Thanksgiving. A day for great food. Friends and family. A day to remember blessings. It’s a day that reminds of us of “home.” But not for Jodi. “My childhood was filled with abuse,” she says. “That’s where my story begins. For years, I was passed around from uncle to uncle … and it just got worse. I never knew what family really was. I didn’t know what ‘home” was, and I didn’t know what love was.” For that, she would have to travel to the “Skid Row.”
A storage unit is not home
"I didn’t know what home was, and I didn’t know what Love was" Jodi
“This is where God was leading me all my life. This is where I finally learned how deeply loved I really am. This is where I found family.” —Jodi
Because of the abuse, by the age of 7, Jodi was already drinking. “I learned early how to self-medicate to take the pain away,” she says. At 17, Jodi married and soon had two children. But the marriage turned abusive, and Jodi once again found herself alone. Shortly after it ended, she tried something she would end up regretting. She discovered drugs. “Drugs just took everything away,” she recalls. “For three seconds, I never felt so good in my life. And that was it.” That started her on a long run of addiction, depression, self-hatred, and suicide attempts. But at 39, sick of her life, she heard God say, “Follow me.” She gave up everything and let God lead. Judi tried to follow Him as best she could, but her life was desperately out of control. She says. “God told me, ‘It’s time for you to learn how to love my people.’ I said, ‘But Lord, I don’t even love myself.’ He just said, ‘Yes, and we’re going to work on that.’” It took a few years, but in 2019, she ran out of options. “At the time, I was working, but I couldn’t afford a place to live,” she says. ”I barely had enough money to eat.” With nowhere to go, she rented a storage unit and lived inside. It was miserable and she desperately needed a safe place to live. But when COVID hit, like so many others, she lost her job and her only source of income. When she couldn’t afford to pay the rent on the storage unit any longer, “God said, ‘Are you ready?’ I threw up my hands and said, ‘Yes, sir.’” Hungry, desperate and alone, Jodi came to Union Rescue Mission looking for a meal and some hope. But she found so much more. Soon joined URM’s apprenticeship program and started serving—and loving—other hurt and vulnerable women just like her. “I started seeing everyone around me through God’s eyes. He said, “Remember how I told you you’re going to love my people?’ I thought, ‘Oh goodness, this is why I’m here. Today, for the first time in her life, Jodi feels loved. Through the generosity of people like you, God has shown her how to love herself. And she’s now free to love others who have gone through similar struggles. “This is where God was leading me all my life. This is where I finally learned how deeply loved I really am. This is where I found family. These are my parents, my sons and daughters, my brothers and sisters. I’m on Skid Row, the worst place in America. But this is where I found home, and I don’t want to be anywhere else.” This year Judi is looking forward to celebrating Thanksgiving. She says she has so much to be grateful for, including recently reuniting with her youngest son. This will be their first Thanksgiving together in years. “I also want to thank all the donors,” she says. “Thanks to you, I’m finally home.”
The Meals You Provide Make a Difference
1 IN 4 PEOPLE IN L. A. FACE HUNGER THIS YEAR
Offering true hope and healing to all the families we serve at Union Rescue Mission and Hope Gardens, THANKS TO YOUR SUPPORT!
Before the pandemic hit Los Angeles, the high cost of living made it difficult for many of our neighbors to put enough food on the table without significant help from government aid, food banks, and food pantries. But since March 2020, the number of people seeking food assistance has tripled, and today it’s estimated that 1 in 4 people in Los Angeles Country experience food insecurity. Think about that…that means one of the four people cannot afford to eat. The number of people facing hunger today is at an all-time high, and among those most at risk are men, women, and children already devasted by homelessness. Your support means “home” for neighbors like Jodi. Empty shelf photo needed here. The Meals You Provide Make a Difference At Union Rescue Mission, Hope Gardens, and our new Angeles House in South Central Los Angeles, we serve more than 1,500 meals every day to hungry people experiencing homelessness. The meals you help provide—especially this Thanksgiving season—mean far more than filling an empty stomach. For someone with nowhere to go, your meals fill them with something they need even more than food…Hope. Encouragement. A second chance. And hearts filled with gratitude to God. It’s often the first step on the road to a new life! Along with each meal, we will again be providing a Bible to each person to help them learn how much God loves them! As we enter this season of gratitude, please remember to pray for all our neighbors in need. The streets are the loneliest place to be, but with friends like you praying and sending the gift of meals and care, lives are being saved every day.
Our shelves are nearly empty.
As Thanksgiving approaches, the overwhelming number of hungry people we’re helping has decimated our food supplies. Please help today!
No one deserves to go hungry.
Please Help Provide Thanksgiving Dinner—and a Taste of God’s Love
This fall and Thanksgiving season, we expect to serve thousands of meals to men, women, and children facing hunger and homelessness at Union Rescue Mission, Hope Gardens, and our new Angeles House.
Please help us get ready by sending a gift today to feed a hungry person struggling from homelessness.
Thanks to hundreds of volunteers and generous donations from local markets, each Thanksgiving meal you provide costs only $2.54. Your gift today will not only provide hot meals, safe shelter, and hope, but you will also give them a taste of God’s love—because our home is THEIR home.
Please give meals today!
Your Chance to Volunteer!
We are currently recruiting volunteers to serve at Union Rescue Mission and Hope Gardens. Opportunities include serving meals, doing building maintenance, and tutoring young guests. We
also have an opportunity for volunteers to serve at our annual Thanksgiving event, as well as our Christmas store in December. To ensure everyone’s safety, we have put the following protocols in place:
Vaccinated Volunteers: First-time or one-time volunteers must submit proof of full vaccine schedule AND test results WITHIN A 30-DAY WINDOW of their serve day. Consistent
returning volunteers must submit a negative test once every 30 days.
Unvaccinated Volunteers: First-time or one-time volunteers must submit a negative test TAKEN within a 72-hour window of their serving date. Their negative test result will then be good for 14 days FROM THEIR TEST DAY. Unvaccinated consistent/returning volunteers must submit a negative test once every 14 days.
Volunteers interested in working with our young guests must go through a background check.
NOTES FROM ANDY
Thank You, Hero!
I love Thanksgiving, especially here at Union Rescue Mission. For me, Thanksgiving represents much of what we’re all about: a welcoming home, a beautiful celebration of a feast, gratitude to God, and a time when we can all experience a kind of “peace on earth” between friends and strangers. When we welcome men, women, and children on Skid Row into our home to enjoy a feast with us, nothing speaks more to the real unity and love we feel. In many ways, however, the coming holiday season will be more challenging than ever. A record number of people are facing hunger and homelessness in Los Angeles. We must step up, as we always have—thanks to dear partners like you— to welcome anyone who’s facing food insecurity into our home for a meal. The meals we serve will be more critical than ever. Yet we also have so much to be grateful for this Thanksgiving. After a year and a half of ongoing pandemic-related challenges, I’m happy to report that because of friends like you, we survived the war. I cannot thank you enough! You are the reason we’re still here, serving men, women, and children who are struggling and experiencing homelessness. You are the reason we are saving lives and I’m so grateful for you. In my book, you’re a hero!
Thank you!
Rev. Andy Bales
President & CEO
To read Andy’s blog, please visit revandysblog.com