High school students joined the holiday food distribution on Friday at the First Baptist Church.
Mark Alan Lovewell

Providing the Most Important Holiday Gift: Food

It was a bustling scene at the parish house behind First Baptist Church on Friday afternoon as volunteers organized and packaged Thanksgiving meals for families in need. Serving Hands provides monthly food distribution and on holidays the Family to Family program joins in to add holiday meals to the distribution.

It was a bustling scene at the parish house behind First Baptist Church on Friday afternoon as volunteers organized and packaged Thanksgiving meals for families in need. Serving Hands provides monthly food distribution and on holidays the Family to Family program joins in to add special holiday meals to the regular distribution.

The Thanksgiving meal is the biggest distribution of the year, and it all gets done in one day. The organizations serve families and individuals who qualify for federal assistance programs. Distributions begin at 2 p.m. and run for one hour.

“There will be 225 families which comes out to about 500 individuals,” said Betty Burton, director of Serving Hands, the Family to Family program and president of the Committee on Hunger.

Good deeds today, the Island Cup tomorrow for young football players.
Mark Alan Lovewell
Good deeds today, the Island Cup tomorrow for young football players.
Mark Alan Lovewell

In addition to produce and dry goods, each client receives a meal of potatoes, cranberry sauce, apples, oranges, squash, stuffing and other seasonal goods along with their choice of a turkey or chicken.

At the church, high school boys wearing varsity football and baseball letter jackets carried boxes bulging with juice, while volunteers filled green totes with fresh produce and canned goods. A group from Daybreak Clubhouse volunteers with Serving Hands every month and today was no exception.

“It’s wonderful we have a community like this, it’s amazing to me,” said Ms. Burton. She encouraged the crowd of volunteers to ask where the food and produce had come from. While a lot was shipped in from the Greater Boston Food Bank, a sizable amount of goods, especially the fresh produce, came from Island sources.

Ms. Burton goal is to have 70 per cent fresh produce. “Currently I’d say we’re at about 50 per cent,” she said.

Betty Burton — all roads related to keeping the Island's hungry fed lead to her.
Mark Alan Lovewell
Betty Burton — all roads related to keeping the Island's hungry fed lead to her.
Mark Alan Lovewell

This year Morning Glory and Whippoorwill farms donated 1,000 pounds of potatoes ranging from russet to blue. Twenty-one high school students bagged the potatoes this morning into five pound bags.

“These twenty-one kids, they saved our lives,” Ms. Burton said. “It’s wonderful if someone gives us one thousand pounds of potatoes, but...” She widened her eyes indicating the manpower involved in parceling out the spuds.

Ms. Burton said regional high school principal Margaret (Peg) Regan used to volunteer with Serving Hands before taking the interim position at the high school, and was the reason so many high school students were involved this year.

“She said, ‘these kids are going to get there, we’re going to get a bus and get them there,’” said Ms. Burton.

Family to Family benefits from the support of several Island institutions. Through Community Groceries organized by Jessica Roddy customers at Cronig’s can purchase organic goods such as spinach and milk which are donated to Serving Hands. Jim’s Package store provides delivery service for clients who are housebound. And Island Grown Gleaners regularly visits Island farms collecting any surplus produce from the fields. On Wednesday they were busy bundling shoots of kale.

As the morning continued and distribution time neared, Ms. Burton disappeared into the crowd of volunteers, delegating responsibilities and thanking each participant.

Tax-deductible donations to Family to Family can be made through the Vineyard Committee on Hunger at P.O. Box 4685, Vineyard Haven 02568.

Comments

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sat, 11/21/2015 - 09:23

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Betty Burton Vineyard Haven

Thanks, Heather. You really captured the spirit of the Thanksgiving distribution. I can't begin to thank all of those that contributed food and cash donations to the program and the parish house was filled with volunteers. Besides the high school students, the eight grade from the Tisbury School arrived just in time to help folks carry their food to their cars or in some cases walked them to their nearby homes. What a community we have. Just watching those young children go to the elders and ask if they could help them carry their groceries. Thank you to our stalwart volunteers who stayed until the everything had been put away and the floors had been mopped clean.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sat, 11/21/2015 - 11:53

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Betty Burton Vineyard Haven

I just noticed the photo caption that says all roads to keeping the island's hungry fed lead through me. This is very flattering, but it is not true. There are many, many people who work hard to help feed those in need, including the people of the Island Food Pantry, Meals on Wheels, Senior Centers and the organizers of Community Suppers. The Vineyard Committee on Hunger raises funds for many of these organizations and we try to list the various places food can be obtained through our pamphlet "Food Resources for Those in Need." Information is also available at our website hungercommittee.org.

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