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    Post Hosts Community Toy and Food Drive

    Post Hosts Community Toy and Food Drive

    Photo By Tarah Jackson | Sgt. Maj. Jodie Newby puts her non-perishable food items in the collection container...... read more read more

    CAMP ATTERBURY, IN, UNITED STATES

    11.13.2009

    Story by Sgt. William Hill 

    Camp Atterbury Indiana

    CAMP ATTERBURY JOINT MANEUVER TRAINING CENTER, Ind.— To help support the local community, the leadership at Camp Atterbury Joint Maneuver Training Center is hosting a toy and food drive so citizens can provide for their families in time for the holidays.

    The goal is to collect 2,000 pounds of food and 1,000 toys which will be given out to the local community.

    Command Sgt. Maj. Rodney Spade, the post command sergeant major, said he would like every Soldier to contribute by donating non-perishable food items and toys with a price range of $5 to $15.

    "I am asking every Soldier to purchase extra food and toys when they shop and bring it in, because we are doing this as an installation, as a collective body, and if we do things as a collective body then we could help more people rather than a few individuals," said Spade.

    Spade said while the installation is collecting both food and toys, food is the critical issue. He added that with the upcoming holidays, the families that cannot afford food may not be able to buy gifts for their children.

    "Could you imagine being a child waking up on Christmas Day and having nothing to open because your family has nothing to give? My heart would break if I was that mother or father," said Spade.

    "I believe the Soldiers on this installation are blessed," he said. "We have jobs and we get paid good money for what we do and we should be giving back to our community. There are people out there that are hurting and people out there in need so do the right thing and donate," said Spade.

    Maj. Douglas Brown, a chaplain at Camp Atterbury, reminisced about hardships his family faced when he was a child and how hard his parents struggled to support their five children. One morning, Brown said, he walked out onto his front porch and found five bags of groceries sitting there.

    "To this day, I still do not know who put those groceries out there, but here it is some 40 years later and I still remember it," said Brown.

    "[You can] take the time and effort to make a memory of love for someone too," he said.

    "We as a nation have deeply entrenched values; love, respect, dignity, self worth and hope. When those kinds of values are upheld over generations such as at Christmas and Thanksgiving they become enforced by emotional connection and association with this time of year. Donating helps to not only continue to uphold such values but they also prove the capability we as humans have in showing each other some of the various forms of love," said Brown.

    The food drive is scheduled to end Nov. 15 and will be delivered to local pantries Nov. 20. The toy drive is scheduled to end mid-December. All food and toys can be dropped off at Building 1 Trailer P11.

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    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 11.13.2009
    Date Posted: 11.13.2009 15:01
    Story ID: 41548
    Location: CAMP ATTERBURY, IN, US

    Web Views: 196
    Downloads: 180

    PUBLIC DOMAIN