October 2024_MCC Thrift, St Catharines Volunteer Newsletter

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Keeping our valued volunteers informed

GM Corner—50 Years of Thrift!

Did you know that you are part of a legacy of generosity! In 1974, a group of passionate supporters of Mennonite Central Committee (MCC) opened the first MCC Thrift Store in Ontario. Our shop, originally known as the Christian Benefit Shop, was this first store, located on Pelham St. in St. Catharines. As you will see in the historical articles included in this newsletter, the story of how our shop came to be is filled with intrigue.

We’ve moved several times and operated out of seven different locations during those 50 years. As a result, we’ve become well-known in Niagara as a thrift destination.

So many volunteers who have served over the years have contributed to make our shop what it is today. We stand on the shoulders of those who have served so faithfully and passionately. And we say “thank you.”

Please join us as we celebrate this legacy together. We are inviting past and present supporters of our shop to share in an afternoon of memories on October 6, at Bethany Community Church. We hope to see you there. You are part of our legacy and our future!

Around the shop

Joanne T. is jamming up a tune on the toy guitar. MCC Photo/Ana Galindo
Donna B. is happily organizing product on the retail floor. MCC Photo/Yamilet Corea
Danielle S. MCC Photo/Yamilet Corea

How the “Christian Benefit Shop” Came to Be

In 1974, our Shop opened under the name “Christian Benefit Shop.” Eventually, we became known as the “Christian Benefit THRIFT Shop.” This year, our name changed to MCC Thrift, more closely identifying us with MCC (Mennonite Central Committee), the organization we support. Here are some historical stories about the early days of our Shop.

Training Active Bystanders Workshop

If you are a bystander witnessing a harmful situation, you have a choice to make. Learn how to interrupt harmdoing, generate positive actions by others and be more than a spectator through this important workshop. It is not an expectation of MCC Ontario for volunteers to step into unsafe or risky situations while volunteering. Please always seek out staff should these types of situations arise. The TAB training is to give tools for and reflections about everyday life situations you may come across to feel more equipped to know what to do.

Workshop options:

ONLINE - Wednesday, November 6th – 10:00am - 12:30pm

To register either click HERE or contact Holly McClement – hollymcclement@mcco.ca for support.

IN- PERSON - Thursday, November 7th – 1:30pm - 4:00pm (Only for those in the KW area—there is an inperson TAB training happening at 50 Kent on the 2nd floor)

To register either click HERE or contact Holly McClement – hollymcclement@mcco.ca for support. When you register, please use MCCVOLUNTEER in the payment section. This training is $25 for those who are not MCC staff or MCC volunteers. If you accidentally pay $25 for the training, please let me know and MCC will reimburse you.

A Journey of Covenant and Reconciliation

The following is a special story that is transforming one of the most foundational relationships in Canada—that between Indigenous Peoples and the Christian Church. Your work in MCC’s thrift shops is not only about the good work you do within the shops—you are also supporting important, “big-picture” work through MCC’s local programs, like Indigenous Neighbours.

Adrian Jacobs, a Christian and a member of the Turtle Clan, Cayuga Nation of the Haudenosaunee Six Nations Confederacy, has been a friend of MCC’s since 2007. He had started a job with MCC educating the Mennonite churches on the history of the Haldimand Tract—six miles on either side of the Grand River that was granted to Six Nations back in 1784 by the British Crown as a thank you to Six Nations for supporting the British during the American Revolution. Over the decades and centuries, however, Canada broke their promise and sold that land that was no longer theirs to the point where now only 5% of the original Haldimand Tract is Six Nations’.

Adrian was having lunch with Rick Hill, an Elder and traditional Knowledge Keeper at Six Nations, when Rick asked a curious question: “Do the churches pay property taxes?”

To this, Adrian responded, “No, they don’t.” “That’s great,” said Rick. “Wouldn’t it be great if we had a spiritual covenant with the churches where they could acknowledge Six Nations jurisdiction over their church lands, they could pay a token lease payment—which was the original idea of leasing the land when we first got it in 1784—and they could continue their spiritual work and if they ever decommissioned, the land could revert back to Six Nations.”

The churches Adrian spoke with resonated with

Rick’s terminology of “spiritual covenant,” which resonated with both traditional Haudenosaunee and Christian spirituality—a living testament to respect, responsibility and harmonious coexistence.

Pam Albrecht, a member of Stirling Avenue

Mennonite Church where Adrian first presented the idea of spiritual covenant back in 2007, reflected on the growing desire for reconciliation within the church over the years: “A commitment to, and a desire to move forward with reconciliation was something that felt universal for those who participated in the process.”

They also grappled with the legacy of colonization, recognizing that their faith had been used to justify colonialism and the ongoing harm of colonial systems.

“My encouragement all the time to the churches [is], ‘you claim to be the conscience of the government,’” says Adrian. “Here’s your chance to lead the way! Here’s your chance to move forward with doing the right thing, and maybe the government will catch a drift that that’s possible, and maybe they should be doing that as well.”

In 2024, after years of dialogue, Stirling Avenue

Mennonite Church committed to ongoing token lease payments to Six Nations, a monumental step toward acknowledging historical injustices. Three Mennonite Churches in Manitoba, where Adrian had also worked for years in spreading the message of spiritual covenant, also recently committed to token lease payments to local Indigenous organizations.

In June 2024, Adrian, alongside MCC staff Scott Morton Ninomiya and Laurie Warkentin, organized a Strawberry Thanksgiving and Communion event— combining both Haudenosaunee thanksgiving ceremony and Christian communion. Over 150 people from various denominations and the Six Nations community gathered, reaffirming their commitment to justice and collaboration. “It’s what Rick talked about,” reflected Adrian. “Six Nations and the churches meeting together in a place of unity, a place of pursuit of justice, tangible action being taken and celebration.”

Listen to the full story on Undercurrents by clicking here

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October 2024_MCC Thrift, St Catharines Volunteer Newsletter by MCC Thrift Ontario - Issuu