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STUDENTS’
SERVICE DURING SPRING BREAK
BENEFITS FAMILIES IN WEST VIRGINIA, KENTUCKY
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| Students
at the "Almost Heaven" Habitat for Humanity
site in West Virginia. |
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There’s something to be said for getting plenty
of rest during spring break, but there are many rewards, both physically
and mentally, for those students who chose to spend that chilly
week in March hammering, sawing, drilling, and painting new houses
as part of 8th Dimension’s HOAP (Housing Outreach Action Program).
Through HOAP, volunteers from Haverford and Bryn Mawr are sent to
building sites throughout the country, where they help construct
houses for low-income families. This year, groups visited West Virginia
and Kentucky.
At the “Almost Heaven” Habitat for Humanity site in
Pendleton County, W.Va., students spent the week building and erecting
exterior walls for the future residence of the Kuykendall family.
“One highlight was when the leader at the site trusted us
to put an entire interior wall together without supervision,”
says Laura Brown ’05. “When we were completed, he said
it was the only wall that didn’t have a problem!”
The Haverford and Bryn Mawr volunteers worked alongside a group
from nearby St. Joseph’s University, and the students bonded
over games and a talent show. The workers also attended two big
community events: a “Lenten Lunch” sponsored every Thursday
during Lent by different churches and a house blessing for one of
Habitat’s recent completions. “Attending the house blessing
ceremony was a really interesting experience because we got to see
someone appreciate the organization’s hard work,” says
Ruth Stein ’07. “We saw that what we were doing at the
Kuykendall site would change someone’s life.”
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| Haverford
& Bryn Mawr students working in Morehead, Ky. for
Frontier Housing. |
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The second group traveled to Morehead, Ky., a college
town nestled in the foothills of the Appalachian Mountains. They
worked with Frontier Housing, a private non-profit serving nine
counties in northeastern Kentucky. “Since starting up with
only four volunteers, Frontier Housing has grown over its 30 years
in existence to a company of more than 20 full-time employees and
many volunteers from all over the country,” explains Erika
Haglund ’05. “They will have built 26 houses this fiscal
year.” Frontier Housing serves some of the country’s
poorest areas, where a quarter of the residents live below the poverty
line and the median income is just over half the national average.
The volunteers helped with several projects, including repainting
and cleaning up an interior, reshingling a roof, and framing an
entire house. During their down time, the students took a driving
tour of the area, attended open-mike night at a local coffee house,
went hiking, and enjoyed dinner and a program with their hosts,
the Newman Club of Morehead State University. “It was very
hard work,” says Haglund, “but well worth it for all
involved.”
Laura Brown agrees, and hopes that more students will take advantage
of the HOAP experience in the future. “It’s so much
more rewarding for the community and the soul than any alcohol-filled
island spring break trip could be,” she says.
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