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Soup Kitchen to Become Homeless?

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Thursday, March 29, 2012   

ROOSEVELT, N.Y. - They say they don't blame the church, whose congregation has shrunk below a dozen members, but the volunteers who serve breakfast and lunch to about 100 people every Saturday in the church basement have received an April 30th eviction notice. The soup kitchen is about to become homeless.

Mary Joeston runs the Faith Mission. It moved into the First United Methodist Church in Roosevelt only last September, after it was forced out of another church. She sees irony in the situation.

"We've committed our lives to working with the poor, with the needy, the unemployed, the seniors who are on a fixed income. And now, we're homeless, too."

A trustee of the church disagrees with the decision, which was made by a district church superintendent. Trustee chairperson Dermot Sutherland says if the soup kitchen goes, he's going, too. Even though the congregation of First Methodist Church has dipped below a dozen, he says, it shouldn't evict the soup kitchen.

"When they came to the church, they were more a credit to the church than the church is to them, because they were doing the church a favor by coming in and getting so many people to come into the church yard or building on a Saturday."

Joeston, who is 75 and has been doing volunteer work since 1969, says since an area newspaper reported this week on the soup kitchen's plight, there have been some rays of hope.

"I got some calls from different churches, and I got a few this morning, so I will follow through."

The soup kitchen donates $200 dollars a week to the church, she says. In addition to the weekly meals, the group provides new and used clothing and other volunteer services.

The district superintendent says the chuch is in debt, adding that uncertainty about its future led to the decision not to extend the soup kitchen a long-term lease.




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