Today, the congregation of St. William Catholic Church along with volunteers throughout our community will prepare and deliver more than 600 hot, cooked Thanksgiving meals to neighbors in need in Millington, North Memphis and Tipton County.
Just a bit
of trivia to start with: The first Thanksgiving in America was celebrated
between the Pilgrims and Native Americans in October of 1621, marking the
Pilgrims first harvest. The first official U.S. “Day of Thanksgiving and
Prayer” was declared by President George Washington on November 26,1789, and it
was Abraham Lincoln who declared Thanksgiving Day a federal holiday in the
midst of the Civil War in 1863.
Family, Sharing and Gratefulness
For most folks,
particularly here in the South, where there are many amazing Southern cooks,
Thanksgiving means a great meal, with my apologies to my friends on the East
Coast who are devotees of oyster stuffing and my vegan friends who ascribe to
tofu turkey…just no.
My mom, who
was Japanese, learned to prepare a Thanksgiving meal from my many Southern
aunts who are wonderful cooks. Today, more than a decade since my mamaw passed
away, a Cooper Thanksgiving is celebrated at the Cooper cabin, a huge kitchen,
built by my uncle Dale solely for the purpose of my large and extended family
to share meals together. Our Thanksgiving is a quintessentially Southern one,
with both turkey and ham, cornbread dressing (made in a pan, not stuffed inside
the bird) and all the trimmings. Last year, maybe because my great-grandmother
was Irish, I counted no less than six different dishes of potatoes, as well as
macaroni and cheese, green beans (cooked with pork), and much more, along with
desserts too numerous to count.
For several
years before my mom passed away, my immediate, small family of three went to
Thanksgiving dinner at The Helmsman Club on the Navy base. My dad enjoyed it
because we always saw and visited with friends and neighbors there, and my mom
enjoyed it, too, because she didn’t have to cook or clean up. The last picture I
have of us together as a family is at Thanksgiving dinner there.
And, it’s
where I will be celebrating Thanksgiving dinner this year, with my best friend
and her family. Her mom is Japanese, too, and at 86, was diagnosed with cancer
earlier this year. She wanted to have Thanksgiving at The Helmsman, and made a
point to ask me to come along, At its heart, to me, Thanksgiving is about family,
sharing and gratefulness. My best friend and I have known each other since we
were children. We are only-children, and share Japanese moms and Southern,
military dads, as the major common threads in our lives. She and her family are
my family, too. We are so much more than friends, more like sisters, really.
And for this, I am eternally grateful.
Feeding Our Neighbors
Continuing
on the theme of sharing...While most businesses and churches are closed on
Thanksgiving Day, St. William Catholic Church located on Easley Street is a
busy place. Beginning at around 5:30 a.m. the kitchen in its Family Life Center
is filled with provisions and volunteers preparing to cook and transport no
less than 600 Thanksgiving meals to shut-ins and families in need in
Millington, North Memphis and Tipton County, according to parishioner Bob Allen
who spearheads the logistics of this effort, having taken over several years
ago from church members Ruth Ann Olson and Jack & Gloria Sparks
The
congregation has been offering this ministry of food and fellowship to
neighbors in our city and the surrounding area for some 35 years. Allen
stresses the key role Wendy Strevel plays, whom he calls “the kitchen queen,” overseeing
the cooking of the meals. “She has a real passion for this.” He also notes the
church’s Knights of Columbus and women’s club are very actively involved
in this effort.
Similar to
the “Meals on Wheels” program conducted by the Metropolitan Interfaith
Association (MIFA), hot, cooked meals are hand-delivered. Allen is in charge of
recruiting the approximately 20 drivers needed and mapping the routes.
Some 250 of
the 600 meals prepared are delivered to and distributed by the nuns of Mother
Teresa’s Missionaries of Charity who run a shelter for women and children and
minister to neighborhoods in North Memphis.
The menu
includes turkey, potatoes and gravy, stuffing, mixed vegetables, cranberry
sauce, a roll and dessert.
But Allen
says, it’s much more than a meal. For many folks, the human contact and
connection is just as important, if not more. He urges the volunteer drivers
not just to drop-off the meals, but to take the opportunity to visit with folks,
especially the shut-ins, who may not see visitors often.
“We have the skills, capability and means, and we’re driven by faith. It’s a labor of love and fun. I’m honored to be a part of it. I do so little. Everyone else works a lot harder. It’s a marvelous project,” Allen says.
He stresses
this is an ecumenical and community-wide effort, with volunteers from other
churches including the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints and First
United Methodist Church, and companies such as Ingram-Micro and other
individuals donating funds and their time as well. This morning, the MCHS
Fellowship of Christian Athletes played a key role helping to peel and slice
some 300 pounds of potatoes.
Strevel says she has been participating in this ministry since she was in the church youth
group. As a teacher and administrator with Millington Municipal Schools she
sees many low-income, working families struggling to make ends meet.
“This is
one day out of the year we can come together and help someone.” She adds, “This
is what community is about, pitching in and helping out, and we’ve expanded and
continue to reach out.”
She
stresses, “This is not just a ministry of the Catholic church. This is what
Jesus has called us to do.”
St. William
Catholic Church is located at 4932 Easley Street. For additional information,
visit the church’s website at www.stwilliamcc.org or call (901) 872-4099.
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Thursday, November 28, 2019
Thanksgiving: Family, Sharing & Gratefulness
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