Crazy Quilt party gives kids a merrier Christmas The Catholic Charities ministry in Newcomb distributes toys to more than 250 children
By Dan McWilliams
DAN MCWILLIAMS
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he annual Christmas party at the Crazy Quilt Friendship Center in Newcomb on Dec. 16 saw more than 250 young people receive toys, bicycles, and more. Donations from East Tennessee Catholics and churchgoers of other faith traditions helped make Christmas a little brighter for needy children of Appalachia who live in and around the northern Campbell County town outside of Jellico along the Kentucky border. Crazy Quilt is a ministry of Catholic Charities of East Tennessee that is nearly 50 years old. It operates a food pantry and a Pregnancy Help Center, and its toy distribution at Christmastime has benefited thousands over the years. Program supervisor Ed Bryant of Catholic Charities stood at the door of the Crazy Quilt during the party and kept the line of children and their families moving, inviting those waiting to enter the center and wishing those leaving a merry Christmas. Mr. Bryant, who lives in Newcomb and has worked for Catholic Charities since 2011, has taken part in the toy giveaway for 25 years. “This is my neighborhood. This is where I go to church. This is my community, and I like to help my community all I can,” he said. “We like to help the most vulnerable people in our community and the surrounding area. We appreciate
The Grinch who gives Christmas toys Allison Overbay, program coordinator for the Pregnancy Help Center at the Crazy Quilt Friendship Center, has her Grinch mask off as she shows a toddler an array of toys. Catholic Charities and what they do for us here. They have really helped us in this community, and I just can’t thank them enough.” Mr. Bryant’s wife, Pat, has volunteered alongside him the whole time. She said the party “to me, means the kids get something. For
some of them, this is all they get.” Deacon David Duhamel, executive director of CCETN, attended the Christmas party in Newcomb. “It means a lot to the kids, and for us at Catholic Charities, it’s one of our most important missions that we have here, serving
the people, our neighbors, up here in the Appalachia region of East Tennessee,” he said. [The party] brings a little bit of Christmas cheer to these kids who may not have the resources or the ability to have the Christmas that most of us Crazy Quilt continued on page B2
St. Ann Parish in Lancing serves its neighbors The small Morgan County community ‘jumps at the chance’ to offer a Holiday Food Box distribution By Bill Brewer
BILL BREWER
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lot can happen in a year. And a lot did. Just ask the members of St. Ann Church in Lancing. During the 2022 Christmas holiday, parishioners in the Morgan County Catholic community were hoping to identify ways to better serve their broader county community. But a small, rural mission parish has limited resources, and opportunities to begin a new ministry are limited. But God’s timing and His plans were perfect. And a year later, St. Ann launched its first ministry in years to serve its Morgan County neighbors: the Holiday Food Box distribution. “It was very much a hands-on experience. It’s the first time we’ve been able to reach out to the community on a broad basis. Last year at Christmas (2022), we were looking at ways to serve our community, but we didn’t have the means. Deacon Dave reached out to us to see if we would be willing to help out, and we jumped at the chance,” said Nancy Jurkoic, one of several St. Ann members who volunteered to get the Holiday Food Box ministry off the ground. Deacon Dave is Deacon David Duhamel, newly appointed executive director of Catholic Charities of East Tennessee, the Diocese of Knoxville’s leading social-services agency. Archbishop Shelton J. Fabre, who is serving as apostolic administrator of the Diocese of Knoxville until a new bishop is named, last month removed the interim tag from Deacon Duhamel’s position, making him the executive director of Catholic Charities on a permanent basis. Deacon Duhamel succeeds Lisa
Food for families Taking part in the Holiday Food Box distribution for St. Ann Parish in Lancing are Dudley and Ruth Hurst; Mark and Coleen Patterson; Ed Hajost; Ted Lucas; Matt, Dani, and Nathan Van Dalen; Jeremy and Nancy Jurkoic; Rick Bemis; Frank, Nancy, and Alex Boniewski; Betty Kober; and Mary Jo Hooker. Healy, who retired as executive director earlier in 2023. Deacon Duhamel in 2023 reached out to St. Ann about becoming a new site that Catholic Charities’ Hope Kitchen could help serve. Hope Kitchen provides relief to families through food and basic necessities in partnership with community organizations and parishes. St. Ann was a good fit for the Hope Kitchen even with the rural parish’s limited resources. “St. Ann is a great community. They are very willing and actively engaged in helping their neighbors in Morgan County,” Deacon Du-
hamel said. One of Catholic Charities’ many missions is to ease the economic burden of East Tennesseans across the 36 counties the agency serves. And one of the ways it is accomplishing that mission is through its Hope Kitchen. “Morgan County is a very underserved county. Catholic Charities is actively looking at ways to extend our reach in counties like Morgan,” said Deacon Duhamel, who praised Father Michael Sweeney, pastor of St. Ann, for helping bring about the Holiday Food Box ministry. Father Sweeney also is pastor of
Blessed Sacrament Parish in Harriman and St. Christopher Parish in Jamestown. “I made the offer, and they took it and ran with it,” Deacon Duhamel said about St. Ann and its members. He said Catholic Charities staffers Michelle Kitts and Paul Ritter led the effort to get 4.5 tons of food to Lancing for the December distribution. Y-12 Federal Credit Union and its FCU Gives Grant helped make the food supplies possible. Deacon Duhamel hopes St. Ann’s Holiday Food Box ministry and St. Ann continued on page B3