Not being an option to stay at home and mind my own business
while I was furloughed, I looked to another option for voluntary service. I
decided to go and volunteer at the service placements at which my unit mates
volunteered. During the past two weeks, I have volunteered predominately at the
Downtown Soup Kitchen and also at the Children’s Lunchbox (a program that
prepares lunches for school children and other food for weekends). It has been
a joy to see where and with whom my unit mates work on a daily basis.
The Downtown Soup Kitchen, where I have spent most of my
days “off” from work, serves lunch to anywhere from 200 to almost 600 people a
day. My work there has involved everything from de-boning turkeys to serving
clients bread, soup, and a sandwich to reorganizing the walk-in freezer. Over a
time period of only a couple weeks, this place has become like home to me.
Coming from the Bureau of Land Management, a very solitary job, to the Soup
Kitchen, where there are always people to talk and interact with, has been
great. Whether through conversations while slicing torta bread for sandwiches
to talking with clients, I have truly enjoyed the opportunity to interact with
people and build a whole number of new relationships. I have been made very
welcome and the work feels rewarding and life-giving. Another aspect I have
enjoyed is the faith emphasis that the Soup Kitchen brings to their mission.
While the Bureau of Land Management is a government agency and as a result has
no faith component, at the Soup Kitchen, there is a strong emphasis on showing
God’s love to all through serving soup. Devotions and prayer are a regular part
of the day. In a less organized setting, I have enjoyed having conversations on
faith and life matters with a Soup Kitchen employee as we do food pickups at
local grocery stores.
A couple of the prep tables in the kitchen |
With the government finally back up and running, it is a
little sad in some ways to leave the Downtown Soup Kitchen. While I know that
there will be plenty of work to do at the Bureau of Land Management, I will
miss the people that I have built relationships with at the Soup Kitchen, and
the experiences that I have had. In any case, I am grateful for this
opportunity to experience another way of serving others and showing God’s love.
On a side note, my last day at the Soup Kitchen, a TV News
crew came in for a story about furloughed government workers being affected by
the shutdown and how they are responding. Here’s the short article and video
from Anchorage Channel 11 News: http://www.ktva.com/home/top-stories/Furloughed-workers-spend-time-volunteering-228121181.html