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Discovering The Mature Lifestyle

Edina woman opts to work with children after 30 years in ministry. Page 3

Volunteerism

July 16, 2015

July Issue

Volunteer work takes New Hope woman to the library, church and beyond BY SUE WEBBER CONTRIBUTING WRITER

“I’m kind of a busy person; I don’t like to sit,” said Zelda Zahn, a 35-year resident of New Hope. She’s up at 5:30 a.m. each day and is at the Northwest YMCA to work out starting at 6 a.m. six days a week. “That’s what keeps me going,” Zahn said. But a lot of what she does during her busy days keeps other people going as well. Zahn is a seasoned long-time volunteer in a variety of settings. “I like all of my volunteer work,” Zahn said. She spends Monday mornings volunteering at the Rockford Road Library in Crystal. “I really like the library,” she said. “It makes me aware of all the books that are out there.” Another day is spent helping with service bulletins at her church, Beautiful Savior Lutheran Church in Plymouth, where she also sings in the choir. She and her husband, Carl, left Peace Lutheran Church in Robbinsdale in 2003, after Carl’s retirement

from 23 years as the church’s minister. Much of her volunteering involves helping with food and meal preparation at numerous venues. Four times a year, she works with Loaves and Fishes to serve meals at River of Life Lutheran Church in Minneapolis. For several years, Zahn worked with the KidPack program that packaged meals for elementary school youngsters to take home for supplementary nutrition on weekends. And she and other church members help with Feed My Starving Children on a regular basis. Beautiful Savior, which has a licensed kitchen, has begun another food-related project, an idea Zahn brought back from a trip to Iowa. The program is called Meals of Encouragement. Church workers purchase food and gather once or twice a month to pack 200 to 300 meals (similar to TV dinners) and freeze

A lot of what she does during her busy days keeps other people going

them. “Anyone is welcome to help themselves to meals in the freezer, to take to a neighbor who is sick, someone who has a new baby or has had a death in the family,” Zahn said. “It’s a really good program.” For five years, Zahn tended flower gardens at the church. One day she noticed a neighbor’s garden that seemed to need attention, “I said to my neighbor, ‘Do you mind if I work on your garden?’” Zahn said. “She said, ‘Are you for real?’ Sometimes people get busy. They had a little baby. I just thought I should go over there and do some weeding.” Zahn has recollections of numerous church mission trips in which she has participated, including a three-week stint in New Orleans to help with flood relief. “The temperature was in the 90s every day, and we were wearing HazMat suits, masks and boots,” Zahn said. “It was really hard work. We call it mucking. We were emptying out houses right down to the studs.” They also Zelda Zahn spends Monday mornings volunteering at the sanded, stained and varnished Rockford Road Library in Crystal. (Photo by Sue Webber) church pews that had been ruined by the floodwaters, Zahn said. ZAHN - TO PAGE 3


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