Franciscan sisters run emergency lifeline for needy in West Virginia

744 0
Franciscan Sister Therese Carew, head of Christian Help in Kermit, W.Va., poses in the clothing store July 25. For nearly 25 years, the center has had a presence in Kermit providing free clothing as well as a food from its pantry, furniture and household items, and, when possible, financial assistance to help with utilities, rent, medication, gasoline, propane and kerosene. The nondenominational outreach center, supported by donations and grants, helps low- to no-income residents. (CNS photo/Colleen Rowan, The Catholic Spirt)

KERMIT, W.Va. (CNS) — On a rainy July afternoon in Kermit, a local woman sifted through a table of donated apparel at Christian Help Inc.’s free clothing store. The outreach center was full that day and she was among many seeking help.

“The economy is so poor here it’s hard for people to even clothe their children and grandchildren. There’s no work, there’s really no recreation here, there’s nothing,” she said as the blaring horn of a passing train outside muffled her words. She wished to remain anonymous but wanted to express how bad things are in the town located in Mingo County.

“Without this place we would be lost,” she told The Catholic Spirit, newspaper of the Diocese of Wheeling-Charleston. “A lot of kids would not have what they need, people would not have the food they need.”

For almost 25 years, Christian Help has provided the free clothing store as well as a food pantry, furniture and household items and, when possible, financial assistance to help with utilities, rent, medication, gasoline, propane and kerosene. Christian Help is a nondenominational, donation and grant-supported outreach center for low- to no-income residents.

It is run by Sister Therese Carew, a Franciscan Sister of the Sacred Heart of Frankfort, Illinois. For the people she has served for the last nine years, life is not easy she said, primarily because of the lack of job opportunities.

She said once mining, which was the major employer, went down, factories closed too.

“You can’t just say, ‘Well go out and get a job.’ First of all, you have to be able to get there and there has to be an employer.” In Kermit, other than the public elementary school, the store is the next largest employer with eight employees — four part-time and four full-time workers.

Christian Help is located by the Tug Fork River. On the other side of the river is neighboring Martin County, Kentucky, whose residents also come to Christian Help for assistance. The nearest Walmart is almost 40 minutes away but Kermit does have a Family Dollar and Dollar General.

“We’re a nondenominational Christian emergency assistance agency, helping some of the poorest of folks in America,” she said.

Another issue for the area is the opioid crisis, which West Virginia has suffered from in the past few years. It has been especially hard on Kermit, Sister Therese said.

Earlier this summer, she gave talk at St. Agnes Parish in Louisville, Kentucky, where she said that Kermit, with a population of 392, is known as the opioid capital of the U.S. “We have been featured on ’60 Minutes’ regarding this crisis — a single pharmacy in Kermit, received roughly 9 million pills over the course of two years.”

Because of the opioid crisis, she said, the area has one of the highest death tolls resulting from overdose. And this, she said, has brought even greater challenges to a community that has already suffered so much.

“We have lots of grandparents raising their grandchildren, because of death or incarceration of the parents,” she said. “If social services remove the children from a home, they literally hand the child to the family members taking them, often with no supplies provided.” Because of this, she said, Christian Help is in need of basic baby supplies.

The store shares a building with a program sponsored by the Congregation of St. Joseph — A.B.L.E. Families (Affirming, Believing, Learning, Empowering) — which is headed by Franciscan Sister Pat Murray. Together, they help address the needs of the poor from different angles.

The sisters run the after-school program, giving students a snack and providing a place to get their homework done with computer access. The sisters also run a mother, infant, health outreach, to help mothers of young children.

Christian Help added a transportation component 18 years ago, bringing people to see doctors since there is no public transportation in Mingo County and many residents do not have cars.

“We have about four drivers on the road Monday through Friday,” Sister Therese said.

Christian Help provides the free demand-response transit service to take people to doctors, pharmacies, stores or the post office, and any place they need to go.

It also works to help people pay for dental care, dentures and eyeglasses which are not covered by Medicaid.

Sister Therese said Christian Help is getting ready to give area children supplies and clothes for the new school year. Martin County families are given school supplies and no allowance for clothing, she said, and Mingo County families get a clothing voucher and no supplies.

“We provide what isn’t, so our kids have what is needed to start the school year to be as successful as possible,” she said. “Often the shoes we provide is the only pair of shoes they will have and they come in barefoot.”

Related Post

Dawn Teresa Parkot and her father, Sean, discuss why they are opposed to the Aid in Dying bill at the New Jersey Statehouse in Trenton March 25, 2019. Parkot, a quadriplegic motivational speaker with athetoid cerebral palsy, was among dozens of advocates making their voices heard as the bill went to a vote in both chambers of the state Legislature. The bill passed the Assembly 41-33 and the Senate 21-16. (Hal Brown, The Monitor)

Pro-lifer says allowing assisted suicide like ‘state-sanctioned execution’

Posted by - April 6, 2019 0
TRENTON, N.J. (CNS) — Dawn Teresa Parkot does not mince words when she speaks about the Aid in Dying bill.…
Pope Francis and Patti Gallagher Mansfield, a participant in the 1967 Pittsburgh retreat that marked the beginning of the Charismatic renewal, pray during a Pentecost vigil marking the 50th anniversary of the Catholic charismatic renewal at the Circus Maximus in Rome June 3. (CNS photo/Paul Haring)

Mercy toward others implies taking risks, suffering, pope says

Posted by - June 10, 2017 0
VATICAN CITY (CNS) — Works of mercy are not a way of easing one’s conscience but are acts of suffering…