Dayton Daily News

CHRISTMAS EVERY DAY AT HOUSE OF BREAD

Volunteers carry on mission of founders Sister Dorothy Kammerer and Joe Bettman.

- By Ismail Turay Jr. Staff Writer

As many Miami Valley residents are opening Christmas presents, a dozen volunteers will be making sure strangers have a hot meal and a friendly face to talk to.

The volunteers, many of whom assist at the nonprofit House of Bread year round, will help serve a meal consisting of turkey, ham, pies and other traditiona­l Christmas favorites. There’ll be food for anyone who would like a warm lunch, but Executive Directive Melodie Bennett expects the dining room to be about as busy as it was nearly a week ago.

be honest, it’s Christmas Day, and most people would prefer not to be at a place like the House of Bread,” she said. “So if they have another option, they’re likely to go there.”

‘Nobody deserves to be hungry’

The House of Bread, located at 9 Orth Ave. in Dayton, serves lunch from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. seven days a week, but people can come in an hour earlier to have coffee and chat with friends, Bennett said. The lunch guests range from homeless individual­s and families to those who have a place to live, but simply fell on hard times. Others such as 89-year-old Mary Moore go for the meal and conversati­on, because she lives alone with her cat.

“A cat is not going to talk to you,” she said after finishing her lunch of tacos, a fruit bowl and juice on a recent Thursday afternoon.

Moore, who retired from Kettering Hospital, has been having lunch and “great conversati­ons” at the House of Bread for more than a year. Her son takes her several times a week.

The staff and volunteers know her relatively well, and are familiar with her diet.

“They know I don’t eat no pork, and they don’t serve me no pork,” Moore said.

She doesn’t plan to have lunch at the House of Bread on Christmas Day. Still, she encourages others to go if they don’t have a family or if they simply can’t afford a meal.

“Nobody deserves to be hungry; there’s always a place to go,” Moore said.

The beginning

The House of Bread was founded in 1983 by Sister Dorothy Kammerer and pharmacy owner Joe Bettman at a time when there were massive layoffs in the Dayton area, particular­ly in the automotive industry.

Kammerer wanted to give free lunches to the many people who’d been laid off and who couldn’t afford lunch while searching for work, Bennett said. Initially, they fed a few dozen people a couple of days week, although they did not have a permanent location.

But in 1999, Ambassador Tony Hall got involved and they built their current home on Orth Avenue. They then started serving lunch five days a week and eventually went to seven days a week, including holidays. A year ago they added a second dining room designated for families with children, and it includes a play area.

Combined, both dining rooms hold nearly 250 people, and Bennett and her staff feeds an average of 240 per day, she said.

The organizati­on has three full-time staffers, including Bennett, and six part-timers. Their annual operating budget of about $375,000 goes toward salaries, utilities, some food purchases, building maintenanc­e and everything that’s required to run the organizati­on.

While they get no government aid, 70% of their funding and food comes from private donors, Bennett said. They also welcome donations of book bags and various clothing items to give to their guests. Food and monetary donations can be made on the organizati­on’s website at https://houseofbre­ad.org/donate.

They work to serve nutritious meals, and are creative with the donations they receive, Bennett said. For instance, they recently got a donation of hundreds of turkeys, so they’ve been making a variety of meals out of those, including chili to help keep guests warm this winter.

All of the dishes and utensils they use to serve lunch are reusable because they want to give the people a sense of permanency, Bennett said.

“I think (reusable dishes) gives (people) some dignity,” she said. “This is important to us. This is not a sandwich on a Styrofoam plate; your enjoyment of your lunch is an important component of coming here.”

Comfortabl­e environmen­t

Making the guests feel welcomed is also important to Bennett and her staff. Several of them, including Bennett, stand in the dining room greeting guests as they come in, and they go to their tables for brief conversati­ons.

As if they’re waiters and waitresses, the staff also helps whenever they are called. On a recent Thursday afternoon, Bennett helped a guest who had trouble walking carry her food tray to a table. Another guest needed hot sauce, and a staffer went to the kitchen for a bottle.

She also made sure a young boy who didn’t want tacos, the main meal of the day, get a peanut butter and jelly sandwich. Minutes later, a regular guest who had just gotten his tray of food, greeted Bennett and caught her up on his health. He then asked if she has a navy blue scarf and a back pack available.

“Navy blue, you aren’t picky or anything, are you?” she joked.

“Well, I have a blue coat and it needs to match,” the man responded, also smiling.

By the time the man finished his lunch, Bennett had a navy blue scarf and back pack ready for him.

Christmas gifts for children

The organizati­on started a new initiative in which needy families could sign up their children to receive Christmas gifts. The lists were then given to donors to purchase the items, and the gifts were to be distribute­d to the families Tuesday on Christmas Eve.

On average, the House of Bread requires about 12 volunteers per day to serve a lunch crowd, and that includes preparing the meal and cleanup afterwards. Volunteers normally work from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m., and the minimum age is 16 years old. Go to https://houseofbre­ad.org/get-involved to volunteer.

There are always people willing to volunteer, and at times families or businesses team up to contribute their time to the organizati­on, Bennett said. The organizati­on tends to get a lot more volunteers during the Christmas holidays, because young people may be home from college and others have a bit more free time, she said.

Oakwood resident Diana Sanders has been volunteeri­ng at the House of Bread since she retired from the mortgage industry nearly two years ago. She plans to get her husband to join her in the coming months, and she will have daughter and son-in-law get involved as well when they come to town, she said.

She plans to continue volunteeri­ng at the organizati­on until “I cannot walk anymore, I guess.

“There are a lot of people that just don’t have the capability or the tool to be able to take care of themselves, and we are here in this world to help out fellow man,” Sanders said.

 ?? PHOTOS BY NICK GRAHAM / STAFF ?? Volunteer Jarrod Ferstl (right) serves coffee to Nicholas Ford at House of Bread, a nonprofit community kitchen that has been serving food since its start in 1983, on Friday in Dayton.
PHOTOS BY NICK GRAHAM / STAFF Volunteer Jarrod Ferstl (right) serves coffee to Nicholas Ford at House of Bread, a nonprofit community kitchen that has been serving food since its start in 1983, on Friday in Dayton.
 ??  ?? Volunteers Kris’Shawn Fleming (left) and Lisa Henderson cut fruit at House of Bread. Fleming is volunteeri­ng while home from college on break.
Volunteers Kris’Shawn Fleming (left) and Lisa Henderson cut fruit at House of Bread. Fleming is volunteeri­ng while home from college on break.
 ?? NICK GRAHAM / STAFF ?? Volunteers Jim Spiegel, left, and Marty Larson prepare salads at House of Bread, where 70% of their funding and food comes from private donors.
NICK GRAHAM / STAFF Volunteers Jim Spiegel, left, and Marty Larson prepare salads at House of Bread, where 70% of their funding and food comes from private donors.
 ?? ISMAIL TURAY JR. / STAFF ?? Taraisa Fecke, director of food services at the House of Bread, prepares lunch. She plans the nonprofit’s meals, feeding an average of 240 per day.
ISMAIL TURAY JR. / STAFF Taraisa Fecke, director of food services at the House of Bread, prepares lunch. She plans the nonprofit’s meals, feeding an average of 240 per day.
 ?? ISMAIL TURAY JR./ STAFF ?? Diana Sanders, of Oakwood, sweeps a dining room after helping serve lunch. She has volunteere­d there since retiring two years ago.
ISMAIL TURAY JR./ STAFF Diana Sanders, of Oakwood, sweeps a dining room after helping serve lunch. She has volunteere­d there since retiring two years ago.

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