As the nation and, in places, Maine recover from a draining recession, local stores again are full of people beginning another year intense Christmas shopping. Things aren’t so festive, however, for families where jobs have been lost or chronic underemployment have made it difficult to pay the every-day bills. So before you finish your holiday shopping and celebrations, please remember those who cannot afford the presents that most people take for granted, who struggle to feed their families, without hope of putting gifts under Christmas trees.
For 139 years the Salvation Army has been remembering those in need. Begun in 1865 in England by William Booth, an itinerant preacher, to provide religious services to the poor who were not welcomed in the local churches, the Salvation Army describes itself as “an international evangelical Christian movement with a strong social conscience.”
While the red kettles are a familiar sight during the Christmas season, the local Salvation Army works year-round. The Dorothy Day Soup Kitchen, sponsored by the Army, served tens of thousands of meals last year to area residents. “Salvationists” volunteer in nursing homes, group homes and jails throughout central and Down East Maine, accomplishing countless acts of charity, large and small.
Since 1978, the Bangor Daily News has sponsored the Santa’s Helper Fund, which raises money for the Salvation Army to buy food, clothes and toys for needy Maine families during the holiday season. Last year the Santa’s Helper Fund received nearly $50,000 in donations, and more than 1,000 toys, 1,500 articles of clothing and 500 food vouchers were distributed from Bangor to Millinocket, from Eastport to Newport, to friends and neighbors in need. All of the money received by the BDN goes directly to the Salvation Army, with the funds directed to the charity’s unit closest to the contributor’s hometown. It is truly neighbor helping neighbor.
The fund’s goal this year is $50,000, and through your generosity it has already reached $7,224. The traditional early giver to the fund, the Fraternal Order of Eagles Aerie 3177, started the season of giving with a $2,004 donation. Gifts in the past have been given by families, businesses, in the name of loved ones, anonymously and even in memory of a cherished pet. Thank you to all who have given.
Please mail your donations to Santa’s Helper Fund, P.O. Box 1329, Bangor 04402-1329. Donations will be listed in the Bangor Daily News, but may also be made anonymously or in someone’s memory. Your gifts and generosity will be greatly appreciated.
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