Sunday, February 21, 2010

Team Civitron Walks for Hunger


Sunday, February 21, 2010 – On Sunday, May 2nd, I will be participating in Project Bread’s 2010 Walk for Hunger. This is my fifth Walk for Hunger. My first walk was in 1989. Eighteen years later, my three-year old son made the commitment to join the fight against hunger and a family tradition was born! Since then, we have cultivated a superheroic team of friends and family to suit up and tighten our laces against the injustice of tightening belts around hungry bellies. I hope that you will support me and my team in our efforts to raise money to help end hunger in Massachusetts!

That’s my son and me (upper left), posing at the 10 mile checkpoint. He doesn’t usually look like that. He’s just really really tired. We all were tired and hungry. Then, Super-Scott’s shoe exploded! But we didn’t let the damp weather dampen our spirits. We pressed on with visions of cheeseburgers, dancing in our heads

Why am I walking? I’m walking because many Massachusetts families are seeing their monthly income stretched beyond capacity. They are forced to go without food in order to pay their rent, utility, and medical bills. The demand for emergency food has never been greater with pantries and meal programs supported by Project Bread serving 57.3 million meals last year alone. Hunger is not just an urban problem — it exists in nearly every community throughout the state.

The money that I raise by walking as much as I can of the 20-mile route will directly help hungry people. Funds raised through the Walk support more than 400 emergency food programs in 135 communities statewide.

Who is hungry? Hunger affects more than 554,000 people in Massachusetts, including the state’s most vulnerable citizens — children, the elderly, the disabled, and the unemployed.

Hunger also affects the working poor, who use more and more of their income to pay rent, heating oil, medical care, and childcare. Both children and the elderly are disproportionately represented at emergency food programs funded by Project Bread. In low-income communities throughout the state, one child in three lives in a family that struggles to put food on the table.

Please donate to my Walk to help me make a difference and reach my personal fundraising goal. Thank you for your support of me and of hungry people.

Together we CAN make a difference!

About The Walk for Hunger

Since 1969, Project Bread’s Walk for Hunger has provided critical resources for hungry children and families in Massachusetts. Today, The Walk for Hunger is the oldest continual pledge walk in the country, and the largest annual one-day fundraiser to alleviate local hunger.

Money raised through The Walk for Hunger funds more than 400 food pantries, soup kitchens, food banks, and food salvage programs in 135 communities across Massachusetts.

The Walk for Hunger is held on the first Sunday in May every year. The 20-mile Walk route weaves through Boston, Brookline, Newton, and Cambridge.

About Project Bread

As the state’s leading antihunger organization, Project Bread is dedicated to alleviating, preventing, and ultimately ending hunger in Massachusetts. In addition to organizing the annual Walk for Hunger and supporting emergency food programs statewide, Project Bread also advocates systematic solutions that prevent hunger in children and that provide food to families in everyday settings.

About Civitron

As the premier real-life superhero/costumed activist in Massachusetts, Civitron endeavors to battle hunger and poverty, while protecting the world from imagination gentrification. His mission represents a reclamation of the creative spirit and true self-expression. He works with an amazing team of heroes, dedicated to making the world a better place through community outreach, fundraising and inspirational events. In the spring, Civitron and friends will begin work on a new series of ongoing events and workshops designed to spark creativity and empower your superhero potential!

For more information about hunger in Massachusetts and how you can help, please visit www.projectbread.org/goto/civitron

Much of this article was provided for my Personal Walk Page by the lovely and talented people at Project Bread’s Walk for Hunger. We love them and all that they do. Thanks! Visit them at www.projectbread.org or follow them on Twitter at www.twitter.com/walkforhunger. If you have any difficulty accessing any links on this blog, please contact me directly at civitronx@gmail.com

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