October 2013 - Old Town Mission
Transcription
October 2013 - Old Town Mission
PO Box 1779 Cottonwood, AZ 86326 OR CURRENT RESIDENT Gary Alden (Board President) Dick Snider Frank Nevarez Dan McIlroy Glenda Lalonde Board of Directors NON-PROFIT ORG. US POSTAGE PAID COTTONWOOD, AZ 86326 PERMIT NO. 66 Mark Pelletier – Executive Director Darlene Gamble – Office Administration Kellie Wilson – Old Town Mission Manager Old Town Mission Staff Special need of the Month: Thrift Store is in need of Shelving to display misc. items, kitchen items, and knick knacks. If you have any shelving that you would like to donate please contact the Thrift Store at 928-634-7869. Volunteers: Volunteers are Welcome! Hygiene Items: Shampoo, conditioner, lotion, soap, toothbrushes, toothpaste. Janitorial Supplies: Bleach, Laundry soap-(did you know we offer daily showers), floor cleaner, bathroom cleaners, Windex. Thank You for Supporting the Old Town Mission Old Town Mission Wish List www.oldtownmission.org Old Town Mission is a 501c3 non-profit Christian charity serving the low-income and homeless population of the Sedona/Verde Valley communities of Northern Arizona. Your tax-deductable donations are very much appreciated and can be mailed or made online. Mailing Address: PO Box 1779 Cottonwood, AZ 86326 Mission: 116 E Pinal St 928-634-7869 Hours 8:00-3:00 Thrift Store: 810 W Minus Ave 928-634-1644 9:00-5:00 8:00-3:00 Administration Office 928-634-2977 Our Mission Statement Old Town Mission is a Christian faith-in-action outreach to meet the basic necessities of food, clothing, and the Word of God to those in need in the community. Page 2 Old Town Mission November Newsletter Celebrating the Reason for the Season The Christmas season is celebrated in different ways around the world. On Christmas Inside this issue: From the Director December Events Board Biography December Events Tax Credit Old Town Mission Current Needs The Old Town Mission will be entering a Float in this year’s Christmas Parade. Volunteers are now being recruited to help design and decorate the float. This theme of the Parade is Nigerian towns and cities empty as revelers return to their ancestral villages to be with Mark Pelletier Executive Director family and to bless those less fortunate. Rather than having sweets and cakes, Nigerians tend to prepare various meats in large quantities. “Patriotic Christmas” if you would like to be involved please contact Kellie at 928-634-7869, we would love to have your help. We will also need volunteers to ride on the float and walk alongside passing out treats. Donations of red, white, and blue streamer and crepe paper and balloons are now being accepted at the Mission in Old Town and the Thrift Store. Christians in Pakistan celebrate Christmas by going from house to house singing carols, and in return the family offers something to the choir. Money collected from such carols is mostly used for charity works or is given to the church. Their homes are decorated with local Christmas handicrafts while artificial stars signifying the Star of Bethlehem are hung on rooftops. For many Japanese, Christmas Eve has become a holiday for couples to spend time together and exchange gifts. A successful advertising campaign in the 1970s made eating at KFC around Christmas a national custom. On Saint Barbara's Day, which falls a couple of weeks before Christmas, the Lebanese plant seeds, like chickpeas, wheat grains, beans and lentils in cotton wool, and water them every day. By Christmas time, the seeds have sprouted, and the Lebanese use them to decorate the manger in the nativity scenes. In El Salvador children celebrate Christmas by playing with firecrackers, fountains, such as the small volcancitos ("little volcanos") and sparklers, estrellitas ("little stars"). Teenagers and young adults display bigger fireworks or Roman Candles. Families also have parties in which they dance and eat. In Brazil Christmas Eve is the most important day. Unlike in the North American and Anglo-Saxon tradition, Christmas takes action mainly near midnight, usually with big family dinners, opening of gifts and the celebration of the "Missa do Galo" (the rooster's mass) in churches throughout the nation. (Continued on Page 6) “God alone knows exactly what you and I must endure in order to form His character in us. It is in our trials that God refines us and removes our impurities. Like refined gold, when we pass through our trials, people will see His perfect reflection in us.” ― Wendy Blight What happened during the month of November at the Mission Lunches Served : 2365 Weekly Food Boxes: 1785 Representing 6791 individuals Emergency Monthly Food Boxes: 295 Showers: 65 Hair Cuts: 11 Clothing Room: 682 New Friends: 158 The Old Town Mission welcomed Over 250 volunteers this month. Thank You for all your support. Volunteers helped collect, sort, distribute, prepare, serve, and so much more. Thank You we could not have done it without your help. Page 6 Old Town Mission (Continued from page 2) In Ireland candles signify symbolic hospitality for Mary and Joseph so it is usual to see candles, or a candle set, placed in several windows around homes. The candle was a way of saying there was room for Jesus' parents in these homes even if there was none in Bethlehem. Almost the entire workforce is finished by lunchtime on Christmas Eve or often a few days beforehand. It is traditional to leave a mince pie and a glass of Guinness for Santa Claus along with a carrot for Rudolph on Christmas Eve. Mexican Christmas festivities start on December 12, with the feast of the Virgin of Guadalupe and end on January 6, with the Epiphany. At midnight on Christmas, many families place the figure of baby Jesus in their nativity scenes. In the center and south of Mexico, children receive gifts on Christmas Eve and on 6 January, they celebrate the Feast of the Epiphany, when, according to tradition, the Three Wise Men (Wizard Kings) brought gifts to Bethlehem for Jesus Christ. In Hungary, Slovakia and the Czech Republic St. Nicholas, or Santa Claus, does not come for Christmas. He visits families earlier, on the dawn of St. Nicholas Day on December 6, and for the well-behaved children he has presents and candybags to put into their well polished shoes that were set in the windows the previous evening. In Ethiopia they celebrate Christmas on January 7th, not December 25th. Christmas in the Ethiopian Orthodox Church is called Ganna. Twelve days after Ganna, Ethiopians start the three day celebration of Timkat. It celebrated the baptism of Jesus. People don't give and receive presents during Ganna and Timkat. Sometimes children might be given a small gift of some clothes from their family members. It's more a time for going to church, eating lots and playing games! And in the Verde Valley of Arizona, all of us at the Old Town Mission wish that all of you, regardless of how you celebrate the gift of Christ’s coming, will have your very best Christmas season ever. Thank you for all you have done for the needy of this community and will do in the coming year of 2014. “The virgin will conceive and give birth to a son, and they will call him Immanuel”(which means “God with us”). Matthew 1:23 That staff of the Old Town Mission and The Mission Thrift Store would like to wish everyone a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year! Picture Above: Old Town Mission Staff Jim King, Kellie Wilson, Darlene Boudreau, Jeannie Nelson, Mark Pelletier (absent from photo) Billy Rodriguez Picture at Right: Old Town Mission Thrift Store: Dennis Kreiner, Mary Bertram, Donovan Mewhinney, Jennifer Cochran, Joseph Rodriguez, Brian O’Connell, Hazel Russell, Dustin Gooslin, Jaycen Coldiron Thank you to the following business who have contributed to this year’s Fall Food Drives: Tae Kwon Do Curves Wells Fargo Fry’s WalMart Safeway Mr Rooter Grahams Automotive Page 4 Old OldTown TownMission Mission ARIZONA CHARITABLE TAX CREDIT ARE YOU PAYING TAXES THIS YEAR? Burning Desire to Feed the Hungry December 13th & 14th Donations are collected at local grocery stores. Volunteers are still needed to help collect food. All canned goods and proceeds collected benefit the Old Town Mission. To sign up for this event contact Jeannie at 928-634-7869. Old Town Mission DONATE UP TO $200 PER PERSON OR $400 PER COUPLE! Did you know YOU can choose to have your tax dollars spent serving the needs in your community? The Arizona Charitable Tax Credit allows YOU to decide where your tax dollars are spent! This credit is “dollar for dollar” and is available even if you take a School Tax Credit. MAKE YOUR CONTRIBUTION BY DECEMBER 31st 2013 Please indicate on your check “tax credit” The Old Town Mission is collecting new unwrapped toys to give away in our Christmas Toy Store. If you would like to donate a new unwrapped toy please drop it off at the Mission Thrift Store at 810 W. Mingus ave or at the Old Town Mission 116 E. Pinal St. Cottonwood, AZ 86326 Annual Christmas Toy Store “Christmas is most truly Chritmas when we celebrate it by giving the light of love to those who need it most.” -Ruth Carter Stapelton Thank You for Volunteering! Donations of new and gently used toys are needed for this event. Our Toy Store will be opened December 16th –20th. Volunteers are needed to assist shoppers. Families signed up for Old Town Mission services prior to December 16th are able to come and shop for a gift for their child. Christmas Dinner and Gift Give Away December 20th at noon Volunteers are needed to help prepare, serve, and clean up after this event. The menu for this year’s Christmas Dinner is: ham, sweet potatoes, green bean casserole, rolls, and pie. We will also be presenting our friends with a small Christmas Gift, which vary each year but usually consist of warm winter gloves or socks and a small gift card to McDonalds. Donations of new socks and financial donations can be made for this years gift at the Mission Thrift Store or the Old Town Mission. Please sign up to help for this event by contacting Kellie or Jeannie at 928-634-7869.