Monday, November 21, 2011
Emergency need
Barb has recently had a single mother referred to her- a 9/11 era veteran Gold Card holder with two young children. She's about to be kicked out for nonpayment of rent. $350 will keep her in her apartment until the first of the year, by which time some VA support will be coming in. Our Peaceful Place can cover this expense- but it will leave us with a shortfall before the end of the year if we do so. If you can, please go to OurPeacefulPlace.org and click on the "Donate now button" to make a one-time donation specifically for this cause.
Monday, November 14, 2011
Needs
Thanksgiving is fast approaching. And with it, the infamous Black Friday, start of the Christmas Shopping Season. If you are reading this and are in the Portland Area, and are planning on shopping at Fred Meyer's on Black Friday, we ask you to add a couple of items for the homeless to your shopping list:
-Socks. Any Socks. Barb likes giving out socks.
-A $24 book of Tri-met 2 hour passes.
Freddy's always has a sale on socks on Black Friday- and Tri-met tickets- so would you please add the homeless to your shopping list? You can always contact one of our volunteers through:
Our Peaceful Place
P.O Box 3093
Clackamas, OR 97015
Ph : 503-295-7744
Email : OPP_Giving@comcast.net
-Socks. Any Socks. Barb likes giving out socks.
-A $24 book of Tri-met 2 hour passes.
Freddy's always has a sale on socks on Black Friday- and Tri-met tickets- so would you please add the homeless to your shopping list? You can always contact one of our volunteers through:
Our Peaceful Place
P.O Box 3093
Clackamas, OR 97015
Ph : 503-295-7744
Email : OPP_Giving@comcast.net
Sunday, November 13, 2011
A Walk With Barb
This past Friday, Veteran's Day, was my birthday. Being on the board of directors for Our Peaceful Place, I can sometimes feel a bit disconnected from the work Barb does- almost like my few hours a month, necessary as they are to support Barb's work, are like paying somebody else to do my charity for me. After the dinner in October, my son and his "friend who is a girl" decided they wanted to be a bit more hands on, but they're young, 7 and 8. So I decided for my birthday, I wanted to see what Barb did for myself- we invited along myself, Ted, my wife Shannon, my son Christopher, his friend Julia and her parents. At the last minute my parents also showed up, with three more cousins in tow, for a group of 10 lost little ducklings following along behind Barb.
It was raining heavily- so it was hard to find the type of people who needed our help. In bad weather, homeless people try to find someplace dry to hide, and with the way poverty has become criminalized on our society, they usually don't want to be disturbed. But right away, we found a group of teenagers. I thought they weren't homeless at first. They looked like any other group of teenagers enjoying a night on the town. But Barb led off- asked them if they needed socks. A couple took the socks, so we offered the peanut butter sandwiches my wife had made earlier that were in Christopher's backpack. Those were a hit- so my mother took out the loaf of bread and tuna salad she had mixed up earlier, and started making tuna sandwiches.
After that, we crossed the street and went under Burnside Bridge, where a few people were settling down for the night. We found one very nice couple- he just wanted to sleep, but she was very interested in additional clothing. But when he heard "tuna fish sandwich" he perked right up. We handed out some clothing there, and moved along. Next we took a walk up towards where the day shelter used to be when Sr. Maria was alive. It now appears to be a bar of some sort, but was closed, boarded up, so we took a left and went down towards Voodoo Donuts- where we found a young lady with a small dog and a sign "I can't remember the last time I was warm". We bought her a tea at Voodoo, gave her some sandwiches, and gave her some extra clothing to keep her and her little puppy dog warm.
On the way back, we found more homeless men, and gave out a few more socks and sandwiches- one had some candy and gave it to the kids.
It was an awfully large group to take around, and a large group probably scared some people away, but it was a good experience. What Barb does, is important. Please visit our website and become a monthly donor. If we can just get back to 88 people in our sustaining circle, giving an average of $25 each, we can balance the budget and let Barb continue doing more of what she does.
Tuesday, November 1, 2011
Become a regular supporter
This article reminded me why Barb Lescher does what she does. Our Peaceful Place has modest needs. 88 people giving $25/month through our website would fund us. In this recession, we're down to less than 1/8th of the number of regular donors we need. The people we help- for a day, for a moment- are the poorest of the poor in America. Each one of them is a human barometer telling us that something is deeply wrong here: with our legal system, our housing programs, our mental health care system. There is something wrong with our priorities, our economy, us. There is something deeply wrong with us when people stand in the cold and rain, in public with their personal dislocation and shame. It is too painful, too humiliating, to dehumanizing. And, truth be told, for most of us, if we lost two or three paychecks, it could be us out there. That is why Barb does what she does. So reach into your heart, into your budget. Visit our website today. Click on the Donate Now Button- and sign up for monthly donations taken out of your credit or debit card. Because, for most of us- if we lost two or three paychecks, we'd be right under that bridge as well.
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