Feeding the hungry - Green Hope Gardens
School Sisters of Notre Dame Associates
Living out the works of mercy in their everyday life
By Sister Joan Marie Van Beek and Associate Wayne Fontaine - Ohio and West Virginia
Sisters and associates at May 2015 covenanting in Belpre, Ohio.
 |
Sister Mariel Kreuziger at the dedication of the garden in May 2012. |
 |
Associates Joan and Wayne Fontaine planting a tomato in a raised bed. |
In 2010, during monthly associate meetings, Sisters Mariel Kreuziger and Henrita Gonia and the associates in Ohio and West Virginia reflected on what they might do to feed the hungry, bring comfort to those in need, provide nourishment for the hungry spirit and be good stewards of the land entrusted to us.
They identified the land surrounding St. Ambrose Church in Little Hocking, Ohio, as a perfect site for multiple garden boxes. They spoke to St. Ambrose Parish Council and easily obtained their permission and enthusiastic support to build four 20-by-3-foot garden boxes. Sisters, associates and friends from the parish planted, weeded, harvested and shared all the vegetables with the local food pantry, Belpre Area Ministries. In 2011, four more boxes were built.
Each year the harvest provides fresh vegetables to clients of the food bank, a healthy supplement to the canned goods received during the winter months.
 |
Satellite imagery shows the mediation path, 4 mediation points and 8 raised beds of Green Hope Gardens. |
In 2015, Green Hope Gardens produced a harvest of beans (20 pounds), sweet peppers (55), zucchini (124) regular tomatoes (157), cucumbers (312), carrots (529), and golden cherry tomatoes (8,934 -- yes, we counted them!).
In 2015, the dream of a meditation path meandering around the garden boxes became a reality. With the help of the parish Knights of Columbus, this path with four meditation points and four stone benches was built. These markers encourage the walker to relax, take in the beauty of the gardens and ponder the meditation points.
Feeding the hungry has grown from an idea into a reality, with the investment of time, sweat equity and some aching backs.
-
Praying for the living and the dead
I have a leadership position with the Daughters of Isabella in Baraboo, Wisconsin. The Daughters of Isabella organization is the female counterpart of the Knights of Columbus. Both organizations are dedicated to praying for life issues. Read more...
-
Beekeeping shows mercy and compassion
Most people may not think of beekeeping as an act of mercy. However, if the main reason to care for bees is to help them survive in an increasingly unsafe environment made so by human action, and to refrain from exploiting them for the honey they produce, beekeeping surely represents compassion and mercy. Read more...
-
Associates build extended communities
SSND associates are located across the United States and around the world. United in a desire to live out the spirit and mission of the School Sisters of Notre Dame, the associates are lay women and men who better their communities in their own ways. Read more...