December 7, 2017 | St. Croix, USVI | NCC Staff/IAD Staff
Dozens of pathfinders from the Central Seventh-day Adventist Church in St. Croix volunteered their time to prepare care packages for the community during Thanksgiving weekend, which is celebrated in North America near the end of November every year.
Leaders and pathfinder volunteers gladly assembled gifts and personal notes that were shipped from the Adopt a Family, USVI, a volunteer organization which responded to wish lists posted by families impacted by the hurricanes which swept across the Unite States Virgin islands in September 2017. The gift packages were distributed in the community on Nov. 25, 2017.
The founders of the volunteer organization, Pam Engle and Sabrina Jureidini, first met online in the aftermath of the destruction.
Pam Engle had worked as head of fundraising at a school on St. Thomas, USVI, but lost her job and her home as a result of the hurricanes. She has since moved, with her young children, to Philadelphia, in the U.S. state of Pennsylvania.
Jureidini and her husband, who also have children, lived on St. Thomas until 2014 and now live in in the U.S. state of Virginia. With a staff of 14 volunteers, the organization coordinates collecting and shipping items selected from posted wish lists, including canned goods, personal items, toiletries and infant supplies.
“We are amazed by the generous response of ‘adopters’” said Engle.
Many young people at the Central Adventist Church Pathfinder Club were eager to participate in the care-package preparation.
“I have to go and help pack for those [left] in need [by] the hurricane,” said Pathfinder Royann-Blossom.
Pathfinder Mariska Beresford identified with individuals who have been affected by the hurricanes. “They are people like you and I,” said Mariska.
Club leaders felt heartened by the opportunity to share in the lives of others as Director Ada Luz Fleming expressed to the Pathfinders:
“Even while participating in this recovery, you can feel the love of those who care for us,” said Fleming. “Look at the notes in the boxes. That’s the kind of love we want to share with youths out there.”
The personalized notes of compassion struck a chord with the pathfinders and leaders said Sister Ana C. Brown, a church member volunteer who contacted Adopt a Family USVI organizers. “The gifts and notes inspired so many of our pathfinders,” said Brown. “It’s such a morale booster. Just to see the notes moves us at what [was] going on while they were being packaged,” she added.
One note signed by a family of four, including Owen (6) and Andrew (4), read: “Dear hurricane survivor, we live far away in Washington state, but the USVI have been in our thoughts these last months. We hope you are recovering from those monster hurricanes and that you and your family are safe and healthy. Stay strong – the Virgin Islands are not forgotten.”
Club leaders are already planning for the Pathfinders who participated to record their thanks so “Adopt A Family, USVI”, can share the responses with “adopter” families.
The Central SDA Church is one of eight congregations on St. Croix. It is the largest congregation in the North Caribbean Conference with a membership of 1,779. The church has an active youth ministry and the Pathfinder Club caters to 45 youth, from age 10 to 15.