4 minute read

‘Hunger doesn’t take the weekend off’ Groups respond to rallying cry of Backpack Buddies founders

Next Article
►Out & about

►Out & about

churches and other locations in just a little more than a year.

“The best part about this to me is that without a huge amount of effort, there are a huge amount of children being fed,” Samra Robbins said.

Nearly 500 children at 10 schools are now receiving enough food for the weekend through the work of all of the groups.

The Robbins’ Beth Shalom group has upped its own efforts and now, in addition to Kingsley, also delivers backpacks weekly to 30 children at Montclair Elementary School and to 25 at Woodward Elementary School. Children should not be going hungry in America, Ronald Robbins said. “We have so many freedoms but so many people who don’t have food to

Right, eat,” he said. The retired Ford Motor Co. sales and marketing executive typically books three or four meetings a week with organizations he hopes to sell on starting their own Backpack Buddies programs.

His message to them: “Hunger doesn’t take the weekend off.”

“Samra’s been there right by my side the whole time,” he said. “This has been a labor of love for both of us.”

All it takes to start a Backpack Buddies program, he tells prospects, is “having a place to store and pack the food, a champion willing to spearhead the effort, willing volunteers and a desire to help feed nutritionally challenged children in the community.”

‘So blessed with volunteers’

Congregation B’nai Torah in Sandy Springs was Backpack Buddies’ first affiliate and sent its first delivery to Dunwoody Springs Elementary School in September 2018. Co-led by Rose Haber, Bonnie Cook and Debbie Sonenshine, the group has now added Dresden Elementary School to its list. Their program delivers weekend meals for 80 children between the two schools, with expectations to add more as time goes on.

They have a wait list for volunteers.

“So many people have wanted to participate it’s unbelievable,” Haber said. “We have been so blessed with volunteers.” Among them, Alan Cohn and Larry Ellison help to pick up, sort and deliver the food.

“I think it’s a great way to help the children in school. A child has to be healthy to learn,” Ellison said.

One of the group’s appeals is that all money donated goes directly to the children, Cook said. “There’s no lack of needs, even in our wealthy suburbs,” she said.

Donations have come from both their congregation and the community, with some following the Jewish custom of giving monetary gifts in increments of 18, Cook said. protein products, two vegetable items, two cereals, two fruits, two milks, two juices and two snacks.

Eighteen is the numerical value of the Hebrew word “chai,” which means “life,” and the congregation was told that $180 could provide enough weekend food for a child for an entire school year.

The bins’ contents are loaded into sacks which are delivered weekly to schools for students selected for the program with parental permission. Counselors place the food into the backpacks on Fridays for the children to take home on the weekends, and they return the backpacks to school on Mondays.

The affiliate programs generally follow the same guidelines but, as autonomous organizations, can design their own workflows.

‘This is what it’s all about’

An anonymous donor has been key to Backpack Buddies’ expansion, providing a $1,500 grant to each new affiliate and a $500 mentoring grant to the group that launches them. New groups must commit to serve at least 24 children and to grow their Backpack Buddies programs over time.

3. On Oct. 6, a family came to our church and one of the little boys was telling our youth pastor about getting food in his backpack,” Flanagan said.

“I choked up,” she said. “It’s one thing to think about it in theory, but to have a human being in our sanctuary who got one of those bags, it kind of just rocked my world. It really made it ‘this is what it’s all about.’”

Backback Buddies affiliates

Backpack Buddies programs launched by Ronald and Samra Robbins:

■ Ahavath Achim Synagogue, Atlanta

■ Assistance League of Atlanta, Chamblee

■ Chamblee First United Methodist Church, Chamblee

■ Congregation B’nai Torah, Sandy Springs

“Some donated $18. A lot of people donated $180. Some did $1,800,” Cook said. “The generosity of the community has been overwhelming.”

How it works

At least twice a month, Ronald, 72, and Samra, 69, visit the Atlanta Food Bank to pick up as much as 1,300 pounds of nonperishable food in seven specific categories. They load the food into their SUV, then drive to Beth Shalom and unload it all. When the Food Bank can’t completely fill their needs, they strike out in search of the best grocery store deals.

Once a week, volunteers from their synagogue and the community spend about an hour sorting food into a bin for each child. Each one will contain four

The Robbins help them go through the channels to connect with schools and partner with the Atlanta Food Bank, which charges a small handling fee per pound of food received. The couple also personally donates packing bins, backpacks and packing bags to each new group, offering them ongoing assistance and encouragement.

Eleanor Flanagan, treasurer of Brookhaven’s Skyland United Methodist Church, still remembers her initial talks last August with Ronald Robbins. “I can’t tell you how committed he was to this and how persistent he was,” she said. “He’s just a great guy. … He makes it work for you.”

Today, Flanagan is the administrator of Skyland UMC’s Backpack Buddies program, which has 10 volunteers filling backpacks weekly for 25 Montclair Elementary School students. More than 90 percent of Montclair students qualified for free and reduced-price lunch in 2018.

“Our first delivery was Oct.

■ Congregation Beth Shalom, Dunwoody

■ Congregation Gesher L’Torah, Alpharetta

■ Congregation Or VeShalom, Brookhaven

■ Congregation Shaarei Shamayim, Atlanta

■ Congregation Shearith Israel, Atlanta

■ Kingswood United Methodist Church, Dunwoody

■ Lenbrook Square life plan community, Atlanta

■ Skyland United Methodist Church, Brookhaven

■ Temple Beth Tikvah, Roswell

■ Temple Emanu-El of Atlanta, Sandy Springs

■ Temple Sinai, Sandy Springs

■ The Temple, Atlanta

To learn more, contact Samra Robbins at 912-844-9127, samrarobbins@gmail.com, or Ronald Robbins at 912-272-6245, ronaldrobbins034@gmail.com.

This article is from: