‘Hands On’ volunteers serve service
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Deirdre Newman
Derek Fisher brought his Boy Scout troop to a community service day
inside a gym at a local church Saturday, but he didn’t expect they’d
end up sewing.
Fisher and his troop found themselves at a table, laden with cloth
pieces decorated with bunnies and colorful patterns, trying to thread
needles to make dolls for premature babies and their mothers.
“[My wife] knows I’m pretty handy, but I think she would be
impressed,” Fisher said, as he licked a piece of thread to help it go
through the needle. “I’ve done a little bit of stitching, but this is
driving me nuts.”
The determination of Boy Scout Troop 746 of Newport Beach
illustrated the length service day volunteers went to in order to
help others. The fourth annual Hearts & Hands “Hands On” Community
Service Day at the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
attracted about 700 participants, said Jaimie Day, the vice president
of community service for the Newport-Mesa-Irvine Interfaith Council,
which sponsored the event. It was set up so members of about 30
community and faith-based organizations -- including Sikhs, Bahais
and Jews -- could interact with each other while donating time to
help a range of people.
Naziha Wareh, a Muslim volunteer, who has participated in the
event every year, said she was inspired by the event’s diversity.
“It feels so good to work side by side with people of other
faiths,” Wareh said. “Sitting at the same table and talking really
builds bridges for us.”
The service day filled almost every nook and cranny of the gym of
the church, where Day directed volunteers to the event’s activities.
“Go find a project” became Day’s mantra.
The activities included work on projects outside the building,
including “Operation: A Bit of Home,” to support troops in Iraq.
Junior ROTC members from Orange High School collected and boxed up
sporting equipment, games, art supplies and snacks to be sent to
troops recovering at a rest-and-relaxation base in Baghdad. When U.S.
troops took it over, the cupboards and shelves were bare, and a
sports field constructed by the troops was bombed as soon as it was
finished.
“[This project] has given a patriotic feel to this event,” Day
said. “We love seeing the cadets and what they represent: hope for
the next generation.”
One of those cadets, 15-year-old Jeanette Cortez, was doing her
part, painting heart key chains that would be distributed through the
church’s humanitarian-services arm. Attached to the key chains were
counseling and referral information for women with unplanned
pregnancies.
Day anticipated that next year the service day will expand across
the street to a Lutheran Church and include any other churches that
want to join in.
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