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Wow! What a week! The official ribbon cutting activities for the Claude and Betty Harris Center for Hunger Relief brought several hundred supporters into the Food Bank over the two-day period. If anyone ever questioned if the community supports our mission, all they would have had to do was be here during those two days. Over the past few months, I have introduced you to various features of the new Food Bank; the community room/teaching kitchen, the climate-controlled volunteer center, the protein pack room, the expanded dry and cold storage, and more, all of which was designed for multi-function and to serve Northwest Arkansas for years and years to come. This is YOUR Northwest Arkansas Food Bank, so if you did not have a chance to come out this week and are interested in seeing it, feel free to stop by. I told those in attendance both Wednesday and Thursday that the building is just a tool in the fight against food insecurity. It is not the solution. We have to continue to be innovative and creative in finding ways to support our neighbors in need. One way you can help is through awareness. People simply do not think there is a problem in Northwest Arkansas. But there is! Feeding America estimates that over 89,000 are food insecure. The faces of those 89,000 are many. Most are working poor, many times a single parent household. Many are seniors, men and women who have outlived their savings. Far too many are children. As the population continues to grow, unfortunately the number of food insecure also grows but as I said at the ribbon cutting, “As long as there are food insecure neighbors, the Northwest Arkansas Food Bank will be here to serve them.”
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In just a few days, the Eikenbabies, along with thousands of others, will be headed back to school. While some may be excited about seeing their friends who they may have missed over the summer, depending on which source quoted, between 1 in 5 and 1 in 6 kids under the age of 18 are excited to go back to school because they know they will get a nutritious meal. A hungry student struggles to pay attention in class. A hungry student struggles to keep up with his or her classmates and many times grows into a hungry employee. Our school pantry program is a partnership to try and help break that cycle. Thank you for your support of it.
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September is National Hunger Action Month. A calendar for the month with several ways to get involved will be posted on our website and on our social media channels. Please note, EACH OF US CAN DO SOMETHING to help spread the message! My “go to” is to wear orange every day of the month. I promise by the end of the month, I am ready to move my orange shirts to the back of the closet. As I said, there are lots of events going on next month so I encourage you to take part and spread the word.
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I begin most mornings with about 30 minutes of devotional readings, followed by a two-mile reflective walk during which I try to focus on my gratitude. While I may not think of each of you specifically by name, I do collectively remember to be thankful for your support of our mission.
Because of you, someone will eat today!
K
For families in crisis, safety means more than having a roof over your head. Having a place to call home frees you from constant fear, creates space for rest and recovery, and opens the door to a brighter future.
Peace at Home helps families escape domestic violence through holistic support, including an emergency shelter, housing support, counseling, legal support, and connections to community resources.
The Northwest Arkansas Food Bank supplies food to Peace at Home to help keep the kitchen stocked in the emergency shelter.
“The way we do the vouchers to the store (for clothing) and the way we do meals at the shelter are all connected to the empowerment model,” said AJ, Marketing Coordinator for Peace at Home. “We want it to be as much like home and as much about their choices as possible ... Everybody cooks for their family.”
A study published in “Public Health Nutrition” found connections between intimate partner violence and high levels of food insecurity. When families escape abusive situations, they often struggle “to acquire food because they are unable to afford it due to their tenuous financial status.”
AJ shared how some families escaping domestic violence experience financial abuse with the abuser limiting access to money or controlling how it can be spent. Abusers also can control how often and how much family members eat.
“The way we see that intersect with food insecurity is a lot of times they’ll have very specific shopping lists or a very specific budget,” AJ said, “... and that’s obviously reinforcing power and control, but it’s also to keep them from saving up the money to escape.”
Peace at Home wants to restore the freedom of “being able to choose what you want to eat and not having somebody exercising control over what you and your kids eat,” AJ said.
To connect with resources from Peace at Home, visit www.peaceathomeshelter.org.
For additional food resources in Northwest Arkansas, visit www.nwafoodbank.org/find-food for the latest Mobile Pantry schedule and information on 110+ agency partners in Benton, Carroll, Madison, and Washington counties.
Photo is representative of neighbor. Courtesy of Juan Monino.
Ricardo knows strength and support are necessary to heal. As he recovers from major back surgery, he’s found a caring community at St. Joseph’s Catholic Church in Tontitown.
At the church’s food pantry, he picks up food for his family and diapers and wipes for his young children. The drive-thru format also is more accessible during his recovery.
“It’s a blessing,” he said. “The people are very cordial, very polite.”
As an agency partner of the Northwest Arkansas Food Bank, St. Joseph’s Food Pantry offers help to anyone in need twice a month. They provide pre-packed bags of groceries, including foods like bread, flour, sugar, frozen meat, cereal and more. They also have a community garden.
Living in western Washington County, Ricardo said it’s harder to find resources and that people don’t “always remember that there’s people on the outskirts” of the major cities. But he’s especially grateful for St. Joseph’s Food Pantry helping anyone in need.
“If it wouldn’t have been for this surgery, I would have never known the humbleness out there in the world, like this particular church,” he said. “They’re really good people.”
The St. Joseph’s Catholic Church Food Pantry is open every Monday from 5:30 to 6:30 p.m. They are located at 192 E. Henri de Tonti Boulevard in Tontitown. They can be contacted at 479-200-2088.
As the demand for food increases across food banks across the country, we’re thankful for CVS Health Pharmacy customers who have joined us in the movement to end hunger. Your donations will support our Mobile Pantry program and ensure that in Northwest Arkansas, no one goes hungry. Feeding America
For more information on Feeding America please visit: www.feedingamerica.org
NWAFB is a 501(c)3 nonprofit organization, all donations made are tax exempt. TIN# 71-0680830
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1604 Honeysuckle Street
PO BOX 2126
Lowell AR 72745-2126
Phone (479) 872-8774
Fax (479) 872-8777
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