Suburban News North Edition - May 10, 2015

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2015

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May 10, 2015

Issue No. 19

DEADLINE: Tuesday, May 12th Issue Date: May 17th

From the publishers of Suburban News and Hamlin-Clarkson Herald...the best read weekly newspapers in our area.

Westside News Inc. 1776 Hilton-Parma Corners Rd., Spencerport, NY 14559

www.westsidenewsny.com

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Volunteers stitch quilts for those in need around the world Quilts for Christ warm many by Grace Griffee For nearly a decade, a group of about 15 volunteers have been churning out over 60 handmade

quilts a year and then turning them over to Lutheran World Relief so that they can be sent overseas. Handmade quilts have long been collected and cherished - and are pricey to purchase - but these women think nothing of creating these

Top, Carolyn Hurlbutt (left) and Lois Kane hold one of the quilts the Quilts for Christ volunteer group creates for those in need around the globe. “It’s a great crew and we work really well together,” said Kane. Bottom photo: Before the quilts are picked up by Lutheran World Relief, they are laid on

works of art, boxing them up and donating them to people around the world. “It’s like an old-fashioned quilting bee,” said Lois Kane, who heads up the Quilts for Christ group. Volunteers work on the squares at home and then the quilts are assembled during two monthly meetings. “We have a meeting in the afternoon and then one in the evening for those who work during the day,” said Kane. Working with donated fabric, the squares are stitched together in coordinating colors and patterns with the only criteria being that they measure 60 x 80”. “The mission isn’t fussy about how they look, but our ladies are,” said Kane. Sheets are purchased for the backing and huge rolls of fiberfill for the filling. Before the finished quilts are boxed up, a dedication ceremony is held during which all of the quilts are draped over the church pews and blessed. This year, instead of transporting the quilts to a site in Downtown Rochester, St. Paul’s Church served as the drop off location for churches in the Rochester area,

Buffalo area and everywhere in between. Collectively, around 1,400 quilts were packed into a large truck that was headed to the Lutheran World Relief warehouse in Baltimore, Maryland. “We have a spacious parking lot and good storage, so we’re hoping to serve as the drop off in years to come,” said Kane. In 2014, Lutheran World Relief sent 408,245 quilts to 19 countries, including Armenia, Iraq, Jordan, Nicaragua, Philippines, Serbia and Tanzania. The organization focuses on long term solutions to poverty and emergency operations, such as helping with recovery efforts after the Nepal earthquake. “The quilts go to people who have nothing and fulfill a basic need,” said Kane. In addition to being a cozy, clean bed cover, the quilts are used as a baby carrier, tied around a mother’s back; a market display, spread on the ground and piled with vegetables; a sack for transporting those goods to market; a sunshade; or a shawl. “Our hope is that the recipients will feel the love of Christ through the warmth of our quilts,” said Kane.

the church pews at St. Paul’s Lutheran Church in Hilton and blessed. While the group makes the majority of quilts for mission efforts overseas, occasionally they will give one to someone who is ill or in need locally. The quilts are never sold. G. Griffee photos.


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