Santa and his elves have nothing on our indefatigable group of youth and members from the Seguin congregation! Yesterday, they teamed up with additional members from the Cibolo Valley Stake and delivered household furnishings and goods to 14 refugee families in one day.
Bishop Tim Bird described the day as “…an incredible crazy, organized, chaotic day…!” They were able to help furnish previously bare apartments. The Afghan community is close knit. They help and share with each other. As a result, yesterday the members from the Cibolo Valley area were able to identify an additional 15 families in need of assistance.
If you would like to assist with ongoing deliveries to help the newly settled refugees please consider checking out their “Stable Project” ministry. Check out their Facebook group. They have an Amazon registry set up or you can purchase IKEA gift cards for larger items at a better price. Also, share this post with others to help spread the word.
At this time of year our list of “to do’s” seems to grow exponentially as the holiday season rolls forward — too quickly for parents and agonizingly slow for children. Clad predominantly in red “Light the World” t-shirts, a congregation in Seguin ditched their lists in favor of what the Savior Himself would do — they went about “doing good.”
“Doing good” is probably an understatement! Youth and members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Seguin spent their last Saturday before Christmas helping six Afghan families receive much needed household furnishings and supplies. Bishop Tim Bird said: “Many years of moving families in and out of wards prepared us for today. We have been on moves when it rained, been on moves where they were on the third floor of a building, been on moves where you couldn’t park close enough to the home and had to carry stuff a mile away.” They encountered all of that on Saturday, but the spirit of what they were doing propelled them on.
They had started the day with a plan to deliver to four households, but as they were moving furniture and dishes they became aware of two other families that had nothing. This group from Seguin can’t look the other way — they are too invested in their work of bringing comfort to others.
The families were living in empty apartments before the Seguin congregation showed up. The sizes of the families they helped sound a little like the song “12 Days of Christmas”. They helped a family of nine, another family of eight, two families of seven, a family of six and an apartment of five single men. Continue reading “Doing Good”
It was a pleasant, warm south Texas Saturday. Volunteers from the Bulverde Ward, Hill Country Stake, gathered at SJRC Texas, formerly known as St. Jude’s Ranch for Children, in Bulverde. Their goal, to decorate the campus for Christmas.
SJRC Texas cares for children and families who have been affected by trauma, abuse and neglect. These kids had to be removed from their homes by the Department of Family and Protective Services. The Bulverde ward has had a long relationship with SJRC Texas helping clean and repair the buildings and grounds. But this time the need was to convert the campus into something special for Christmas.
The Texas Giving Machine, with its crew of youth and adults clad in red “Light the World” t-shirts, is gearing up to provide the first of many full apartment furnishings this Friday evening to a family of 10.
The Giving Machine built by youth from @churchofjesuschristsat Seguin congregation has been showing up all over the area. From parades to Seguin City Hall meetings and other community events. The Giving Machine has pictures of 72 items displayed that people can purchase.
Culturalingua held its first annual Welcome Walk in San Antonio. The “welcome” was extended to the many refugees and immigrants recently arriving in San Antonio. Latter-day Saint Charities was one of the event sponsors. Members and missionaries from the Church of Jesus Christ could be seen everywhere helping to man various stations. Also, very prominent was our Texas Giving Machine built by the @churchofjesuschristsat youth group in the Seguin congregation (@SeguinStableProject). It even caught the attention of San Antonio Mayor Ron Nirenberg and many in our community!
“Starting something new is never easy but this has been a very memorable experience for our family. We love the words of Christ in John 14:27: “Peace I leave with you, my peace I give unto you…Let not your heart be troubled, neither let it be afraid.”
When Jared was laid off from his job in 2019, we were grateful that the fear and uncertainty that would normally accompany such a transition was replaced by divine peace. We felt like everything would be all right even though we weren’t sure what it would look like. Shortly after, we ignored all the rational reasons to avoid starting a new risky venture and we simply dove into starting a cookie business. We felt peaceful that this would be good for our family. We wanted to create a place that would make everything from scratch and use only the highest quality ingredients. We wanted it to taste “homemade” in the best sense.
Our kitchen became a never-ending procession of new cookies. We enlisted the help of friends and neighbors to help us compare different iterations of cookies to help us improve the recipes. For instance, in creating our Texas Ranger cookie, we experimented with nearly a dozen different mix-ins before settling on the optimal mix of 3 types of chocolate chips, oats, coconut, pecans and toffee bits for a truly unique cookie. Taste testing with neighbors was always an important and fun part of the process.
We really value family time and perhaps the best part of starting this new business is the extra family time that resulted. Creating this shop together has given our family a common goal to work on together. One son created an iOS app while another designed the website. Yet another son helped us refine recipes and have helped out at the shop. We now have a wonderful team who also works in the shop day in and day out. We strive to create a friendly and relaxed environment so that our customers know we are grateful for their support and hopefully feel the friendliness. We have really appreciated all the enthusiasm we have received from our customers.
Starting something new is never easy but this has been a very memorable experience for our family. We love the words of Christ in John 14:27: “Peace I leave with you, my peace I give unto you…Let not your heart be troubled, neither let it be afraid.”
By the end of the year, members and missionaries of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints will have donated a whopping 3,000 volunteer hours in 2021 working at the Christian Cupboard, a food pantry, in Seguin, Texas!
Today, a few of those same volunteers helped unload a truckload of food for the Christian Cupboard, representing the largest single donation of food in the Cupboard’s history. The truck was sent by the Church’s humanitarian services in response to a request made by Bishop Tim Bird, of the Seguin congregation.
The Christian Cupboard of Seguin finally finished erecting a warehouse for storage, making today’s shipment possible. Bishop Bird said that often times the folks at the Christian Cupboard have had to purchase items off the shelves at HEB to keep their pantry stocked, so they are thrilled with today’s delivery, especially during this holiday season.
Members and missionaries helped unload 24 pallets of food ranging from green beans to chicken soup, applesauce, rice and other pantry staples. Of course there were two pallets of the perennial favorite of any food bank — peanut butter! Pallets of laundry and dish detergent were also donated. Want to volunteer like the youth and folks in Seguin? Find opportunities for service at JustServe
Service opportunities are as varied as the people who perform them. Over the past week, thousands of members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints from around San Antonio have metaphorically come together to help feed the more vulnerable in our city.
The word went out just over a week ago that Catholic Charities needed help filling their Thanksgiving boxes. They had turkeys but they needed side items. Members went into action with different congregations assigned different items to donate —from apples and oranges to potatoes, stuffing, corn, sweet potatoes, marshmallows and other items needed to round out a Thanksgiving meal.
By Leisa Parsons and Ken Jarvis, Area Media Specialists
Most of us are familiar with the saying “Think Globally, Act Locally”. The plight of the Afghan refugees is a global story that has inspired many to get involved. This particular story starts in Germany, ends in San Antonio by way of St. George, Utah. It is the epitome of acting locally to alleviate the suffering of others across the globe.
“As soon as I heard about the Afghan evacuees flying to Ramstein Air Base in Germany, just an hour from where we are living, I hoped there would be an opportunity for me to help.” said Valarie Olson, a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints living in Germany, where her husband is stationed with the military.
Members of the Kaiserslautern Stake of the Church of Jesus Christ mobilized quickly and emails were sent requesting volunteers. “Count me in” Olson responded, “I remember standing in the hangar on Ramstein Air Base, surrounded by carts full of donated clothes. Afghan refugees urgently needed clothing, as many had arrived with only the clothes they were wearing, some even barefoot. I was one of the many volunteers that morning sorting items into packets to distribute.” Continue reading ““Be a Helper””
Another Saturday rolls around and one more refugee family arrives in San Antonio, homeless and with little more than the clothes on their backs. Just as predictably, another Latter-day Saint ward is ready to meet their needs.
This time it’s the Alamo Ranch Ward, San Antonio Texas Stake. Heather Haskin, Ward Relief Society First Counselor said, “We got an email from our Stake Relief Society telling us about the opportunity and I just jumped on it. I’ve been reading about all these people from Afghanistan and wanted to do something, even if it was just a little. I thought back to all the talks that our Church leaders have given in the past couple of years about refugees and how we should reach out and my heart was ready to do that.”
Kristen Holmes, the ward Relief Society Compassionate Service Leader said, “We got lists from the Refugee Center, sent them out to our members and the response has been phenomenal; clothes, toys, everything that they should need to get them started.”
One item on the list was a carafe to put tea in. Serving hot tea is extremely important in the Muslim culture, but for Latter-day Saints…not so much. Holmes couldn’t find anyone who had one so they went on-line. “We found one and it was perfect!”
Haskin added that it wasn’t just adults that helped. “Our Primary boys put together some tables from Ikea. They also drew some pictures for the family.” She added, “Everything was about ready to go but, of all things, we didn’t have kitchen knives. So a young boy took his own money and bought them for the new family.”
So a family arrives in their new home and some local residents have the experience of a lifetime helping them get settled. But who puts all this together?
That enormous task is the responsibility of the Center for Refugee Services in San Antonio. Joann Franck is one of two Donations Coordinators. “I’ve been doing this for about six years,” she said. “We bring household goods and furniture, piece by piece, to brand new families.” When the number of refugees arriving is very low someone would donate an item and “…We would coordinate a pickup and get it delivered directly to the recipient.”
But then came the Afghan refugees. “Based on initial projections we’re anticipating about 500 Afghans, total, to arrive in San Antonio. We’ve had about 100 arrive so far,” Franck said. To collect and distribute enough household goods to meet the needs of all these people would overwhelm this small organization. She said that what is making this program work now, “…is that your wards are doing all the collecting and all the distribution in one big event. So the families are being serviced much more efficiently because when they arrive in their apartment they are given everything, or nearly everything and sometimes much more.” She added that if one family receives more than they need they share.
There is still the question of what we can do to help the families feel settled? “The next step for them,” Franck replied, “is to get a job and to enroll their children in school. Some women will enroll in English classes, some will not. Building relationships will be a slower process. The father will probably work every single day.”
In the Muslim culture if the husband is gone it is acceptable for women to visit the home but not men. The best thing to do would be to touch base with the families that we’ve helped. Check in every week or couple of weeks in the beginning just to keep tabs and say “hello”. “And for families without a job and without food stamps their need for food will be great,” said Franck.
A volunteer herself, Franck said, “What your Latter-day Saint wards are doing right now has not only eased the burden for myself and my partner, you have also met the needs of these families so beautifully.”