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August 2020 www.miamiarch.org
YOUR MIAMI COMMUNITY
Local organizations partner with Catholic Charities to provide emergency supplies for new parents
TOM TRACY
Florida Catholic correspondent
MIAMI More than 20 pallets of donated baby supplies will be distributed to needy mothers and fathers in Broward and Miami- Dade County thanks to a recent collaboration between Catholic Charities and other South Florida agencies. The supplies will be distributed through the Miami Respect Life Office's five pregnancy help cen- ters. Several local parishes, Catho- lic school students and members of the Knights of Columbus helped to sort and deliver the donations to the pregnancy centers. The effort is in keeping with the U.S. bishops' "Walking with Moms in Need: A Year of Service" initiative, whose goal is to make local Catholics more aware - and involved - in providing aid to pregnant mothers and fami- lies in need. As the program's website states, "everyone in the parish community should know where to refer a pregnant woman in need." The bishops announced the program - which will be pro- moted in the Miami archdiocese through Oct. 31, 2021 - in recog- nition of the 25th anniversary of Evangelium Vitae, Pope St. John Paul II's 1995 encyclical. The outreach is especially need- ed amid the COVID-19 pandemic, said Rebecca Brady, director of the Archdiocese of Miami's Respect Life Ministry. "A lot of our mothers are feeling the effects of the economic hard- ships. If the father of the child was working, he may have lost his job," Brady said. She noted the additional "so- cial hardship" for pregnant moms who, due to social distancing and stay-at-home orders, may be de- prived of the support networks
Community donations benefit pregnancy help centers
To learn more about the Respect Life Office visit, www. respectlifemiami.org/ To learn more about Catholic Charities visit: www.ccadm.org/
FIND OUT MORE
In late July, members of several Miami-area Knights of Columbus councils pitched in to help deliver some 20 pallets of baby supplies to area pregnancy help centers in the Archdiocese of Miami, according to James Buzzella, state disaster response coordinator for the Knights of Columbus in Miami. Some of the Knights are shown here posing with Katherine Lantigua, program coordinator of the South Broward Pregnancy Help Center. (COURTESY PHOTOS)
they most need during the "in- tense" periods of pregnancy and postpartum. Miami's Respect Life Office is continuing to operate amid the pandemic but has moved much of its educational and parenting pro- gramming online, while moving outdoors to redistribute donated goods through parking lot pick- ups. The pregnancy help centers are also facilitating online mu- tual support meetups where client mothers and fathers can share dif- ficulties and coping strategies. The centers provide free and confiden- tial pregnancy services, receiving some 10,000 visits annually from both men and women. In the Miami archdiocese, about 75 percent of parishes have a designated respect life represen- tative. Each parish in Broward and Miami-Dade is also linked to one of the pregnancy help centers. Efforts are underway to estab- lish similar pregnancy help center efforts in Monroe County, accord- ing to Brady. We are bringing all of our heads together to look at what we have in our archdiocese to see what gaps exist and to help each parish create a plan to serve our pregnant moth- ers," she said. "With fresh eyes we can come up with ideas to grow the ministry." Peter Routsis-Arroyo, CEO of Catholic Charities in the archdio- cese, credited the recent donations of baby supplies - along with the storage space and volunteer assis- tance needed to move the goods - to the locally-based Food for the Poor, Cross Catholic Outreach,
Belen Jesuit students are shown here volunteering at a warehouse in Doral, where they helped sort donations of baby goods to benefit parishes and local pregnancy help centers associated with the archdiocese's Respect Life Ministry.
Belen Jesuit Preparatory School and the Knights of Columbus. Moreover, he said, Miami's Catholic Charities continues to play a large role in pandemic as- sistance efforts: an estimated $2 million of foodstuffs have been parsed out to some 40,000 local families through parish donation sites, the St. Vincent de Paul Soci- ety and 20 or so community-based organizations. In this pandemic we couldn't be doing what we are doing with- out collaboration," Routsis-Ar- royo, said, adding that Florida's Office of Emergency Management has provided much of the food- stuff donations for redistribution. I don't think there is any end in sight," he said. "With the magni- tude of the pandemic, and with the hurricane season starting, I don't think (the state) had a choice but to continue sending MREs or food snack boxes, rice and beans, shelf stable meals and all things that are ready to eat or you can cook."
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Belem Jesuit students are shown here volunteering at a warehouse in Doral, where they helped sort donations of baby goods to benefit parishes and local pregnancy help centers associated with the archdiocese's Respect Life Ministry.
A lot of our mothers are feeling the effects of the economic hardships. If the father of the child was working, he may have lost his job.'
Rebecca Brady
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