The Columbus Dispatch

Groups provide Thanksgivi­ng meals for city’s hungry

- Eric Lagatta

This is the time of year when Mary Wallace would be looking forward to a Thanksgivi­ng Day gathering with her six children and her large extended family.

Fate, though, had different plans. Wallace is not only living through the deadly coronaviru­s pandemic, which will keep countless families apart this Thanksgivi­ng, but the 56year-old also is grappling with her own personal circumstan­ces, which will drasticall­y alter how she celebrates the holiday this year.

After losing her warehouse job in 2018, Wallace relied for a time on her savings to pay rent and medical bills when her health declined. When the money ran out in March, Wallace had no choice but to seek refuge at Lutheran Social Services’ Faith Mission homeless shelter.

The warm meals and place to sleep have meant everything to Wallace as she waits to hear if her recent applicatio­n for housing through the Columbus Metropolit­an Housing Authority will be approved. But as Thanksgivi­ng approaches, Wallace takes little comfort in knowing it will be a day she spends without her family while in a shelter filled with strangers.

The factors that brought others to the shelter might vary wildly from Wallace’s, but all likely share a sense of loneliness and isolation that is felt even more keenly around the holidays, said Sue Villilo, assistant vice president of community-based services at Lutheran Social Services. To provide some respite from their problems, Faith Mission serves an annual Thanksgivi­ng feast to all staying at its shelter.

It’s a meal Faith Mission has served for at least 10 years, Villilo said, but this year it carries added resonance as the pandemic rages on.

For more than eight months, the COVID-19 has devastated Ohioans in myriad ways. Many have lost family members or jobs to the coronaviru­s, leaving them without loved ones or incomes.

As a result, social service organizati­ons that feed the hungry each Thanksgivi­ng say they see a greater need for such charity as food insecurity becomes a grim reality for more Ohioans than ever. Many of those that have served Thanksgivi­ng meals for years are now expanding their reach, while other groups join the effort for the first time.

“It’s not changing anyone’s situation by any stretch, but it’s really giving them a moment of relief from all the things they’re dealing with,” Villilo said.

The 275 people filling out Faith Mission’s shelter can still expect a turkey dinner prepared by local motorcycle clubs with all the fixings – collard greens, macaroni and cheese, mashed potatoes – but they won’t be able to enjoy it together in a communal space. Instead, residents will have to eat in their own assigned areas surrounded by only those they are staying with at the shelter.

Yet in a year filled with hardship, Wallace said she will cherish a meal that reminds her of better times.

“It’s going to be different than what I’m used to, but I’m still going to be thankful,” Wallace said. “I will appreciate it so much to have a cooked Thanksgivi­ng meal.”

Wallace is one of thousands of central Ohioans who will benefit from a free Thanksgivi­ng meal provided by one of dozens of groups before or on Thanks

giving day.

This will be the fourth year that Crossroads, a large nondenomin­ational Christian church, has hosted a Thanksgivi­ng food drive for people in Columbus. However, this year organizers are hoping to expand from 50 donated meals to 200 after the church’s partners communicat­ed a greater need, said Pastor Vicki Diller.

It’s a steep goal that Diller anticipate­s reaching now that Crossroads has grown its congregati­on once officially establishi­ng its Columbus location in January at Grange Insurance Audubon Center following three years of streaming services from Cincinnati at a small theater.

The local effort is part of 11 Crossroads Church locations in Ohio and Kentucky that will provide Thanksgivi­ng meals for more than 100,000 people.

In Columbus, Crossroads partners with two Clintonvil­le schools – Indianola Informal K-8 School and The Graham School – to identify families in need. The community has been invited to shop from a list available online for items that they can donate Sunday at the Northland Performing Arts Center to fill hundreds of boxes that will be distribute­d to those families for Thanksgivi­ng meals.

“We have a lot of community members who want to be part of seeing change in their community,” Diller said. “It’s a great way for them to think outside of themselves in the holiday season and do something practical that’s going to help people.”

On Wednesday, Columbus police officers from the precinct covering South Linden went door to door in the neighborho­od to hand out bags to about 150 residents containing a turkey, a box of stuffing, gravy mix, cranberry sauce, cornbread mix and green beans.

Dubbed “Cops & Gobblers,” the inaugural effort was part of Starfish Assignment, a nonprofit organizati­on with the mission of providing the resources and funding to officers for charitable projects. KEMBA Financial Credit Union provided $2,400 for the food.

“It’s been a challengin­g year for everybody – people are really having a rough time and not being able to celebrate with family,” said Nicole Banks, the organizer for Starfish Assignment Columbus. “This is a way to brighten up everyone’s day. A lot of these people are hardworkin­g people who may not have time to go to a charity and fill out paperwork to make sure they can get what they need. We can help them.”

The Columbus Recreation & Parks department similarly debuted a Thanksgivi­ng meal giveaway program this year. Community centers were transforme­d into drive-thru hubs to deliver individual­ly wrapped Thanksgivi­ng meals to more than 3,000 people, said Sophia Fifner, community relations chief of the department.

On Monday, the drive-thru will start at 10 a.m. at the Barnett Community Center, 1184 Barnett Road; 1 p.m. at the Feddersen Community Center, 3911 Dresden St.; and 2 p.m. at the Thompson Community Center, 1189 Dennison

Ave. On Tuesday, the drive-thru will start at noon at the Tuttle Park Community Center, 240 W. Oakland Ave.; 3:30 p.m. at the Woodward Park Community Center, 5147 Karl Road; at 4 p.m. at the Howard Community Center, 2505 N. Cassady Ave., and the Sullivant Gardens Community Center, 755 Renick St.; and at 4:30 p.m. at the Dodge Park and Recreation Center, 667 Sullivant Ave.

Patricia Wess was on her way home Monday after a line dancing class at the Marion Franklin Community Center on the Southeast Side when she was offered a Thanksgivi­ng meal by volunteers outside. The 81-year-old happily accepted the offer, which provided a tasty lunch that day.

Like many, Wess is making the decision to forgo a large Thanksgivi­ng gathering this year – she plans to have only immediate family members to her home for dinner – so she was touched by the gesture.

“It was nice, very nice,” said Wess, who lives in Berwick with her 88-yearold husband, Charles. “I enjoyed it.”

Fifner said the goal of the effort is to make sure that families still have an opportunit­y to share a meal together in their homes despite the pandemic.

“During the pandemic, of all years it is crucial we are doing everything we can as a department to make sure families and individual­s have some level of connectivi­ty,” she said.

Dispatch reporter Bethany Bruner contribute­d to this article. elagatta@dispatch.com @Ericlagatt­a

 ?? FRED SQUILLANTE/COLUMBUS DISPATCH ?? A Columbus police officer hands Heaven Martin a turkey Wednesday.
FRED SQUILLANTE/COLUMBUS DISPATCH A Columbus police officer hands Heaven Martin a turkey Wednesday.
 ?? FRED SQUILLANTE/COLUMBUS DISPATCH ?? Columbus police officers fill bags with Thanksgivi­ng meal items at the Douglas Recreation Center on Wednesday before heading to Rosewind Apartments, where residents were given turkey dinners.
FRED SQUILLANTE/COLUMBUS DISPATCH Columbus police officers fill bags with Thanksgivi­ng meal items at the Douglas Recreation Center on Wednesday before heading to Rosewind Apartments, where residents were given turkey dinners.

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