People of faith, actions of justice: Puente’s faith-based outreach takes flight

From the time of its founding in 1998 by Reverend Wendy Taylor, Puente has served as home for interns from a variety of denominations.

Abby Mohaupt landed at Puente in 2012 at the initiative of Rev. Rob Martin at First Presbyterian Church in Palo Alto. Martin secured temporary funding for two pastoral interns to come work for the church. The unusual part of the arrangement: they would also spend part of their week supporting a local nonprofit. Puente is one such nonprofit, and Mohaupt, who had just graduated from McCormick Theological Seminary in Chicago, got the job.

Mohaupt became Puente’s first Faith Community Liaison, which involves reaching out to churches, synagogues and other faith groups and involving them in Puente’s work. It turns out that, even though Puente is a secular organization, many congregations feel a kinship with its mission to serve migrant farm workers, underprivileged families, and youth.

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Abby’s outreach has resulted in new relationships with congregations as far afield as Clovis, where members of the United Japanese Christian Church recently came together to donate a whole minivan worth of sleeping bags, coasts, stocking stuffers, and other essentials this Christmas.

“It’s a congregation that’s full of immigrants. They could really relate to the immigrant experience and have had conversations around food and farming,” says Mohaupt.

A lasting bond

Puente seeks to leverage that kind of enthusiasm into long-term relationships with congregants themselves. Executive Director Kerry Lobel loves it when local congregants personally take the time to come and volunteer with Puente. It’s a somewhat new kind of relationship for Puente, and a welcome one.

“I don’t think we were really equipped before. We knew how to deal with “donated items,” but were not always able to sustain deep relationships with congregants,” says Lobel.  “To get people to be here, working with us shoulder to shoulder, is powerful..”

Staffing Puente’s Christmas Posada would not have been possible without the generous efforts of 45 faith-based volunteers, most of whom are members of First Presbyterian Church. Thanks to Mohaupt, Puente has reclaimed connections with 10 congregations throughout California. At least two more will start working with Puente this spring.

Puente has come full circle since it started out as Puente Ministry, an extension of Rev. Wendy Taylor’s work at Pescadero Community Church. That was 15 years ago. Rev. Taylor tied many local congregations to Puente’s mission. Mohaupt has pulled them back in.

“I love my job,” she says. “I get to talk with people about how their faith may call them to care about people who are farm workers, who are often poor, and who may not have access to healthy food. I get to connect people of faith to actions of justice.”

Real relationships

First Presbyterian Church of Palo Alto has been living those words for years; the church’s progressive values date back to its advocacy work with migrant farmers in the 1960s, according to Rev. Martin.

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The church has been close to Kerry Lobel and to Puente for five years. Rev. Martin has personally painted walls and cleaned rooms on behalf of Puente staff and clients. He and his congregants have done backpack drives, and purchased clothes and bicycles. They have raised money to offset winter electrical bills for Puente clients who can’t afford to pay. This Christmas, they made a large financial contribution for stockings and gifts.

“There are so many faith communities that simply write checks to organizations, but have no relationship to the groups they’re supporting,” says Rev. Martin. “We felt we needed to have a much deeper relational presence with Puente. It’s about having a deep and abiding relationship, not just with the organization, but with the people the organization is serving.”

 

To learn more about Puente faith-based outreach or to volunteer, contact Abby Mohaupt at amohaupt@mypuente.org or (650) 879-1691

Why I give to Puente: Pat Farquhar

Pat Farquhar grew up on a farm in Ohio. And even though her life is pretty different now – she lives in urban Foster City and works at Verizon – she’s never forgotten the place she left behind. More than a decade ago, learning about the lives of farm workers in Pescadero sparked a relationship with Puente that continues to this day.

“I know what hard, physical, repetitive work is like,” says Farquhar. “I don’t think people know what the physical tasks are that these people do.”

Farquhar has donated a fixed amount to Puente every year since before 2002, a portion of which is matched by Verizon, her employer. Other Puente donors have had the same idea over the years – Symantec, Genentech and other local companies also have employee matching gift programs that allow Puente to maximize each gift.

Executive Director Kerry Lobel says she’s grateful for every single donation. “We’re constantly trying to find ways to stretch the giving that we have,” she says.

Farquhar’s introduction to Puente came from founder Rev. Wendy Taylor, a former pastor at the Congregational Church of Belmont. Rev. Taylor took Farquhar and other congregants on her behind-the-scenes tours of farm worker encampments, barracks and trailers. These housing sites were well off the beaten path, and seeing them was deeply affecting.

“That was eye-opening,” reflects Farquhar. “I was totally unaware of it – the conditions that people were working and living in.”

She was also deeply influenced by Rev. Taylor’s recent memoir, “No Longer Strangers: The Practice of Radical Hospitality,” which provides an account of the early days of Puente Ministry.

Over time, Farquhar has watched Puente grow from a church-based effort to funnel lifesaving essentials to single migrant workers on the coast, to a community-based nonprofit focused on improving the lives of every resident.

“It’s pretty remarkable… If you look at a decision that one person like Wendy can make, and how it all unfolds,” says Farquhar.

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To donate to Puente, visit https://rally.org/puente. To learn more about how you can involve your employer in a matching gift program with Puente, contact Kerry Lobel at klobel@mypuente.org or (650) 879-1691 x 144. 

Call for volunteers!

Puente has openings for volunteers to work with Puente participants in two different education programs. Volunteering for either of these positions will earn you major karma points, and help empower local men and women to reach their scholastic dreams.

  • Spanish tutors for GED program

Puente seeks two Spanish-speaking tutors to mentor adult clients who are in the middle of earning their GED. One tutor should have some affinity for teaching science, the other for high school-level math. Both positions require a commitment of 2 hours per week.

  • Plaza Comunitaria tutors

Puente needs at least 4 volunteer tutors for Plaza Comunitaria, the Mexican government-sponsored program that helps adults earn their elementary or middle school certificates. Fluency in Spanish is a must.

  • Puente finance committee

Puente needs a volunteer to join Puente’s finance committee. The committee reviews and makes recommendations to the Board regarding internal aspects of programs, such as costs, projections, budgeting; program planning and its connection to the budgeting process; financial management and its connection to all internal functions; review of financial statements and audits.

To volunteer, please contact Abby Mohaupt at amohaupt@mypuente.org or (650) 879-1691 x 196.