Featured Stories

Ontario Latter-day Saints and Muslims Serve Together by Packaging Food

Joint food packaging activity in Oshawa, Ontario, Canada, helps #LightTheWorld

Ontario-interfaith-service-1
Ontario-interfaith-service-1
Members of the Oshawa Ward in Oshawa, Ontario, work alongside their Muslim neighbors to package food for those in need in their area on November 26, 2022. Photo courtesy of Lisa Whitsitt, courtesy of Church News.All rights reserved.

 
This story appears here courtesy of
TheChurchNews.com. It is not for use by other media.


By Mary Richards, Church News


Members of the Oshawa Ward in the Oshawa Ontario Stake of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints worked side by side with their Muslim neighbors to package food for those in need in their community.

More than 120 volunteers of all ages filled the Oshawa Ontario Stake Center on November 26 for the Light the World “United Hearts and Hands” activity. Working in two shifts for a couple hours at a time, they packaged 8,100 pounds of food.

“It was a huge success,” said Stake Communications Director Lisa Whitsitt. “Everyone who came and volunteered loved it.”

Ontario-interfaith-service-2
Ontario-interfaith-service-2
Latter-day Saints in the Oshawa Ward work with members of the Masjid-e-Ayesha mosque and the Durham chapter of the Islamic Circle of North America to package food together in Oshawa, Ontario, November 26, 2022. Photo courtesy of Lisa Whitsitt, courtesy of Church News.All rights reserved.

 
A Church humanitarian grant allowed the purchase of supplies from GlobalMedic in Toronto, and the completed boxes of food were donated to Feed the Need in Durham, which services more than 70 food banks in the region.

Missionaries and members of the Oshawa Ward attended, along with Muslim volunteers from Masjid-e-Ayesha in Whitby and the Durham chapter of the Islamic Circle of North America.

Whitsitt said the volunteers were pleased to help those in need in their own community, in addition to serving with their neighbors.

“The goal was to interact with one another and to work together on this project,” she said. Members of the Oshawa Ward began growing their relationship with the Muslim community a few months prior, when the bishop’s wife was invited by a friend to an open house at the local mosque. Whitsitt went with her and met some of the leaders.

Ontario-interfaith-service-3
Ontario-interfaith-service-3
Youth in Oshawa, Ontario, package meals from GlobalMedic to donate to Feed the Need in Durham at a Light the World event, November 26, 2022. Photo courtesy of Lisa Whitsitt, courtesy of Church News.All rights reserved.

 
They talked about doing a service activity together, and came up with the idea to package and donate food.

“We called this event ‘United Hands and Hearts’ because that was one of our goals, to spread a little kindness and light throughout our community by uniting together,” Whitsitt said. “This united effort was a wonderful way to ‘Light the World.’”

Ontario requires high school students to complete a certain number of community service hours before they graduate. The activity offered one way for teenagers to get those hours. But beyond just showing up, Whitsitt said the youth volunteers “were super hard workers and really loved it. They were very engaged and very busy.”

Ontario-interfaith-service-4
Ontario-interfaith-service-4
Members of the Masjid-e-Ayesha mosque and the Durham chapter of the Islamic Circle of North America package food with members of the Oshawa Ward at the Oshawa Ontario Stake Center, November 26, 2022. Photo courtesy of Lisa Whitsitt, courtesy of Church News.All rights reserved.

 
In the weeks before the activity, ward leaders ordered the Church booklets titled, “Muslims and Latter-day Saints: Beliefs, Values, and Lifestyles,” to hand out to both faith groups.

The Durham Region newspaper covered the event, quoting volunteer Khudsiya Quadri, who was there with her family.

“It’s very important for us to show our kids that we are part of this community, and we will be always here for each other,” she said. “It doesn’t matter which religion we are, we are neighbors, and we are supposed to help each other, in sickness, in health, in happy times and sad times.”

Ontario-interfaith-service-5
Ontario-interfaith-service-5
Missionaries for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and members of the Muslim community work together to package food in Oshawa, Ontario, November 26, 2022. Photo courtesy of Lisa Whitsitt, courtesy of Church News.All rights reserved.

 
Copyright 2022 Deseret News Publishing Company.

Style Guide Note:When reporting about The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, please use the complete name of the Church in the first reference. For more information on the use of the name of the Church, go to our online Style Guide.