Tuesday, July 24, 2007

from the Kennebec Journal
Sport of Kings
Collins: Detecting 'home-grown terrorists' difficult
Recession over? Don't tell the hungry
Downtown remains optimistic
Health-care bill clears key hurdle
A chance to cash in
A tough way to end it
Windham pulls away to win Class A title
All of today's:
News | Sports
from the Kennebec Journal
from the Morning Sentinel
Old building gets new lease on life
Freedom brings perils along with privileges, Sen. Collins says
At food pantries, recession still very much alive
BILL CLEARS KEY HURDLE IN SENATE
FARMINGTON Volunteers take day to replace roof
OAKLAND Sewer project finishes first phase, ready for next
Black Bears fall to Wildcats in finale
Eagles rally to state title
All of today's:
News | Sports
from the Morning Sentinel
I have rarely met people with the intense good-heartedness of food pantry volunteers.
Over the last 20 years, I’ve interviewed or encountered activists of all kinds — angry fishermen fighting limits on their livelihood, property rights advocates, First Amendment fundamentalists, farmers pounding the halls of the statehouse in search of tax relief, land preservationists, disability rights attorneys. In each case, the people I’ve met have been convinced of their cause’s righteousness — and equally, of the wrongheadedness of those who oppose their point of view.
But there’s something different about food pantry folks and the others who help the hungry. Many of them do what they do out of a sense of religious mission — “The food pantry is a ministry,” says Pastor Tim Murdock of the Albion Christian Church — but that sectarian mission seems to be almost subsumed in an even greater sense of just plain old humanity: “It’s hard to describe the feeling you get when you give out food,” said one of Pastor Tim’s volunteers at the church’s food pantry. There’s a fierceness about their dedication — one school food services director told me “I don’t care what the rules are — we all bend them when we get a child who says ‘Please, please, please can I have seconds, I’m so hungry!’”
After reading some of the early drafts of this series, and after listening to me talk about it at dinner a few times, my son decided to help out at the local food pantry and soup kitchen in Brunswick. Nat goes to Bowdoin and he’s spending the summer working on campus. So he ended up organizing the summer deliveries of leftover campus dining hall food to the Mid Coast Hunger Prevention center downtown.
The first day he did it, Nat called me at work to say he’d just dropped off the delivery. “There’s nothing that makes you feel more like a really good person, Mom, than feeding people who are hungry,” he said.
I was proud of him, for his industry and his bigheartedness. And as I listened to him describe his food mission, I thought of one thing that would perhaps make you feel even better: not having to feed hungry people — because they have the means to feed themselves.




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