2006年VOA标准英语-Volunteers Give Meaning to Thanksgiving(在线收听) |
By Brian Padden The American holiday of Thanksgiving began as a harvest celebration and is intended as a day for families to get together and reflect on their good fortune. For many today Thanksgiving means eating too much turkey, watching too much football and the beginning of the Christmas shopping season The staff and volunteers here are preparing more than 3,500 Thanksgiving dinners complete with turkey, cranberry sauce and potato salad. The cook says the feast will feed about 400 people.
To get Thursday done, Food and Friends relies on volunteers to prepare the meals, such as retired teacher Marlene Hoffman. "Because people need help and I got time." And Debby Greenstein, who has been volunteering here for 13 years. "Aside from the fact that the mission's really important, providing nutrition to people who are sick is a way of either helping them get well. I just have a good time here and they've become part of my family and you get leftovers." These volunteers say they get a sense of satisfaction and a feeling of purpose from helping others. Most of these volunteers do not see the people they help. But Nancy Sahli does. "There are people I deliver to, who know they are going to die." "I think what you need to expect is not so much a frailty of condition but a real affirmation of the human spirit. That's one of the things that really keeps me going in this the common humanity I have with each one of these people."
Charities in America, such as Food and Friends, see a surge of volunteerism during Thanksgiving. They hope some volunteers, such as Nancy Salhi, will continue to give of themselves after the holidays end. |
原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/voastandard/2006/11/35744.html |