Pajamas for the Holidays
Sayville Students Collect
Pajamas for HELP SUFFOLK
The Third Annual Pajama
Program Drive convened a “pajama party”
of approximately twenty-five Sayville students to the Sayville Congregational Church for a
special purpose—to prepare gifts of pajamas and books for those less fortunate.
Working once again in conjunction with www.pajamaprogram.org and thanks to the generosity of the UPS of Sayville that donated boxes and tape, the students volunteered their time to sort pajamas by gender, age, and size, pack, and then decorate boxes for the 117 donated pairs of pajamas and 73 books they had collected this year. This concerted effort not only will bring a little extra comfort in time for the holiday season to homeless children it also rewarded the mix of Sayville High School and Middle School student volunteers who experienced the wondrous spirit of good will.
“Our donations this year will be going to Help Suffolk,” explained Lisa Murtha, mother of Brock the Sayville High School Freshman who launched
this drive when he was a Seventh-grader three
years ago and who continues to organize it still. “HELP Suffolk is a
76-unit transitional housing facility for homeless families.*”
“We have so much fun getting together to decorate the boxes
and sort the pajamas by size and pack them,” explained Seventh-grader Macklin
Murtha, Brock’s brother. “We listen to Christmas music and have food. Not only
is it fun for us, it’s meaningful because we are giving to kids who don’t have
much.”
“I love doing this every year,” Freshman Joe Vanderborgh
said. “It’s become a tradition for the holiday. We are so lucky and it feels
great to do something for kids and families who are down on their luck.” Fellow
Freshman Kevin Golka agreed. “This is my third year doing this, and I hope we
continue it for many years. It’s
something that kids can do for kids, and it just feels right.”
Lisa Murtha added with pride and enthusiasm that watching
the students be so engaged and committed
to this very "feel good"
project was ‘truly amazing.”
*Extracts
from their website:
HELP Suffolk is the largest
housing facility for the homeless on Long Island. The complex sits on seven acres of property
and consists of four residential buildings, a community building, two
playgrounds and a baseball field.
HELP Suffolk is the most
cost-effective model for homeless family housing in Suffolk County, costing
approximately one third less than what it costs to house families in motels and
other emergency housing facilities which offer few or no services. This year at
the Help Suffolk location children represent more than 40% of their residence
homeless population. Nationwide, 1.6 million children experience homelessness
each year.
Homelessness is traumatic for
every person who experiences it, but it is even more damaging for children.
Homelessness is associated with higher rates of asthma, obesity, hunger,
emotional problems, and learning disabilities in children. First and foremost, HELP Suffolk provides
safe places for homeless children to live. In addition they also administer
programs that help minimize the stress of being homeless for these kids ages
newborn to eighteen.