Schools

St. Francis Collects Socks For the Needy

Got socks? St. Francis High School will pass out new socks to homeless and low-income residents of Los Angeles.

and the Office of Franciscan Spirit and Life need your help providing socks for the homeless and poor residents of Skid Row in downtown Los Angeles.

Please bring any new socks for donation to Campus Ministry before April 6. This sock drive collection is going to support the Society of St. Vincent de Paul in L.A. Thank you for your support and generosity.

Information on the Society of St. Vincent de Paul (http://svdpla.org/):

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The Society of St. Vincent de Paul, Council of Los Angeles, provides programs and services for children, the homeless and the poor, free of charge regardless of religion, race, gender, sexual orientation, handicap or national origin within the counties of Los Angeles, Ventura and Santa Barbara.

These programs and services include the operations of St. Vincent’s Cardinal Manning Center, Circle V Ranch Camp, St. Vincent de Paul Thrift Store (which also distributes clothes, furniture and appliances free of charge to the needy), a winter shelter in Ventura County, a prisoner resettlement program that helps newly paroled inmates turn their lives around, and more than 100 community-based conferences of lay volunteers that have furnished direct services and referrals to poor individuals and families throughout the above mentioned counties since 1908.

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The Society of St. Vincent de Paul was founded in Paris, France in 1833 by a 20-year old student, Frederic Ozanam. Challenged by the poverty he saw on the streets, and by his contemporaries who believed the Church no longer demonstrated an active faith in works of charity, Frederic organized the first “Conference of Charity” to help the poor of all religions created by the industrial revolution, as well as create an avenue that assisted people to express their faith and grow spiritually through acts of charity.

Students in the Conference began begging for money, food, fuel and other items that could be used to help the desperately poor families they found in the slums of Paris. These students also met weekly to take stock of their resources and plan their activities.

This first Conference of Charity grew rapidly to more than 600 members and fifteen additional Conferences were formed in the cities and towns surrounding Paris. By 1845 there were Conferences of Charity all over the European continent, as well as in Ireland, England, Greece, Mexico and the United States.

Today, it is an international organization of lay Catholic women and men with more than 1,000,000 members in 142 countries, and a mission to “seek and find the forgotten, the suffering or the deprived.” Members of the Society seek, in a spirit of justice and charity, to promote the dignity of the person and alleviate human suffering and distress, while correcting conditions that caused them. They are actively involved in providing person-to-person assistance to those in need, guided by the credo of: “No Act of Charity is Foreign to the Society”

The preceeding press release was written by St. Francis Spokesman Andrew Burghdorf.

 


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