Orlando Sentinel

Restoring dignity to people in need

- Melissa Mishoe, who lives in Winter Park, is a volunteer for IDignity. For more informatio­n, call 407-792-1374.

Many homes have pumpkins in the yard. Thanksgivi­ng is a month away. Christmas decoration­s are already in the stores.

It is time to think about Halloween. What costume are you wearing to the party? Can you resist eating the candy bars for the trick-or-treaters if you put them on this week’s grocery list?

As November nears we often think of gratitude for all the choices and freedoms we enjoy. The pilgrims made a lot of sacrifices, endured hardships, and were grateful for a harvest. Hundreds of years later there still are people who are in want. Some people are still living with the effects of Hurricane Ian.

In November and December we are exhorted to give food, toys, and clothes to the needy. People line up at churches to receive a holiday meal.

Buy a toy and put it in a box at a store’s entry. Fill a child’s stocking for the Salvation Army. Do you hear a ringing bell? Put some spare change in the red kettle before you leave the supermarke­t.

Are you buying an outfit for each member of a family of five? Do they have a washing machine to wash the clothes? Does a shirt needs ironing? Do they have an iron? Electricit­y? A needle and thread to sew on a button?

All these charitable efforts mean well. They do help people, at least temporaril­y. However, do they inflate the ego of the giver more than they help the receiver?

Do the people receiving canned food have a can opener? Do they have a refrigerat­or that keeps food at 40 degrees? Do they have milk and butter to make macaroni and cheese? Pots and pans? Ziploc bags to store leftovers?

Do they have batteries for the toys they receive? Do they live in such a small space that a younger child might be in danger of ingesting small toy parts?

There is an organizati­on that compassion­ately assists the poor and disadvanta­ged by helping people establish legal proof of their identity. It is IDignity, and it doesn’t do it alone but in partnershi­p with government agencies, businesses, churches and community.

Imagine you lack identifica­tion documents, that are necessary to prove you are who you say you are, and to access education, employment, housing, healthcare, ability to cash a check, obtain access to shelters, receive social services, and numerous opportunit­ies. This process, restores dignity and empowers individual­s to participat­e in our society.

While IDignity’s clients are often the marginaliz­ed of our society, IDignity helps anyone seeking help. IDignity partners with organizati­ons helping the poor, mentally ill, and addicted. Other clients might have a misspelled name on a birth certificat­e which blocks getting needed documents. Perhaps a person moved and lost identifica­tion documents or misplaced them when packing up to prepare for a hurricane.

IDignity helps clients all year long through in-office, in-person, and virtual/remote volunteer positions. Donation opportunit­ies include in-kind donations, fundraiser­s, monthly donations, event sponsorshi­ps, or any amount of your choice.

Melissa Mishoe

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