Sunday, August 21, 2011

Dan Corcoran House Grand Re-Opening!


  With great joy and excitement the Winona Catholic Worker is humbled to announce the reopening of Dan Corcoran House to provide hospitality to single women and families.  After over two years of sitting vacant due to a lack of live-in volunteers we have finally secured commitments from enough volunteers to fully run both houses of hospitality.  It's been a long journey of ups and downs, but after going through a stringent discernment process with seven potential volunteers we have invited and received commitments from three new volunteers. Matthew, a teacher from Minneapolis will be joining us in mid August, and James from North Carolina and Molly from Chicago joined us in July. We plan on giving our new volunteers time to settle into life in Winona and our community, and reopening Dan Corcoran house by mid September.
  Our community is growing, and with its growth we will face new challenges inward and outward. The division of resources between two houses has the potential to bring entirely new rigors to daily communal life. We are glad that our community has grown into its most stable point in years, and we're confident in our ability to meet these new challenges.
With more volunteers in the community, we will have a greater ability to focus some of our energies on other Catholic Worker ideals beyond offering hospitality. Resistance work and further community activism will have a greater opportunity to become a regular staple of our community.
  Now more than ever, support from the wider community is essential. We will continue to conserve our resources, (financial and environmental) but our expenses are going to rise as we fully open Dan Corcoran house. If you've contributed to us in the past we would like to thank you and encourage your continued support. Just as important as financial, we would like to thank all those who have helped us around the houses, from those who cook for us monthly, to those who help us keep the lights on and taxes paid, we would not be able to continue our mission without you.
  In our works of hospitality, we are humbled to play a role in bettering countless lives. From those who stay with us for weeks, to those who stop in for dinner are coming for something. Sometimes that something is just a meal or a warm place to sleep, but most often it's for the camaraderie and companionship that we are able to offer with your help. We couldn't continue without your support and prayers.

Saturday, August 20, 2011

Dan Corcoran House Needs



 As we move to re-open the Dan Corcoran House to provide hospitality for families, we are in need of some gently used home furnishings.   
   • 4 twin Mattresses
   • 2 twin box springs
   • Full size bed frame
   • Headboards - twin and full
   • Loveseat
   • Easy chairs
   • Box fans, window fans
   • Ceiling fans
   • Pac N’ Play 
   • Backyard playset or lumber/labor to build one

Also, basic kitchen staples such as vegetable oil, butter, flour, sugar, as well as pantry items such as; cereals, soups,canned vegetables, pastas and pasta sauce,  would be a great help as we open the house for women and families once again.

If you might able to help us with any of these items, please give us a call at 454-8094 or 457-3451.
Thank You!

Friday, August 19, 2011

Mark Your Calendars for October, 22nd!



Barn Dance and FUNraiser!
Saturday, October 22nd 
Central United Methodist gymnasium
7:00pm All Ages family dance
9:00 reels and squares  
 We’re hosting a Barn Dance to celebrate the re-opening of the Dan Corcoran House, and raise funds for some house projects. 
Our big expense this year was a new furnace at Bethany House, as well as many other repair jobs completed this summer. These expenses have left us low on funds as we enter the winter heating season for our two large homes
 Join us for a night of dancing, and fun! Don’t worry if you don’t know how - It’s family friendly and easy to learn!
ALL dances will be taught 
no experience necessary!

WORK WEEK!


Bethany House and Dan Corcoran House both got some much needed repairs in July. Projects like repairing the front porch, a new shower stall, replacing countertop, deep cleaning, landscaping and harvesting garlic all got accomplished. St. Mary’s Parish donated 100 hours of service as part of their Centennial Celebration. Many thanks to the St. Mary’s crew and everyone who helped out.
all photos by Laurie Watson




Becky - A Force in Our World


  When Becky Lambert transferred to St. Mary's University, she likely had no idea that Winona would become her home for the next eight years.  As a student she was a regular presence around the Catholic Worker, often taking house shifts during evening meetings and building solid relationships with both live-in community members and guests.  As she approached the final months of her senior year, she began the discernment process to become a live-in volunteer herself.  By the time she moved in she probably had a better idea of which cupboards to put the dishes in than some of us who were currently living at the house.  Over the course of the last four years Becky has been a part of all of the changes and adventures, big and small, that have brought the Catholic Worker to where it is today. 
  Though we have had quite some time to get to know her, there are many things about Becky that remain a mystery, largely because she is not one to speak about or display her feelings.  When it comes to  intellectual conversation, however, she is rarely without response.  She is a reader, a learner, and a listener.  These skills and interests provided for many superb book recommendations, insightful breakfast conversations, and a healthy amount of outrage at the latest news story on the wire.  Her degree in political science shown despite her anarchist philosophy.  Rarely have I encountered such a staunch believer in non-government who understood the inner workings of the beast to the extent that she does. 
  When Becky is not reading, most likely, she is working.  She has a sincere love for getting dirt under her fingernails.  Her long time employment in Winona was on a vineyard just outside of town.  She also gardened, bonded with the backyard chickens,  singlehandedly remortared the Bethany House basement, and took on various other less desirable projects around the houses.  She has always been eager to learn a new skill and put it into practice, for which we are eternally grateful!   
  Unlike many of the live-in volunteers at the Catholic Worker, Becky spent time living at both of the houses (and in the process, in nearly every volunteer bedroom) and came to truly see the unique differences and similarities that exist in the hospitality that is offered on our block of Broadway.  She spent over a year sharing the Dan Corcoran House with single women and families and more than a couple years living with single men at Bethany House.  She has often spoken of the growth that the combined experience has inspired.  
  We are excited to see where life leads Becky as she moves on from Winona.  At this point she is living in Chicago and planning to join No More Deaths in their work on the border in southern Arizona.  After a visit earlier this summer she was compelled to make a committment of some kind to the unending work of providing water and first aid to those crossing the desert, which is now highly militarized due to national and regional immigration policies.   We honor and affirm her decision to pursue new and challenging experiences, but we will surely miss her.  Her presence has been a part of the houses for twice as long as she has lived within these walls, it will take some time to fill in the gaps that she leaves in the fabric of this community. 
  Thank you Becky, you have blessed us with your light and we send ours out to you!