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News
Volunteers Serve Thanksgiving To Hungry
Aired November 23, 2001
The spirit of volunteerism was much in evidence on
Thanksgiving at a west side hunger center, where hundreds of people sought
and received a Thanksgiving Day meal. 90.3 WCPN®'s Bill Rice paid
a visit, and prepared this report.
BRAbout five or six dozen of Cleveland's
hungry are seated in the ground floor meal room at St. Augustus Church
in Tremont, patiently waiting and talking amongst each other while volunteers
serve up turkey dinners. Sister Corita Ambro is Director of the St. Augustine
Hunger Center, one of the largest hunger centers in the city. She says
this is just one of several free Thanksgiving meals the Center is coordinating
throughout the area.
Corita AmbroThis facility, we're also serving
at the Korean Church, King Kennedy - I'm trying to remember them all and
not doing so well.
BRAbout 70 volunteers have turned out at
St. Augustine's to set places and serve meals. Paul Lynn is in from Denver
for the holiday visiting his mother. He says this is really his first
time volunteering, and he feels pretty good about it.
Paul LynnWhere I'm from things are quite
good in the economy, and everything about the whole area seems to be pretty
good lifestyle, and to come here and kind of wake up to the realities
of life and what's really going on in the inner cities is a very good
experience for me - humbling, I guess.
BRLynn joins other volunteers filing through
the cafeteria-style line to pick up the meals and move them out to the
tables. Others fill plates with food, while still others direct traffic.
Teenager Beth Gravelis has traveled here with her mother from Medina.
Beth GravelisI've been seving the turkey,
and there's gravy, turkey, stuffing, mashed potatoes, yams, green beans.
PatI'm Pat, and I'm serving gravy, and my
daughter was the one that wanted to come serve today so that's why we're
here. We've done this in Medina twice before, so I think it's going to
be a tradition.
BRAnd so it is with many of the volunteers
here. Sister Corita says the Thanksgiving effort brings them out in droves.
CAThe people in Cleveland are wonderful,
and they do a magnificent job. And the people who come to eat love it
because they have someone different to talk to - they're used to just
having me every day; they get a chance to talk to someone else. And so
many people will share with them, and they love to have someone do that.
BRPeople like Natalie, who has come over
to St. Augustine's from the east side. A large African American, Natalie
claps along with live music as she waits for her meal. She's come here
to St. Augustus by herself. She says alcohol abuse has separated her from
her family.
NatalieThat world that they in, I ain't in
no more. Drinkin' world. And plus I go to church. And my pastor's name
is Jesse Lee Horne, up on 93rd and Nelson.
BRThe St. Augustine Hunger Center provides
meals to the poor and homeless year round - about 190 show up for breakfast
every day, according to Sister Corita, and maybe 250 for lunch, depending
on the day. She sees lots of familiar faces.
CAI think I would know everybody here, from
one time or another.
BRAnd there's plenty of food to go around?
CAYes, we did well. We cooked 900 turkeys,
so we should have enough.
BRAnd plenty of volunteers?
CAAnd plenty of volunteers.
BRIn Cleveland, Bill Rice, 90.3 WCPN®
News.
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