Center of Hope offers 'hand up' to those in need
By Kathy L. Gilbert*
AMBRIDGE, Pa. (UMNS)-When the Rev. Fred Smith and his wife, Emma, moved
from Atlanta to the economically depressed area of northeastern
Pennsylvania three years ago, "the despair and disappointment was so thick
you could feel it," he says.
The steel mills and bridge companies had left the industrial urban area
and "taken away all of the hope."
"All that was left was the very old and the very poor," he says. "The most
acutely affected were the children."
Hope came back into the neighborhood when Fellowship United Methodist
Church turned a beautiful old Serbian Russian Catholic church and
elementary school into the Center for Hope.
During the opening worship service of the 2004 General Conference an
offering was taken in support of Mother/Child Survival Advance Special
(#982645-1) and for ministries to children and the poor in the Western
Pennsylvania Annual Conference.
Fellowship United Methodist Church, Erie Alliance and Connellsville Area
Community Ministries were the local ministries selected to receive
support. The offering request was made by the Bishops Initiative on
Children and Poverty and the Council of Bishops. More than $7,200 was
received, and Fellowship will receive around $1,200, says retired Bishop
Donald Ott.
Finding help and understanding
Every Tuesday afternoon a blue and white van goes out into the communities
of Aliquippa and Ambridge and comes back to the Center for Hope with
precious cargo. More than 30 children come to the center for help with
their homework and to find an understanding adult who will take the time
to listen to their problems.
Majesta Johnson, 12, says her mentor, "Miss Linda," listens to her and
teaches her about Jesus Christ.
"I talk to her about a lot of stuff and she helps me," she says.
Isaiah Williams, 8, says he especially enjoys learning about Jesus. He
also likes to dance in the Sunday worship services and looks forward to
practicing with his friends after homework and a meal at the center.
"Many of these children come from dysfunctional families," Smith says.
"They are children of children; many live in foster homes." Through the
tutoring and mentoring program offered at the center these children are
learning there is another way of life.
"They leave here with Jesus, they learn they are not bound by the place
where they came from," he says.
To prove that point, he asks Majesta what she wants to be when she grows
up.
"A bishop," she replies, without blinking an eye. Isaiah wants to be a
cardiologist, because "I want to fix hearts before people die."
Linda Hoehl, a tutor and mentor for the center, says the most important
thing to her is to let the children know "someone cares, someone loves
them."
"These children are under a lot of stress, they need to know someone is
behind them and can give them direction."
Hoehl says she was compelled to help because she saw how much her own
children were helped by being in a strong church group.
The Center for Hope works with many partner organizations and churches to
offer, among other things, a food pantry, clothes pantry, adult literacy
program and computer classes.
In partnership with the University of Pennsylvania, the center offers free
computer training to help "bridge the digital divide."
One of the classrooms in the center is packed with old computers, monitors
and printers that were destined for the dumpster. Thanks to the North
Pittsburgh Macintosh Users Group the computers are being refurbished and
given to the community.
Dave Sevick, a leader in the users' group, stresses the computers are not
free-potential owners must first complete a training program and pay a $5
fee. The fee is basically for a new battery, he says.
"If you know the word processor or the spreadsheets, you have a marketable
job skill," he says.
Hand up, not handout
Smith says the people in the community were mostly used to being given
"handouts." He wants them to learn how to take care of themselves.
"This is a tremendous facility, this is God's building," he says. "It has
been entrusted to us as stewards."
Otis E. McAliley, president of the church's administration council, points
to a wall hanging in the church that says "God Kept His Promise."
"It is true," he says. "Other churches have embraced us and we are
blessed."
Smith has plans to provide a summer lunch program for 65 children in the
neighborhood. He has many other dreams, such as providing a 24-hour
day-care center.
He also has no doubts that all his dreams will come true.
"God loves Fellowship United Methodist Church because we love God," he
says.
*Gilbert is a United Methodist News Service news writer.
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