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Past Charities


NCMEC

ChemoAngels

Childhelp

The Hugs and Hope Club

Operation Love Our Troops

St. Andrew's Mission

Soldiers' Angels

Only Make Believe

The Salvation Army

Retinoblastoma Awareness

O'Leary's Clover Farm

Make a Child Smile

Sew Much Comfort

Dana's Angels Research Trust

Lewy Body Dementia Assoc.

Red Cross Tsunami Relief

Crystal Peaks Youth Ranch

Sara's Hope

Angel Fund

St. Luke's LifeWorks

Grizz and Friends Cancer Fund

Anne Arundel County CASA

RT Autism Awareness Found.

Friends of Claire

Ben Bowen & Family

Greg and Fiona's Run

Pal-O-Mine

Dec '03 - Jan '04

The Honeysuckle Foundation

The Dream Center

Tuesday's Children

South Carolina Division
National Ovarian
Cancer Coalition

Camp Smile-A-Mile

The "I Have a Dream" Foundation

Boys Hope Girls Hope

Children of Promise Stables

Stars over Mississippi

Habitat for Humanity

Portage for Youth

Toys of Hope

Locks of Love

Michael's Journals Foundation

September Smiles

Wings for Success

Only Make Believe

Newborns in Need

The Colleen Giblin Foundation

Bobby Sherman
Volunteer EMT Foundation

Child Help USA

Huggz from Heaven

Small Paws Rescue

Damon Runyon Cancer Research Foundation

Give Kids The World

Angel Flight NE

Cassidy's Place

The Casey Cares Foundation

Duke Children's Hospital

Hilltop Neighborhood House

Boundless Playgrounds

Kids Beating Cancer, Inc.

Epiphany

The Cody Unser First Step Foundation

Kids For Kids

National Interfaith Hospitality Network

Dreams of Hope

USPS Breast Cancer Research Stamp


More on National Interfaith Hospitality Network

Reflections on NIHN

NIHN Overview

For More Information:

Telephone: 908 273 1100

Fax: 908 273 0030

Donations may be sent to:
National Interfaith Hospitality Network
71 Summit Avenue
Summit, NJ 07901
Website:
http://www.nihn.org
How NIHN began

On an impulse in 1981, a former business commuter bought a sandwich for an elderly, homeless woman whom she often passed on her route in New York City. "I just wanted to drop that sandwich and move on," remembers IHN founder Karen Olson, "but she grabbed my hand and we talked for several minutes. I realized she was hungry not only for food, but even more for human warmth and compassion."

Serving that sandwich changed the course of Karen's life. She got to know that woman, named Millie, and many of New York City's homeless people after she and her two sons began delivering sandwiches to them in Port Authority Bus Terminal on Sunday evenings. In listening to their life stories they learned that homelessness is more than just houselessness... It often means the more profound loss of family, friends, and the support system that connects most of us to a stable life.

Karen soon learned that even in her home community of Union County, NJ, there were hundreds of homeless people including many families. Believing that there were many who shared her concern, she looked the religious community for help. The first step to involvement needed to be education. At a congregation-sponsored conference in October of 1985, over 200 participants listened to Wendy, a homeless mother of two, describe her ordeal of trying to keep her children safe while living in her car an in a run-down welfare motel. Her story, and presentations by clergy members and advocates for the homeless, developed the necessary awareness, and representatives from area congregation soon began working together to find a solution.

"At first, we tried to renovate a building for a family shelter, but finances, the NIMBY (Not In My Back Yard) syndrome and red tape stalled our efforts," remembers Karen. "But we soon realized that if we worked together, we could do what we couldn't do alone."

Within ten months, nine churches and one synagogue came forward to provide hospitality space within their buildings; the local YMCA agreed to provide showers and a room for the families during the day; a car dealer discounted a van; and a foundation provided a grant for the rest. So, on October 27, 1986, the first Interfaith Hospitality Network opened its doors.

Word spread quickly about the program and within nine months, another ten congregations formed a second network. Initiatives such as transitional housing, child care and family mentoring programs, outgrowths of the increased awareness and involvement of community members, developed over the next several years.

The success of the Networks led other congregations to seek help in developing similar programs, and by 1989, National Interfaith Hospitality Network was formed with the mission to spread the program to all parts of the country where people of faith could work together to help homeless families.

Today, many thousands of volunteers have turned their thou

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