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Easter joy: Area kids fill baskets with eggs at Accord Care egg hunt
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In 1934, a young John Bedzyk heard about a Wesleyan Camp meeting in Chambers, New York. Here s what he did, according to a newspaper article:
“At twelve years of age, he and a large group of Ukrainian children piled into and onto a 1926 Essex. John rode straddling a headlight. They were hungry for God. Every one of this group of young people was saved that day” (Herald Examiner, April 1991).
And so began a life in ministry that included being the longtime pastor of one of Elmira s most prominent churches.
John Bedzyk was the son of Michael and Anna Bedzyk. Michael, a Ukrainian immigrant, had come from Zahutyn province in Poland around 1910 at age 16. In 1914, he took a job at the former Eclipse Machine Co. in Elmira Heights, where he met and married Anna Moskal. They settled in the Ukrainian community.
(Image: Twitter/Kristen L. Pope)
Most recently elected as a 2020 top “Forty Under 40” alumna of her alma mater, and a Top 50 Most Influential Businessperson of Color in the Boston suburbs, Kristen L. Pope is a multi-hyphenate visionary. She is a founder, speaker, award-winning TV journalist, and a multimedia strategist.
Kristen manages social media at Harvard University in the Division of Continuing Education. Separately, she runs her own digital content production company, Pope Productions Inc.
Pope Productions Inc. produces culture-shaping digital social content for clients like Wellesley College and Pentecostal Tabernacle. Through her company, Kristen created and produced two seasons of the variety talk show, “The Positive Controversy with Kristen Pope,” to amplify voices not often heard in the media.
CCF awards grants to Cambridge food pantries
Community Content
The Cambridge Community Foundation recently announced that it is awarding $40,000 in grants to 11 neighborhood food pantries and programs.
These are the first in a series of grants planned by the foundation to quickly distribute donated funds back into the community to help nonprofits address emergency issues including food insecurity, housing insecurity and shelter for the homeless, cash for urgent needs, access to connectivity and emergency child care.
The new grants, ranging in this round from $2,000 to $5,000, are administered from the Cambridge COVID-19 Emergency Fund. Over the past few weeks, donors across the city have given to the foundation’s second campaign for the Cambridge COVID-19 Emergency Fund, which is focused on helping neighbors during the 2020 winter.
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