Over the past 25 years, and over and over, I've told the story of our "shiny coffee pot" in the Haskell Avenue Food Pantry. Here's how I told the story in my first book:
". . . I remember that, during my first week or so on the job, I made a trip to a local discount store where I purchased a large, industrial-sized coffee pot. The next morning as was setting up the new coffee pot in the interview room, a long-time volunteer approached me. She put her hand on my shoulder and asked me in a tone that mixed disgust with surprise, 'What are you doing, Larry?' I replied with great pride, 'Oh, I bought us a new coffee pot. I love coffee and the conversation it can start! New we can make coffee for our guests when they come into the food pantry.' She looked at me with incredulity and said, ' You can't do that! Don't you know that, if you serve coffee, these people will never leave?'" (The Wealth of the Poor: How Valuing Every Neighbor Restores Hope in Our Cities, pages 54-55)
Needless to say, coffee has remained, from those early days, a staple at CitySquare. We serve it every morning at the Opportunity Center to our friends, many of whom are homeless. Our students brew it daily in the CitySquare Cafe on that same campus.
Actually, coffee has taken on a life of its own at CitySquare.
Our culinary arts and hospitality students learn how to make coffee, some even opt for barista training!
Last year our good friends at Highland Park United Methodist Church invited us to open and facilitate a coffee shop in their beautiful building. Our trainees and interns staff the food and coffee service every Sunday in two locations inside the church--the new Youth Center and more formal coffee shop setting that we've built out in Wesley Hall. CitySquare reaps the income while learning how to provide food and coffee service on Sunday mornings. And, the coffee shops always seem packed. Every table debunks the myths of poverty with "fact cards" revealing the brutal truth about poverty in Dallas and beyond.
More recently, Southern Methodist University graduate students took charge of a Union Coffee popup truck during a market analysis of how a coffee shop might be received in the South Dallas neighborhood around the historic, iconic Forest Theater. Students and community folks surrounded the truck on two consecutive mornings. Talk about a winner! Coffee and its prospects ignited real neighborhood excitement, and connection.
Several years ago a man told me and a group of United Way volunteers that the coffee pot in the Food Pantry "saved his life." Homeless at the time, the man recalled coming to the food pantry daily for a morning cup of coffee and some friendly conversation. 'That kept me going every day," he said. Today he is employed and doing well.
I tell you, you just can't escape the power of coffee! Come by anytime. The aroma feels magnetic!
Showing posts with label coffee. Show all posts
Showing posts with label coffee. Show all posts
Monday, April 15, 2019
Tuesday, October 30, 2012
Icons: Mrs. Alexander and the CitySquare coffee pot
During my very first week at CitySquare, way back when it was known as Central Dallas Food Pantry (1994), I made an important purchase: an industrial size coffee pot!
I recall very clearly that first day as I broke out my new coffee maker.
As I worked to set it up and make coffee in the interview room, a long-time volunteer said to me, "What are you doing, Larry?"
"Well, I'm making coffee in our new coffee maker! I like coffee. I expect our neighbors like coffee. So, we can get acquainted over a cup of coffee!" I excitedly explained.
"Don't you know that if you make coffee these people will never go away," the volunteer informed me.
It was at that point that I realized we had a ways to go and grow when it came to community engagement and development.
Well, the coffee maker went to work, and lots of stories continue to orbit around the old pot!
A couple of years ago, the coffee maker got put up, largely due to the crowds that have streamed into the food pantry for assistance over the past few years. We had a hard time with the scale of demand for coffee. Putting the pot up was a mistake, even with the understandable challenges.
Recently, we broke the coffee maker out of the closet! Above you'll see Ms. Nois Alexander, long-time volunteer who understands the power of hospitality and friendly conversation over a hot cup of Java!
Glad to see my old coffee back in service!
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