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Knights Marshall Forces
Volunteerism Initiative
BY Joseph Pronechen Register Staff Writer
February 15-21, 2009 Issue |
Posted 2/6/09 at 7:03 AM
FAIRFIELD, Conn. — During the Great
Depression of the 1930s, the catchphrase was “Buddy, can you spare a dime?”
Now, in the current economic
recession, it could be “Can you spare a day?”
That’s according to Knights of
Columbus’ Supreme Knight Carl Anderson, who pointed out that an hour of
volunteerism a week is less than 10 minutes a day.
With millions of people losing their
jobs and many losing their homes, nonprofit charities are feeling the pinch in
decreasing contributions. To meet the challenge, Anderson is calling for a
massive new volunteerism effort. The Knights, along with the Center for Faith
and Public Life at Fairfield University in Connecticut, are sponsoring a
volunteerism summit in New York City Feb. 27.
Headlined “Neighbor Helping
Neighbor,” the summit will include representatives from top charities and
volunteer groups to find new ways to promote volunteerism to help more seeking
assistance.
“This is a nation filled with
imagination and with millions of people ready to step forward,” said Anderson
during a Jan. 23 speech at Fairfield University announcing the summit. “If
greed — one of the worst aspects of human nature — helped push us into this crisis,
then one of the best aspects of our nature — generosity — will be necessary to
help pull us out of it.”
The Knights often boast of the
man-hours their members provide doing charitable works. In 2007, the latest
year for figures, the Knights not only donated $145 million to charitable
causes but provided 69 million hours of volunteer service “through an effective
grassroots structure of thousands of active councils motivated by the Christian
principle of charity,” Anderson said.
“The challenge we must meet is to
effectively connect new volunteers to the local community projects,” Anderson
stressed, “and there is no better place to start looking for new volunteers
than in our churches.”
On Jan. 19, he said, Knights in
Washington, D.C., through local churches, gave “the gift of warmth” to nearly
1,200 children in their “Coats for Kids” initiative. (The rest of a total 7,800
new coats were distributed later in January to children in Detroit and
Chicago.)
“Specifically, volunteer groups with
religious ties — including the Knights of Columbus — need to partner with their
local churches and synagogues to reach those in the pews with the news about
opportunities to volunteer,” he said. “No audience should be more receptive to
this message.”
Outlining the Need
The need is obvious. Indeed, Bishop
William Lori of Bridgeport, Conn., the Knights’ supreme chaplain, noted
immediately after Anderson’s speech that in Fairfield County, one of the
wealthiest in the nation, Catholic Charities will serve more than 1 million meals
to the homeless and homebound. One diocesan soup kitchen, the largest in the
state, “attracts and depends on armies of volunteers from 87 parishes,” he
said.
Candy Hill, senior vice president
for social policy and government affairs for Catholic Charities USA, based in
Arlington, Va., said member organizations reflect distress in local
communities. According to Hill, the Arlington area alone is reporting a 400%
increase in the number of people coming for emergency assistance.
“The reality is that we’re having to
serve more people, particularly middle-class people, with greater needs and
fewer resources,” she said.
The Giving USA Foundation reported
that while nonprofit figures for monetary contributions in 2008 aren’t
available until June 2009, historically, donations decrease during recessions.
According to Nancy Raybin, chairwoman of its parent organization, the Giving
Institute, some organizations have not seen the year-end giving they hoped for
in numbers and dollars. Although she observed good donations during three
quarters of last year, she added, “I don’t think we know the whole scope yet,
and 2009 will be worse than 2008.”
“Our concern needs to be what
happens in 2009,” she said, “and what steps can be taken to help charities get
the resources they need for the help they provide.”
Because the Center for Faith and
Public Life maintains regular contact with national and international
nonprofits, its director, Jesuit Father Richard Ryscavage, doesn’t know anyone
not talking or planning for a major drop in contributions. Although there are
fewer resources, needs are greater and demand for the services has
doubled.
“The Anderson speech points the
way,” said Father Ryscavage. “If you had
enough people trying to help at the local level, you could meet a lot of these
needs.”
He also sees Anderson’s initiative
coinciding with “what the White House people are thinking on this.”
Volunteerism becomes part of the way of life for citizens, he explained.
“A sense of national service takes
root so it’s not considered an odd thing for friends and families to volunteer
their services (regularly) at the community and town level across the country,”
said Father Ryscavage, likening it to an inculturated national voluntary
service in a way reminiscent of a call to the Peace Corps.
The Feb. 27 summit will have leading
nonprofits share ideas about collaboration, said Father Ryscavage, adding that
they’re trying to contact the White House to send a representative to the
summit and hope to have a report to deliver to the White House afterward.
‘Something Tangible’
Already signed up for the summit are
organizations like Catholic Charities USA and Volunteers of America, the
country’s largest provider of housing for the poor and those in need and a
faith-based organization.
According to Volunteers of America’s
Harry Quiett, vice president of ministry development, “Volunteerism is so
overlooked and it’s such a critical issue. This is a great opportunity … for us
to begin to collaborate to become better stewards in these tough times of what
God has given us.”
Catholic Charities’ Hill is excited
about the summit. Even with “230,000 volunteers who have answered God’s call to
help people in need,” she said, “in these tough economic times, we need more
human resources and volunteers to help our neighbors who are suffering.”
Knights of Columbus spokesman Andrew
Walther described how an entire parish of 3,000 people bringing just one can of
food each could help a hard-pressed food bank provide meals for needy people
for weeks. Churches are the one place where people come together every week in
great numbers. Volunteering with familiar people rather then with strangers
makes the effort easier, too.
“It’s something very tangible that
makes an instantaneous change in a person’s life,” Walther said.
As deputy grand knight of Holy
Family Council 8882 in New Haven, Conn., Walther noted his council is already
planning additional volunteer efforts. In fact, councils all over the country
are going to be invited to be more active in providing food and clothing.
‘Hallmark of Recovery’
At Fairfield, Anderson called upon
Americans to make the “spirit of volunteerism the hallmark of our nation’s
recovery.”
“Let us truly become a nation of
neighbors helping neighbors,” he said. “If we do that, we will have
accomplished much more than an economic recovery — we will have set a new and
powerful moral compass for the future of our country.”
He noted that while government plays
a role in encouraging Americans to volunteer, such as when President Obama
called on Americans to participate in a National Day of Service the day before
he was inaugurated, volunteerism can’t be confined to one Monday in January.
For Christians, this call has a special
significance because of the Gospel’s call to “love your neighbor as yourself.”
Anderson pointed out that while
volunteer and charitable organizations must work with government at every level
to best serve the needs of our communities, “a major strength of such
organizations is their local network. Our local churches and synagogues can
help us find additional volunteers.”
Staff writer Joseph Pronechen is based in Trumbull, Connecticut.
INFORMATION Carl Anderson’s speech can be seen at KofC.org
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