tzedakah (charitable giving)

Many cultures in USA have habits or traditions that include giving and serving others. We can serve a little and give a little. We can serve a lot and give a lot. We can have family of origin traditions that include volunteering and donating. We can have children who have not seen a life each month that includes – How will we help others this month ?

Barbara Blumberg Moore, Executive Director of Jeffco Eats has been to Israel several times on a food justice trips. Tzedakah is a biblical tradition of something like a recollection of the life of a woman named Ruth. She was an immigrant and widow and needed help. She got help . She got very consistent generous help. She gleaned the fields edges which was not harvested and sold for money but kept intentionally for the poor and the widows and orphans.

The Book of Ruth Summary. Ruth was a Moabite princess of very fine character, who became the great-grandmother of King David. She was dissatisfied with the idol-worship of her own people, and when the opportunity arose, she gladly gave up the privileges of royalty in her land and accepted a life of poverty among people she admired.

Maimonides (also known as Rambam) was a Sephardic Jewish philosopher that defined tzedakah (charitable giving) in terms of levels from least to most holy.

This giving “ladder” ranges from giving reluctantly to giving in a way that helps a person become independent and self-supporting.

Among the highest forms of giving, he taught, is giving anonymously: the person gives without knowing to whom they give, and the recipient does not know from whom they receive.

We hope in Jefferson County Colorado and in the city of Lakewood to help develop more of a legacy in families to give sacrificially. Beyond a little dab will do you, to giving that is truly a consistent way of life and generous.

If your family or you as an individual have some stories about this type of life habit of giving please share it in comments below.

#jewishfarm #tzedakah

New name and new upgrades in Program

We’re Growing to Meet More Hunger Needs

This is our third year in service to the Jeffco Public Schools and Metro West Housing Authority. We will begin with 23 sites and 600 students and their families receiving weekly foodshares. Food shares means as a community with our non profit and the dozen of our Volunteer Leaders and 1000’s of volunteers and donors – we are so happy to share what we have with others.

The greatest number of children we serve have parents who do not earn Living Wage as a family and therefore work but do not make enough to cover household expenses and food. We need your help. Go to www.JeffcoEats.org/ GetInvolved. We are asking for regularly monthly donors to provide $28 a month per child. You can donate now and help us be ready finically to begin receiving foods, packing foods and delivering foods weekly. https://jeffcoeats.org/donate/

Why support Jeffco Eats ? Because we are the largest weekend food non profit serving Lakewood, which has 9600 children at their 41 schools on Free and Reduced Lunch. We serve 600 but we could grow to 5000.

Image result for storage containers

Our new home at 1395 Benton Street is very compact and to make our system work we will be using 20 ft storage containers. We are frugal with how we operate .

JeffCo Food Pantry Donates Food Bags For Hungry Lakewood Families By Ben Warwick May 3, 2019

CBS Denver

LAKEWOOD, Colo. (CBS4) – Thousands of Jefferson County children went home from school Friday afternoon to homes with empty pantries, and one organization is working to relieve the burden for some of those kids.

JeffCo Eats is a local food pantry that donates food to low-income families at Title I schools, Section 8 apartments, head start programs, recreation centers, and apartments. On Friday, the group sent kids home with bags of food for the summer at an event at Molholm Elementary in Lakewood.

(credit: CBS)

Barbara Moore founded JeffCo Eats, and said she got to work after seeing kids in need. 00:03 / 00:44 SKIP AD

“I kept hearing, in Lakewood in particular, kids didn’t have weekend food,” Moore said. “There’s 9500 kids in Lakewood on free and reduced lunch, plus their families, so that’s like 20,000 people that we know need food.”

Moore works closely with families and parent liaisons at low-income Title I schools to deliver bags of food weekly. With school ending, the weekly food source will come to a temporary stop. Today’s event was aimed at giving families food for the summer.

“When Molholm’s parent liaison got notes from the kids after working here for 24 years, every note said ‘thank you for Thursdays, when I get my food,’” Moore said. “It’s so profound, they’re so quiet about their suffering, but they’re working poor.”

At today’s event, every family got a bag of free food for the summer, and kids got to take home a book from the school’s library for free.

Bags of food ready to go home to Jefferson County families in need. (credit: CBS)

“It’s a really great opportunity for students to have books they can take home,” one Molholm teacher said. “For many of the students, this may be the only book they will have access to over the summer.”

(credit: CBS)

The impact a free bag of food, even for the summer, can make is huge on a low-income family. 95% of students at Molholm Elementary are on free and reduced lunch, and 20% of the population identifies as homeless.

(credit: CBS)

If you’d like to donate food to JeffCo Eats, please visit their website.

“I kept hearing, in Lakewood in particular, kids didn’t have weekend food,” Moore said. “There’s 9500 kids in Lakewood on free and reduced lunch, plus their families, so that’s like 20,000 people that we know need food.”

Moore works closely with families and parent liaisons at low-income Title I schools to deliver bags of food weekly. With school ending, the weekly food source will come to a temporary stop. Today’s event was aimed at giving families food for the summer.

“When Molholm’s parent liaison got notes from the kids after working here for 24 years, every note said ‘thank you for Thursdays, when I get my food,’” Moore said. “It’s so profound, they’re so quiet about their suffering, but they’re working poor.”

At today’s event, every family got a bag of free food for the summer, and kids got to take home a book from the school’s library for free.

Bags of food ready to go home to Jefferson County families in need. (credit: CBS)

“It’s a really great opportunity for students to have books they can take home,” one Molholm teacher said. “For many of the students, this may be the only book they will have access to over the summer.”

(credit: CBS)

The impact a free bag of food, even for the summer, can make is huge on a low-income family. 95% of students at Molholm Elementary are on free and reduced lunch, and 20% of the population identifies as homeless.

(credit: CBS)

If you’d like to donate food to JeffCo Eats, please visit their website.

FOOD DRIVE DROP OFF SITES

FOOD DRIVE DROP OFF SITES for Jeffco Eats

Hampton Inn 137 Union Blvd Lakewood

First Bank    264 Union Blvd Lakewood

First Bank  1940 S Kipling Parkway Lakewood – Near Jewell.

City of Lakewood –  480 S Allison Parkway Lakewood – at Human Services Dept.

Email: [email protected] to set up a new site. Bins will be provided and media coverage to announce and help donors to find us.