Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Midnight Run Helps the Homeless

"Sell that ye have, and give alms; provide yourselves bags which wax not old, a treasure in the heavens that faileth not, where no thief approacheth, neither moth corrupteth." —Luke 12:33

Midnight Run participants, including members of Newman Club and Resident Student Association, Diocese of Rockville Centre representatives and three high school students accompanying Professor Emily Kang, pose for a group photograph.

On Sunday, February 20, Adelphi University's Newman Club and the Resident Student Assocation (RSA) participated in the Midnight Run, a not-for-profit organization consisting of "volunteers from churches, synagogues, schools and other civic groups [who] distribute food, clothing, blankets and personal care items to the homeless poor on the streets of New York City."

Their work began that afternoon, at Adelphi's Interfaith Center. From 3-6 p.m., students sorted clothes, made food packages and arranged bags of toiletries. Clothes were sorted by age and sex, as volunteers placed size labels on them. Food packages included hot chocolate, cookies, crackers and other snacks, in addition to sandwiches.

Volunteers sort clothing for the Midnight Run.

At 7 p.m., Newman Club celebrated Mass and offered up a special intention for the Midnight Run, for the homeless who would be served and for the students' experience that night. Then, at about 8:20, the Adelphi contingent left campus and made its way toward the city.

Approximately 40 minutes later, they arrived and set to work, making three separate stops: At the first, volunteers gave out food, drinks, clothing and shoes to five men, who greatly appreciated the donations.

The group of homeless the volunteers assisted at the second stop was even larger than the first. They live in a small town, of sorts, consisting of homes made of mere cardboard, not brick or stone, to protect their occupants from the bitter winter cold.

This scene, in particular, most struck sophomore Julie Hundertmark. "My most powerful moment was when [fellow volunteers] Danielle Lyons, Gina Cristaldi and I were working on one of the women's shelters made of cardboard boxes to waterproof them with plastic bags," she said.

The Midnight Run's goal is not to end homelessness but rather, "to forge a bond between housed and homeless people by establishing a foundation of sharing and caring from which solutions may evolve." The group's reception Sunday night is evidence of its effectiveness, with significant numbers of homeless, especially at the first and second stops, waiting for the group to come and give them supplies.

Peter Dujmovic (left), brother of Newman Club member Joseph Dujmovic, prepares supplies with Kyle Blackmer.

It was the third and final stop, however, that had the most lasting impact on junior Kyle Blackmer. "We pulled up in front of this Methodist church, and we got out and we walked past some scaffolding covered with tarps, and I didn't hear anything, so I just thought it was typical of New York City construction," he said. "And we went around behind it, and there were five or six cardboard boxes, with people sleeping in them. They were completely hidden, and you could walk by and never really notice, and I've never seen people literally living on the street."

The service trip was finished at about 11:30 that night, at which point the volunteers gathered to pray that the Lord would lift the homeless out of their poverty.

The Midnight Run is "dedicated to finding common ground between the housed and the homeless," and for sophomore Erica Conde, that common ground was indeed found: "It was great. We were able to make them [the homeless] feel like people. We didn't just offer them food and clothing; we offered them conversation."

(Special thanks to Kyle Blackmer for providing information for this post. You can read about his experience at the Midnight Run at Mission: Ecuador 2011. All photographs courtesy of Matthew Rudolph.)

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

Interview with Matthew Rudolph: What Is Newman Club?

Adelphi Catholic Campus Minister Matthew Rudolph (right) meets with Katie Hundertmark, Newman Club President Katie Correa and Julie Hundertmark (far-left to middle).

For my first post, I sat down with Matthew Rudolph, Newman's Catholic Campus Minister, to discuss what the Newman Club is, does and hopes to do.

Newman News: In a nutshell, what is Newman Club?

Matthew Rudolph: "Newman is a student organization that is the [Catholic] Church's organization on campus. There are three pillars: prayer, service and fellowship. The club is open to people of all faiths, but it's a Catholic-based group."

NN: What is Newman Club's mission?

MR: "Newman acts as a home, as a family for students seeking to grow in their faith, and it's through our dialogue, our prayer, our support and our activities that students are empowered and strengthened to build others up on or off-campus."

NN: Do you believe Newman Clubs are vital to the Roman Catholic Church's mission?

MR: "Absolutely. College students are going through a time in their lives where they are evaluating everything they've ever been taught and are seeking new knowledge and really deciding the way they're going to live their lives. Many college students received a Catholic education through grade school and high school, but there's a disconnect with the Church during their college years. Newman Club is that link that connects college students back to their faith and gives them a community of support through which they can actually live it."

NN: Polling shows younger Catholics are far more liberal than their elders, placing many of them in opposition to official Church teaching on issues such as abortion and same-sex marriage. How do Newman Clubs rectify this?

MR: "I think that most people reject several teachings of the Faith because they don't fully understand them. Many think the Church does not fully understand - is not compassionate - to the problems of the world today. In Newman Club, students receive formation in the faith, they are given time to ask questions, given answers and they're given the opportunity to build a personal relationship with Christ."

NN: How do you draw a line between outright proselytizing and simply doing good works in the Name of Christ?

MR: "Pope Benedict XVI said, [quoting Pope Paul VI] 'modern man listens more willingly to witnesses than to teachers, and if he does listen to teachers, it is because they are witnesses.' If anyone listens to a teacher, it is because he witnesses first. Faith without works is dead, as James says."

NN: Has the Bishop or anyone else in the diocese been helpful to Newman Club?

MR: "Several dynamic priests within the diocese have taken an interest in the students of Long Island. They understand they are the future of the Church. We've had over a dozen priests involved in our ministry, providing the Sacraments, giving talks and just being present on campus."

NN: What inspired you to be a campus minister?

MR: "Because I wake up every morning, and I'm not selling a product. I'm not doing a job that doesn't have much meaning. I wake up every morning, and my mission is to bring souls to Christ. And that gives me such zeal and energy to be with these students."

NN: What has been the most difficult thing about being a campus minister?

MR: "I wish that there were four of me here. There's one of me serving thousands of students at Adelphi, and I wish there were more campus ministers to help support [other] campus ministers and Adelphi. But God is good, and He's multiplying the fruits of our labor."