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Labor of Love Provides Gifts to Kids

Tuesday, April 27th, 2010

"Sr. Regis Leahy, 'Hunter/Gatherer' " © 2010 by Paul F. Moloney

On the first Tuesday morning of each month the “Bags of Love” volunteers get together in the Ruth and Joe Akin garage in Firestone, Colo., to stuff bags, visit and have lunch.

They are loving, smiling and positive in preparing their gifts for youngsters of southern Weld and Adams counties  of Colorado, at the north edge of Denver. The bags are distributed through social services. They produce 8 to 16 cloth or back pack bags of contributed clothing, books, crayons, toys and stuffed animals each month.

Organizers were inspired by a similar project reported by 3-Angel Broadcasting.  Then the Akin couple and Sr. Regis Leahy began their slow organizational process in 2005. The Fort Lupton Seventh-Day Adventist church donated the Fellowship hall for two years.

When the church discontinued housing the project, Ruth and Joe Akin, both retired,  bought a home in Firestone and now provide their garage for the project.

The old Frederick library is now closed — has been for three years — with a new one opening recently at Firestone. The “Bags of Love” group is negotiating a lease with owner Weld county to move the project into a portion of the closed Frederick library.

“Child Protection Services of Weld county is grateful for the assistance we have given them,” Sr. Regis said.

She describes the project:

” ‘Bags of Love’ is a project that began back East when a grandmother was called in the middle of the night by police to come and get her grandchildren because their mother had been arrested for having a meth lab.

“As the outcome of this experience, the grandmother began making bags with hygienic products and school supplies to get the children through the first hours until they had been placed in foster care. There have been a number of these products across our country and into Canada to take care of children who have fallen through the cracks.

“As a result, we have had four to five years of experience putting together our own project and have supplied Weld county with at least 450 bags and Adams county 300 bags. The bags are sorted according to age and needs of the boys and girls, toddlers and teens. Because of the privacy act, we are never permitted to know the identity of the children who receive our help.”

Sr. Regis is the “hunter/gatherer” type person, said occasional volunteer Marge Seery of Denver.  Sr. Regis considers this a “loaves and fishes” project as it is not funded by any particular organization — just these men and women. They consider it an adventure to fund the items required for the bags.  Sister says she has a “porch ministry” as people leave things for the bags on her front porch,” writes Mrs. Seery.

"Sr. Regis Leahy Sorts and Places Gifts in Bag" © 2010 by Paul F. Moloney

Tuesday, April 6 the group that included stuffers Shirley Landweher and Doreen Towey filled eight bags with $35 worth of items each. Joe Akin was the lunch chef.

Another element of the project is to make or obtain quilts for the newborn at the Salud Clinic at Frederick.

In 2005 Sr. Regis celebrated her 60th jubilee as a Catholic nun. In September it will be her 65th jubilee. She’s now retired.

Please write a note in this blog if you wish additional information about the Bags of Love project.

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My apologies for the hiatus.  About three weeks ago, my computer died in its sleep.  I immediately replaced it, but the learning curve for the updated and new programs stalled my production of the Wondering, Wandering Photographer.  It is great to be back on line.

German POW Returns to U.S.

Tuesday, January 5th, 2010

 

"Fritz Hellenschmidt Visits POW Camp Site" © 1976 by Paul F. Moloney

German soldier Fritz Hellenschmidt was on the Russian front in World War II when it became clear that he and his company would be captured.  Hellenschmidt broke into a two-mile run for the United States front to escape.

“I was afraid the Russians would take no prisoners,” he said. He barely made it and surrendered to the U.S. Army, which sent him to the German POW Camp 202, 8.3 miles on US Hwy 34 west of Greeley. He was there from 1944 to 1946.

On work detail he was in a vehicle that wondered off the highway in Rocky Mountain Park and in the accident he severely injured his kidneys, a condition that plagued him the rest of his life.

During recovery at Fitzsimons Hospital, Denver, he met Mabel Ellis who was in a group that sang for the people hospitalized. They became friends and corresponded for years after the war.  

He wanted to return to Colorado from his Stuttgart, Germany, home and did that in 1976.  Hellenschmidt made a trip to Denver to visit Mabel and the Paul Moloneys met him at a Denver South Broadway Camera Club meeting.

Since Mabel did not drive, we volunteered to take Hellenschmidt wherever he wanted to go in the region.  We drove to Rocky Mountain National Park where he pointed out the location of the accident.  

Then we drove to Greeley, Colo., for him to see what was left the prison camp at the Windsor intersection (Colorado Hwy 257 spur and US 34).

In the Hellenschmidt picture’s background is the area in which his quarters were located, and he’s sitting on one of the foundation stones. 

He died about four years after returning to America.

                                                                   – From ”Friends and Celebrities”

About the picture: 

I made this portrait with my 18 mm full frame “fisheye” lens which aptly described the location though it created the curving background.  Only two pillars with historical plaques remain, and the land is used for farming by the Rick Hertzke family.