exclamation

Important notice: To continue serving our valued readers during the postal disruption, complete unrestricted access to the digital edition is available at no extra cost. This will ensure uninterrupted digital access to your copies. Click here to view the digital edition, or learn more.

One Challenge foundress Mildred Moy, left, with street missionaries Fredrickson and Fehintola Okunubi. Teresa Do (not pictured) has also joined the full-time initiative. Photo by Agnieszka Ruck

Vancouver women put careers, school on hold to serve the poor for a year

By  AGNIESZKA RUCK, Canadian Catholic News
  • January 15, 2019

VANCOUVER – Three Vancouver women have left career and school behind to serve the homeless.

This fall, the trio pledged to devote one year to full-time street outreach, prayer and faith formation and have so far found it life-changing.

“I’m the happiest I’ve ever been,” said Nicole Fredrickson, a member of Catholic Street Missionaries. In November, she and two others embarked on CSM’s One Challenge — the challenge of spending one year in full-time missionary work in Vancouver’s poorest neighbourhoods.

Fredrickson was raised Catholic but abandoned her faith in her early 20s to dabble in other religions. By the age of 23, she was unsure what to believe and ensnared in an abusive relationship.

“It left me very broken.” After two years, she managed to leave the relationship only to enter another season of despair at the death of a close friend.

“What stood out for me most was his love for the homeless and his wanting to help people on the streets,” said Fredrickson, a University of British Columbia graduate who worked as an ESL teacher and manager. “It was painful to hear of his passing,” but the death also triggered something in her.

Her priorities, previously focused on making as much money as she could, were starting to shift. “I wanted to give up worldly endeavours.”

So, when a friend introduced her to St. Mary’s Parish, which has been running an active street ministry for 14 years, she joined and started volunteering with CSM once a week.

“Homeless outreach helped to heal me,” she said. “Instead of focusing on my own problems, I was working with people who were in much worse condition than I had been in.”

When One Challenge launched this fall, it was a natural next step. Until next winter, Fredrickson will spend every day on the streets, giving away cookies and juice, warm clothing and other items to the less fortunate. If they are open to it, she’ll chat and pray with them, too.

One Challenge is a pilot project of CSM, which, foundress Mildred Moy says, if successful, may become an annual effort. The missionaries spend 18 hours per week reaching out to the poor on the streets and another 18 hours per week in prayer and silent contemplation.

The program also includes faith formation activities, including talks by various priests, spiritual reading and attending Bible studies. Fredrickson said she always spends one hour in silent prayer before going out to the streets.

Fellow missionary Fehintola Okunubi joined One Challenge as a break between post-secondary studies and a career. A recent health sciences graduate, Okunubi was deciding what to do with her degree when Moy’s new initiative fell into her lap.

“I’m trying to figure out my plan in life and it was the perfect gap year thing,” she said. The timing fell into place and she “felt like I was called to do it.”

One Challenge relies on donations, financial and physical, to serve the poor. During the winter, the group has been giving away socks, coats and sleeping bags, all donated by supporters. Lately, members have been giving away Comfort Coats — coats that can convert to sleeping bags, invented and sewn by the Helpers of Sts. Joachim and Anne in South Surrey.

“We have candies and we give them to people, but the candies are not what we are giving,” said Okunubi. Smarties and Comfort Coats are only an opportunity to start a conversation, build a relationship and open possibilities of adding a bit of hope in someone’s life.

“We don’t force our faith down their throats,” she said. Sometimes, upon hearing that they are a Catholic group, a homeless person will take the candy or other items and walk away. But others are attracted by the small group of volunteers.

One couple said, “We just had something really traumatic happen to us, so you are an answer to our prayers,” said Okunubi. “One day, there was a guy telling us: ‘Yes, God is love!’ No day is the same.”

Fredrickson, Okunubi and third missionary Teresa Do hosted a large group of supporters at a dinner and fundraiser for One Challenge Dec. 6. Their many fans include the charitable organizations Covenant House, Luke 15 House, Madonna House, the Helpers of Sts. Joachim and Anne, as well as many priests and Vancouver parishioners.

“Everything I do, I do what I think God wants me to do,” said Moy, who came up with One Challenge during a silent retreat. “I don’t have a long-term plan. Everything is God doing it. So next year, I don’t know if there’s a One Challenge. We’ll see what God says.”

CSM is a branch of St. Mary’s Street Ministry, which was founded 14 years ago to serve prostituted women and has since expanded to reach the homeless, poor and addicted. More information about CSM is available at catholicstreetmissionaries.org.

(The B.C. Catholic)

Please support The Catholic Register

Unlike many media companies, The Catholic Register has never charged readers for access to the news and information on our website. We want to keep our award-winning journalism as widely available as possible. But we need your help.

For more than 125 years, The Register has been a trusted source of faith-based journalism. By making even a small donation you help ensure our future as an important voice in the Catholic Church. If you support the mission of Catholic journalism, please donate today. Thank you.

DONATE