Tag Archives: Dégagé Ministries

Photo of the Week: Thanks for Serving

This week’s photo was sent to us from Dégagé Ministries and features Heartside resident Thomas Carpenter receiving his pin from Dégagé’s Executive Director Marge Palmerlee. Dégagé Ministries held a Veterans Day luncheon on Monday, Nov. 11, to recognize homeless and marginalized veterans from the Heartside neighborhood. The event was hosted by Denny Gillem, LTC, US Army (Ret.) and host of the radio program Frontlines of Freedom. The music was provided by the Catholic Central High School Choir. Employees from SpartanNash, Blue Cross Blue Shield and students from Northpointe Christian Schools volunteered at the event. The veterans were served lunch, received gifts and were recognized in a pinning ceremony.

Do you have a photo you would like considered for Photo of the Week? Email it to Managing Editor Joanne Bailey-Boorsma at joanne@wktv.org.

Snapshots: Wyoming, Kentwood news you ought to know — the weekend edition

By WKTV Staff

victoria@wktv.org

Quote of the Day

“The Sixties are now considered a historical period,
just like the Roman Empire.

~Dave Barry


The Vibe keynote speaker Josh George, a six-time Paralympic world champion and world record holder. (Courtesy/Josh George’s website)

I’m pickin’ up good vibrations

Get your tickets TODAY if you plan to attend The Vibe, a gala benefiting Kentwood Parks and Recreation’s adaptive recreation programs, on Friday, May 17. The Vibe will highlight the City’s adaptive water sports programs, which include kayaking, canoeing, paddle boarding, wake boarding and water skiing for all ages and abilities. Tickets for the semi-formal event are $100 per person and can be purchased online at kentwoodvibe.com or by calling 616-656-5270. More on the story here.


Tickets must be purchased in advance by Friday, May 10.



These boots are made for walkin’ (well…)

It’s not only elite athletes and experienced runners who are preparing for this weekend’s 42nd River Bank Run. For the ninth year, former and current residents of Dégagé Ministries Open Door Women’s Center will participate in the Amway River Bank 5k Walk. Dégagé’s walking group, the ‘Heartside All Stars for Health’, is a group of approximately 12 women who have overcome or are working to overcome things like poverty, addiction and homelessness. With the support of Dégagé’s staff and volunteers, the organization’s walking group totals nearly 30 people. For more information, go here.




Courtesy Air Zoo

Can’t get no satisfaction?
Check out these six destinations

Bored? Don’t be. The Air Zoo, Binder Park Zoo, Gilmore Car Museum, Kalamazoo Nature Center, Kalamazoo Institute of Arts, and the Kellogg Biological Station (KBS) Bird Sanctuary and Manor House are partnering for the sixth year of the Southwest Michigan Cultural Membership Exchange. Guests presenting a valid membership card and photo ID from any of these organizations can enjoy free admission at any of the six destinations May 1–31. More here.


Fun fact:

$4,743

That’s what the average salary was in the U.S. in the 1960s. But then, a loaf of bread was 45 cents, the average new car cost $2,752, and gas was about 31 cents a gallon. Ah, yes. The good, old days.

1963 AMC Rambler American



Music is the saving grace: A VOICES conversation with Thomas Carpenter

By Victoria Mullen, WKTV


The gift of song has always been Thomas Carpenter’s saving grace. His deep baritone-bass voice has opened doors many times, and he delights in singing at church, for Dégagé, nursing homes, Heartside Art Studio and Ministry, and other organizations that help the homeless.


He sang when he was in the military. And he even sings on the street.


Music has always been a big part of his life.


“My mother sang when I was little,” said the Detroit native. “I had a sister who was a musician. She and I sang in church. She was an alto who could sing tenor, so we could sing all the parts.”


Carpenter, 62, said he grew up in a God-fearing family. 


“We couldn’t hang out in the summer. We had to go to summer school or Bible school. Dad was a disciplinarian.”


When his parents and older sister were eventually diagnosed with cancer, he became depressed and started using drugs. Through a series of misfortunes, he eventually became homeless.


“One day, someone stopped me on the street and fed me,” said Carpenter. “We went to a revival and I sang, ‘Just a Closer Walk with Me’.”


His singing led to a scholarship at Marygrove College in Detroit where he was a voice major with a concentration in classical music. One of his classmates was Madonna, who was studying to be an opera singer.


“God was trying to help me out,” Carpenter said. “But I got careless and squandered the scholarship.”


Carpenter has lived in the Heartside district for seven years and is thankful to many organizations. Mel Trotter gave him shelter when he was homeless. Dégagé helped arrange his mother’s funeral and transport for her body to go back to Detroit.


He helps out wherever he is needed.

“I had worked at a shelter before, so I had experience,” he said. “I needed to turn the lemons into lemonade, so I volunteered without actually taking a job there. Whatever needed to be done, I just stepped up. And then I went to have surgery on myself at the Veterans Hospital.”


When he came back, Dwelling Place provided him with a low-rent apartment. 


“They saw how I interacted with people and developed a position, ‘resident engagement mentor’, so that’s what I’m doing for Dwelling Place.” 


He also serves on the board there.


“I work primarily in fund development and resident engagement, and I have a mentor who’s a lawyer as I need to know more about the laws of the land.”


And the First Methodist Church of Grand Rapids, which  partners with Dégagé, has opened the doors for him to come in and do special music for their services.


He finds the work rewarding on many levels.


“When someone who has been broken or lost or defocused receives the help from Dégagé, my joy is when that person brings another person,” he said. “Or when I see them putting the same  tools and resources to someone who is in the same situation they were in. When I see that, I get charged up.”


Listen to Carpenter’s VOICES conversation here.


Share your story with VOICES. It’s easy — just go here to reserve a time!

Homeless women find ‘sweet job’ with local cookie business

By Micah Cho
WKTV Contributor


Susan Schur lived on the streets of Grand Rapids for eight months. Now, thanks to the partnership of Dégagé Ministries and Paul’s Mom’s Cookies, she has a steady job and an apartment.   

“Dégagé helped me reinvent myself after being homeless,” Schur said.

Founded in 1967, Dégagé Ministries looks to serve homeless women in the Grand Rapids area. Men and women in need of assistance can visit Dégagé for food, hygiene, and legal services. Only women, however, can stay at the “Open-Door Women’s Center,” a homeless shelter for women in crisis.

Employing women that come through the shelter, Paul’s Mom’s Cookies gives women the opportunity to work for a real business and make a wage, something that’s difficult for homeless women. 

“We were able to use those women to come in and pay them a fair wage and teach them the trade of baking the cookies,” said co-owner Cindy Knape. “So to us it was a win-win because we’re not just giving money to a charity, but we’re helping it from the ground up.” 

Knape, along with co-founder Chris Mason, started the business out of Knape’s home kitchen and sold their cookies at the Rockford Farmers Market. After the cookie’s popularity took off, it was time to find a new place to start baking. Now, 20-30 volunteers and employees pack Trinity United Methodists Church’s kitchen on Tuesday mornings producing more than 1,500 cookies. 

“A year ago it took us three hours to bake 800 cookies and now its three hours to bake 1,500,” said cookie business manager Zenobia Taylor-Weiss. “So, we’re getting good at what we do”. 

Taylor-Weiss has noticed the different types of relationships that have been formed between the volunteers and the women from the open-door program. Because of the situations some of the women have gone through, Taylor-Weiss says there is nothing better than a strong support system. 

“The community that’s been created here… It’s been really beneficial to everybody,” said Taylor-Weiss.

Community has been especially beneficial to Schur. With an apartment and job, Schur is also a strong believer in the community that has been created at Paul’s Mom’s Cookies. 

“The volunteers and the rest of the workers are fabulous, I have great relationships with all of them,” said Schur. “I have their phone numbers and I can call them at any time if I have any questions and I just love it.” 

Paul’s Mom’s Cookies can be found in Forrest Hills Foods, 4668 Cascade Rd. SE; Kingma’s Market off Plainfield, 2225 Plainfield NE; and the Bridge Street Market, 405 Seward Ave. NW.

For updates on Paul’s Mom’s Cookies, you can visit their facebook page (https://www.facebook.com/paulsmomscookie/)

Dégagé Ministries, St. Cecilia Music Center hosts ‘Talent from the Heart’

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WKTV Staff

ken@wktv.org

 

Early this month, Dégagé Ministries — a group with its mission “to reflect the love of Christ by building relationship and offering programs that foster dignity and respect” — hosted its ‘Talent from the Heart’ at St. Cecilia Music Center, with music and other performances by people living homeless or otherwise in Grand Rapids’ Heartside neighborhood.

 

Degage’s patrons organized, hosted and performed a free community showcase that included poetry reading, singing, music and more, all performed by Heartside artists.

 

“A performer said, ‘We are homeless but first we are people.’ This is why this event was important,” Brooke Jevicks, development director for Dégagé Ministries, said to WKTV. “We are all created equal in the Lord’s image. We wanted the opportunity to showcase the people we serve and their talents. We wanted an opportunity to bring everybody together as a community. We wanted to celebrate that we are community, all of us, together.”

 

The May 9 event was prompted by a donation of a grand piano from Dottie Johnson, Jevicks said. The piano now sits in the Open Door Women’s Center, where the women have the opportunity to gather together, play music, and “sing joyfully as they build community among each other.”

 

The event was made possible by the Steve and Susan Rechner family, Jevicks added.

 

For more information on Dégagé Ministries visit degageministries.org .