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Wedgewood collects canned goods for Second Harvest Food Bank the first Sunday of each month. Read the stories below to find out why we think this is a very important ministry. |
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Ms. Marsh noticed that Miguel was having
difficulty paying attention one morning in her first
grade class. He was bright and usually eager to
learn, so she was concerned. When she took him
aside and gently asked him what was wrong. In a
sad, little voice he answered, "It’s hard to pay
attention because my stomach’s growling. It
wasn’t my turn to eat breakfast today."
Miguel now participates in Second Harvest Food
Bank’s Kids Cafe program. He comes to the
center in his neighborhood after school where he
gets a snack, help with his homework, and plays
outside.
Two nights a week he gets a nutritious hot dinner.
Because she can save the money she would have
spent on dinner for her children those two nights,
Miguel's mother can give both he and his brother
breakfast every morning. |
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Ms. Elizabeth Ray is 72 and lives alone. Her only
income is from social security and a small pension
her husband left her. Her arthritis makes it very
difficult for her to move about, so she does not
leave her small apartment often. Lately, preparing
meals has become more and more difficult; and
her health is beginning to suffer because of
malnutrition.
This week Ms. Ray began receiving daily home
delivered meals from a Second Harvest Food
Bank partner agency. A friendly volunteer arrives
at her house midday with a hot, nutritious meal.
There is usually enough for part of her dinner that
night as well. |
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Sam and Martha are married with four children,
ages 6 to 3 months. They have come to Charlotte
with a prayer to find a better life for their family.
Sam is a machinist. He found a job quickly, and
they moved into an apartment. After a few months,
however, his shop closed; and before he could
find another job, they fell behind on their rent and
lost their apartment. The Department of Social
Services intervened and placed the children in
foster care. Sam and Martha felt lost and hopeless.
Fortunately, someone at DSS referred Sam and
Martha to a crisis center that receives food from
Second Harvest Food Bank of Metrolina. At the
center, they found people who treated them with
kindness and dignity. A counselor helped them to
make a plan to find jobs and a place to live. The
center would help them with some expenses and
with food when they found a place. Meanwhile
they stayed in a shelter and ate at a soup kitchen
that are both Second Harvest Food Bank of
Metrolina partner agencies. |
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