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Marietta College focuses on homelessness

April 5, 2012
By SAM SHAWVER , The Marietta Times

MARIETTA - More than 100 hungry people were served a hot lunch prepared by Marietta College students at the Daily Bread Kitchen in the Harmar district Wednesday - part of the college's Office of Civic Engagement second annual Hunger and Homelessness Week activities.

"This is really a wonderful thing - so many people in this area wouldn't otherwise have had a good meal today," said Glenda Williams of Marietta, who attended the lunch with family members.

The Daily Bread Kitchen has been serving community meals at the Knights of Columbus Hall on Franklin Street every Wednesday since January 2011, according to Flo Eckstein, who helps coordinate the weekly meals through St. Marys Catholic Church's Health Ministry program.

Article Photos

Photo by Sam Shawver
Marietta College student Kayla Yeager, left, serves fellow student Jessica St. Clair during a lunch break at the Daily Bread Kitchen. They were among 25 students who prepared and served meals for more than 100 people Wednesday during the college’s second annual Hunger and Homelessness Week.

"The first meal we served about 50 or so," she said. "Last week we served 229, including carry-out meals, and today we're expecting to serve around 275 with the take-out meals included."

Eckstein said she sees many needy people coming through the food lines.

"We have several who are living out of their vehicles or are out on the street," she said. "We try to refer them to other ministries that can help."

Eckstein said several Marietta College students volunteer to help serve meals throughout the year, but on Wednesday more than 25 students worked from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. to prepare and serve the community lunch as part of Hunger and Homelessness Week.

"The main purpose of the week is to spread awareness about hunger and homelessness in general, but also focusing on our local community," said student coordinator Drew Schulte, a senior from the Cleveland area.

Schulte took on the responsibility by himself during last year's initial Hunger and Homelessness Week, but this year he was one of four student coordinators for the event.

"It's sometimes hard to convey the message to busy college students that hunger and homelessness exists in our local community," Schulte said. "But this week we're hitting them on all fronts, including preparing and serving this meal today. There are many other activities, too, like a daily email challenge to live the day without something that a homeless might have to live without."

The "A Day in the Life Challenge," sponsored by Sigma Kappa, encourages participants to endure a week-long simulation of what it would be like to be homeless. Students signed up to receive daily emails with instructions on how they would be living that day.

Amanda Dever is a coordinator for the college Office of Civic Engagement.

"Our volunteer base of 25 students to prepare and serve meals today is an indication of how participation in Hunger and Homelessness Week has grown since our first event last year," she said. "And we want to see it continue in the years ahead. The goal is to create a dialogue between the college and community that can help address issues facing Marietta and surrounding areas."

Wednesday night the campus Shake America organization sponsored a panel discussion on the Faces of Homelessness in the Alma McDonough Auditorium.

The panelists included Patrice Pooler, executive director, Kim Caplinger and Kevin Pryor from the Mid-Ohio Valley Fellowship Home in Parkersburg as well as Andrea Horsch, acting director, and Jim Todd, transformation station manager with Good Works Inc., in Athens.

Both facilities provide services and programs designed to help the homeless get back on their feet.

"The people I work with look like you and they look like me," Pooler said. "But for various reasons they've gone from the top of the pile to the bottom of the pile. And one thing I've learned is that homelessness and addiction crosses all boundaries. We take in people from Yale and from jail."

Caplinger said she first became homeless after being kicked out of a relative's house in January 2010 due to substance abuse. She and her children moved in with her parents for a short time, but it wasn't working out, so she left the kids and ran.

"I went from couch to couch for some time, then went to the Salvation Army where you could stay overnight but had to leave at 7:30 a.m. and couldn't go back inside until dinner time at 5 p.m.," Caplinger said. "It was December and cold - I picked a bad tome to be homeless. It was tough. I was bumming cigarettes, and I missed my kids. My mother would bring them to visit me at the Salvation Army."

Eventually she had to leave the Salvation Army shelter, but that same day she was accepted into the Fellowship Home where Caplinger received the recovery help she needed.

"I've been 16 months sober now, I'm working and have a house for me and my kids," she said.

Pryor admits his thirst for alcohol left him without a home, but he worked hard at not letting his homelessness show.

"I was living in my car and would shave and clean up every day at a McDonald's or Hardee's or at the local Go-Mart," he said. "I would go to the library and use the computers to go on Facebook and contact my children. They didn't know their dad was homeless."

His car eventually broke down, leaving Pryor without transportation or a place to sleep.

"I began sleeping under a truck loading dock," he said, but still tried to maintain the appearance that he wasn't homeless.

Pryor said he had been attending a church near the truck loading docks and had helped distribute food and frozen turkeys to needy people, but didn't let on he was in need himself.

"It was about 20 degrees one night and it was cold under the docks," he said. "Then I remembered the turkeys we handed out came in thick cardboard boxes that we threw away."

Pryor dug the boxes out of the trash and fashioned a shelter in which he could sleep, although rest was difficult in the intense cold.

"But I would clean up at a store the next day, then wander the streets, hoping for enough change to buy a $1 hamburger," he said.

His alcoholism continued, and one night in January 2011 someone called the police and reported Pryor for public intoxication.

While he was being booked he finally admitted his homelessness and asked if a bed was available for the night.

Pryor was also taken into the Fellowship Home where he's been recovering his life.

"Becoming homeless was my fault, but there were people and angels watching over me," he said. "I've changed a lot over the last year, and I've learned to be very grateful for what I have - a warm bed, a shower - it's not much, but I'm getting back on my feet and I'm very thankful."

 
 

 

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