-school event. To the 60-plus children seated on the floor in front of her, she said: "Embrace your community. Embrace the unique qualities that made you all different. Follow your dreams."
Then she posed for pictures before hugging a few of her favorite teachers.
Malina Xiong, her former third-grade teacher, was among the few adults in the room over whom the diminutive Lee now holds a size advantage — a fact the two often make light of, Xiong said.