HomeNewsBerlin NewsBerlin Rotary Club donates Thanksgiving boxes to those less fortunate

Berlin Rotary Club donates Thanksgiving boxes to those less fortunate

Members of the Berlin Rotary Club delivered over 100 boxes with food for Thanksgiving dinner to The Holy Communion Lutheran Church.

The Berlin Rotary Club

Berlin Rotary Club member Andy Simone said being a part of the Rotary Club means “giving back to the community, every Monday night for 25 years.”

“We live here, we eat here and we try to take care of the people that live here,” he said.

He and his fellow members took care of the less fortunate residents in Berlin Borough and the surrounding communities by providing more than 100 turkey boxes that included everything a family needed for Thanksgiving dinner. They met early Saturday morning on Nov. 19 at ShopRite in West Berlin where the boxes of food were prepared and ready to go. The boxes included stuffing, cranberry sauce, corn, green beans, potatoes, rolls and pumpkin pie. The Rotary Club loaded the boxes onto four pickup trucks and donated them to GIFT Food Bank at The Holy Communion Lutheran Church in Berlin Borough on Saturday, Nov. 19. GIFT provided turkeys, which was put together with the boxes of food and then handed out in time for Thanksgiving. God’s Interfaith Food Table is a food pantry that provides food distribution to those in need.

The Rotary Club also delivered 100 turkeys to Berlin Community Elementary School and Dwight D. Eisenhower Middle School in West Berlin the day prior.

“I think it’s a lot of giving back to the community, and we are able to help people, especially those who are less fortunate,” said member Brian Peterman of Voorhees. “We are able to provide for them and help out where we can. It’s important.”

Mike Denomme and Brian Peterman loading Thanksgiving boxes onto trucks.

Even though Rotary Club member Randy von der Tann has volunteered at this event for many years, when he pulled into the church parking lot and saw the line of people waiting outside, he was shocked.

“I’ve seen lines in the past, but that line was probably the longest line I’ve seen that early in the day,” he said.

von der Tann is a fourth-generation Rotary Club member in his 10th year, but said he’s been involved with the club his entire life.

“Rotary has been in my blood my entire life growing up as a kid,” he said.

He is getting his children involved early, just like he was brought up with it when he was a kid. He took his children to ShopRite and the church to see the work they do and to show them how fortunate they are.

“I always bring my son so he can see that. It’s important to let him know that we have this giant party at our house with tons of food, everyone comes over and you don’t even think about people out there starving,” he said. “They don’t have the money to have something like we do every year. It makes you feel good. You might not be changing the whole world, but you’re making some people’s lives a little easier and not so sad during that time of year when you can provide something to them they wouldn’t normally be able to get.”

Mike Denomme of Berlin Borough echoed his fellow member’s statements, saying they put others before themselves, especially this time of year.

“Like Andy said, it’s giving back to the community to people who maybe aren’t as fortunate as we are, and it’s a good feeling,” he said. “Service above self, that’s our motto.”

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