matteo-paganelli-5XJarqlwvPA-unsplash-scaled
Picture of EmilyCC
EmilyCC
EmilyCC lives in Phoenix, Arizona with her spouse and three children. She currently serves as a stake Just Serve specialists, and she recently returned to school to become a nurse. She is a former editor of Exponent II and a founding blogger at The Exponent.

Feeding Refugees at an IRC Welcome Center: a Just Serve Stake Service Opportunity

Feeding Refugees at an IRC Welcome Center: a Just Serve Stake Service OpportunityI am the Just Serve stake coordinator, and our stake is working on a service project to provide meals at our local International Rescue Committee’s Welcome Center. I personally love this project because it is so central to what Christ taught us to do. As one Episcopalian woman I spoke with as I was working on plans said, “I don’t care about anyone’s politics. My job is to feed people who are hungry.”

So, I wanted to share what our stake is working on in hopes that other stakes with an IRC Welcome Center near them could prepare a meal for hungry sisters and brothers from all over the world. (Note: this opportunity is evolving and is not on the Just Serve website at this time.)

What are Welcome Centers?

At a Welcome Center, refugees wait for their bus or plane tickets to take them to their final destination in their new country, usually near their sponsor.  While waiting, they work with IRC staff and volunteers; refugees get help navigating court dates and interview appointments; meet with nurses to assess health issues; and get access to donated clothing, snacks, and toys. Refugees have a safe place to bathe, eat meals, and a warm bed at these Welcome Centers before they embark on the last leg of their journey as asylum seekers in the United States.

In 2018 and 2019, Arizona experienced a swell of asylum-seekers; churches, synagogues, and mosques in Tucson and Phoenix cobbled together ways to nourish our sisters and brothers from around the world who had come to our country. Generally, our wards and stakes worked in the churches of other denominations who could provide access to showers and beds for a night. It was heart-warming to see a truly interfaith effort. The Mormon network could provide meals for large groups of people and use our minivans to drive refugees to the airports and bus stations while a synagogue, for example, had members of their community set up cots and bedding in their building (and doing LOTS of laundry). This loose network would often have around 24 to 48 hours notice that 30 to 100 refugees needed these services; I was just on the periphery, but there were people who spent all day, every day for weeks, ensuring these refugees had food, clothing, and beds. Because this wasn’t a sustainable process, the International Rescue Committee opened a Welcome Center in Phoenix July 2019, just as the swell of refugees began to ebb.

This past month, we are seeing more people at the borders again, and these refugees again need places to sleep and food while their documentation is processed for the final leg of their journey in the United States.

I wrote a template for logistics and meal plan.

Other Ways to Involve Members with Planned Activities:

Suggestion from Other Faiths Who Have Fed Refugees

  1. Serve “hot” meals—even in the middle of summer, a hot chicken soup was appreciated
  2. Fresh ingredients—refugees have had a lot of heavily processed shelf-stable items on their journey. They appreciate whole fruit that can be saved for later.
  3. Serve well-known staples like eggs, rice, bananas
  4. Because refugees come from all over the world and enter at the Mexican/US border, have some vegetarian portions at each meal for Hindus and Buddhists

Current Safety Guidelines for Food Preparation

Phoenix’s Welcome Center does not have a working commercial kitchen so our stake’s options are limited right now to the following

  1. Buy food prepared at a restaurant or supermarket
  2. Find a commercial kitchen and prepare the food there.

I’ll continue to post about our efforts and collaboration with our local Welcome Center as we continue to coordinate with the Interfaith Refugee and Immigration Service.

How has your ward or stake participated in Just Serve? What have been your favorite activities? What would you like to see your ward or stake do?

Read more posts in this blog series:

EmilyCC lives in Phoenix, Arizona with her spouse and three children. She currently serves as a stake Just Serve specialists, and she recently returned to school to become a nurse. She is a former editor of Exponent II and a founding blogger at The Exponent.

3 Responses

  1. Thank you for outlining all of this and documenting what you’ve done. It’s so much easier when there’s a template than reinventing the wheel over & over. Amazing resources.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Our Comment Policy

  • No ads or plugs.
  • No four-letter words that wouldn’t be allowed on television.
  • No mudslinging: Stating disagreement is fine — even strong disagreement, but no personal attacks or name calling. No personal insults.
  • Try to stick with your personal experiences, ideas, and interpretations. This is not the place to question another’s personal righteousness, to call people to repentance, or to disrespectfully refute people’s personal religious beliefs.
  • No sockpuppetry. You may not post a variety of comments under different monikers.

Note: Comments that include hyperlinks will be held in the moderation queue for approval (to filter out obvious spam). Comments with email addresses may also be held in the moderation queue.

Write for Us

We want to hear your perspective! Write for Exponent II Blog by submitting a post here.

Support Mormon Feminism

Our blog content is always free, but our hosting fees are not. Please support us.

related Blog posts

Blogger Abby Maxwell Hansen writes, "What were the best (of the worst) Young Women's activities from the 1990s? Priesthood Appreciation night, book club for The Miracle of Forgiveness, STD awareness/sexual shaming night, free babysitting for ward members, or wash and iron the Sacrament tablecloths while the boys explain to you how their priesthood powers work?"

Never miss A blog post

Sign up and be the first to be alerted when new blog posts go live!

Loading

* We will never sell your email address, and you can unsubscribe at any time (not that you’ll want to).​