Monday, December 15, 2008

If All of Us Got Together…

Every morning I shuffle out of my bedroom, into the kitchen and I feed my little dog and two cats. It is a ritual, sometimes comical, sometimes wearing. The cats cry and wind around my legs as though they haven’t eaten in decades. The dog shadows my every step, from the bedroom, to the kitchen, to the sink to fill the kettle, to the stove, to the cupboard, to the pet dishes, to contented munching. Then I have my tea and my breakfast.

Despite the ups and downs, well, actually, downs and downs, of my recent life, none of us, not me, not my children, not my animals, have ever been hungry.

But for people in close proximity to my home, perhaps even right next door, hunger is a very real fact of everyday life.

My church, Trinity Church in Asbury Park, has had a food pantry for more than thirteen years. It started when Asbury was a wasteland and the neighborhood surrounding the church was desperate and marginalized. The pantry continues to operate three days a week and has always prided itself on having no means testing or other such restrictions. There has never been a ‘deserving poor’ versus ‘undeserving poor’. Hungry was hungry.

The food that stocks our Pantry comes from several sources, from parish donations, from cash donations, but most importantly, from the Monmouth and Ocean Counties Foodbank. This post is a plea to help save that organization and, consequently, to feed our quietly suffering neighbors. I and over 100 other New Jersey bloggers are dedicating today to the “We Can’t Let This Bank Fail” campaign.

Our economy is facing the worst crisis since the Great Depression. More families everyday are finding one or both parents out of work. People are without jobs, and food, who never, ever imagined they could face such a predicament. Yet just when the need for food at the Foodbank is the greatest, the resources are at their lowest.



Kathleen DiChiara states it simply, but her one comment says it all: if all of us get together, we can keep the Foodbank supplies at needed levels.

There are so many ways to make a difference, some of them as effortless as tearing off one of those Check Out Hunger coupons at the supermarket.

The website for the Community Foodbank of New Jersey has an incredible amount of information about this silent crisis. Here are some ideas that you can act on:

• Start a food drive at your workplace, church or school.
• Engage your children, have them help you pick out and deliver non-perishables. You are raising responsible human beings and helping your neighbors at the same time.
• Donate money directly to the Foodbank. Even a little bit helps.
• Volunteer to help out at the Foodbank if your resources don’t stretch to donations. Again, it is a great way to help your children understand the value of giving back to our community.

If you can’t donate and you are unable to volunteer, pray for everyone involved: for our new administration, that they will guide us out of this crisis; for those who are struggling, that they will stay strong and not despair; for those who are serving, that they will find peace and gratification in helping their fellow New Jerseyans.

Here are some website resources, for you to help or seek help:

The Community Foodbank of New Jersey: www.njfoodbank.org

Trinity Church, Asbury Park: www.trinitynj.com

New Jersey Hunger Prevention Advisory Board: www.endhungernj.org

NJ Helps (free and private): www.njhelps.org

And here is the roster of incredibly generous and talented bloggers taking part today to raise awareness (brava to Debbie Smith of JerseyBites.com for pulling this together!!):

1) JerseyBites.com
2) RedBankGreen.com
3) Jersey Girl Cooks
4) Simply Sable
5) John and Lisa are eating in South Jersey
6) Padma's Kitchen
7) Chefdruck
8) Life Lightly Salted
9) My Italian Grandmother
10) Cook Appeal
11) Crotchety Old Man Yells at Cars
12) Mommy Vents
13) This Full House
14) Paper Bridges
15) Motherhood Avenue
16) The Kamienski Chronicles
17) Down the Shore with Jen
18) Fits and Giggles
19) House Hubbies Home Cooking
20) Nourish Ourselves
21) Partybluprints.com
22) Tommyeats.com
23) Off the broiler
24) Mrs. Mo’s New Jersey Baby
25) IamNotaChef.com
26) SimplyBeer.com
27) HistoryGeek.com
28) Savy Source Newark
29) Momlogic New Jersey
30) SurvivingNJ.com/blog
31) SurvivingNJ.blogspot.com
32) JerseyGirlGuide.com
33) Best of Roxy
34) Citizen Mom.net
35) Lynetteradio.com
36) Jersey Beat
37) Pop Vulture Phil
38) JerseySmarts.com
39) LongBeachIslandSummers.com
40) WildwoodSummers.com
41) Mike Halfacres Blog
42) Somerset08873
43) Family, Friends and Food
44) KateSpot.com
45) NewJerseyMomsBlog.com
46) JCRegister.com
47) New Jersey Real Estate Report
48) Riverviewobserver.com
49) More Monmouth Musings
50) Man of Infirmity
51) Another Delco Guy in South Jersey
52) SweetNicks.com
53) Average Noone
54) Cleary’s Notebook
55) Welcome to my Planet
56) The Center of New Jersey Life
57) Sharon’s Food Blog
58) Morristown, Chatham, Summit, and Madison NJ Real Estate
59) Midtown Direct Real Estate News
60) New Jersey Real Estate
61) BlowUpRadio.com
62) LazlosDen.com
63) The Ridgewood Blog
64) Book a Week with Jen
65) Banannie
66) Cartoongoddess.com
67) Matawan Advocate
68) Take Back the Kitchen
69) The Joy of Toast
70) Route 55
71) Montclair Kids.com
72) SaveJersey
73) Stompbox
74) Joe the Blogger
75) Environmental Republican
76) Stacey Snacks
77) Subversive Garden
78) New Jersey Pathfinder
79) Cooking With Friends Blog
80) Triple Venti
81) Read All About It
82) Rich Lee on Media
83) Likelihood of Success
84) Cape Cuisine
85) The Business At Hand
86) NewJerseyTaxRevolution
87) Figmentations
88) MiddletownMike
89) Caviar and Codfish
90) A Day in the Life
91) Mack’s Journey Through Life
92) Alice’s Restaurant
93) Tiger Hawk
94)Politics Patrol, The Bob Ingle Blog
95) The Food Chain
96) Henson’s Hell
97) Cranbury Conservative
98) Baristanet
99) New Jersey: Politics Unusual
100) Jersey Shore Blog
101) Plainfield Today
102) Beacon Bulletin
103) Journal Square Jersey City 07306

5 comments:

Deborah Smith said...

Great post Marie, thanks so much for participating.

Lisa Emrich said...

Marie,
Thank you for reminding folks of what they CAN do to help others in a very concrete way. Wonderful post.

ps. the word verification thingie for this comment is "unread" - for some reason I find this humorous.

Da Old Man said...

Glad to see you a part of this too, Marie.
If we all just do a little, it could make a big difference.

Anonymous said...

Thanks for your inspiring post - groups like the Food Bank urgently need our help! These challenging times call for all of us to donate, volunteer, and participate in any way we can!

For those wanting to organize a food drive or other DIY volunteer activities - consider VolunteerSpot.com. We offer a simple sign-up tool that makes it easy to coordinate service projects (like food drives) with neighbors, friends and coworkers. If you're the leader - no more reply-all emails, clipboard signup sheets and back and forth phone calls. For the volunteer, sign up to help with a click and get automated email reminders.

Please help - www.VolunteerSpot.com can make it easier!

Jane Turley said...

Well this is typical of you Marie -to be thinking of others when you're down in the dumps yourself.

Things are going to get a lot of worse though. Redundancies are in full swing here now but there is still a lot more to come. One of our oldest retailers will close its doors for the last time on Jan 5th with the loss of 22,000 jobs...

Maybe we will all learn from this economic breakdown..and the sense of community that was dying will be rekindled - I hope so, it's a tough old world at times without friends to lean on.

Cheer up Marie; it could be worse -you could look like Joan Rivers.