Food helps abused women start healing at Kitchener's Anselma House
Shelter ‘couldn’t feed our women and kids’ without The Food Bank of Waterloo Region
A mom sits down at a brown table with her two children and she smiles at them as they begin to eat a snack.
It's a scene that could happen in any home in Waterloo region — but at this particular moment, it's happening at Anselma House in Kitchener, an emergency shelter for women escaping violent or abusive partners.
Much of the shelter's food comes from The Food Bank of Waterloo Region.
"We couldn't feed our women and kids without them. Not at all," Merle Fast, manager with Women's Crisis Services, said as she gave CBC K-W a tour of the facility.
"It's not just pork and beans and mac and cheese, it's fresh things," Fast was quick to note. She has seen orange juice, strawberries, corn on the cob and milk — many items that are expensive and difficult to afford on the shelter's limited budget.
More than 384,000 meals
The shelter provides three meals a day for the women and children. The women make their own breakfast and lunch with the items they find in the kitchen and then a hot dinner is cooked in the shelter's commercial kitchen.
That's three meals a day, every day of the year.
More than 384,000 meals were served in facilities like Anselma House across the region last year. The number includes food for community meal programs and shelter and residential programs, said Wendi Campbell, executive director of The Food Bank of Waterloo Region.
"If we added the community meal numbers and the food hamper numbers, just sort of imagine the amount of food that is required to ensure that our community is fed and is staying healthy."
Kitchen is 'where life happens'
Fast said she remembers one woman who came to the shelter and offered to make a meal from her home country for everyone.
You see moms and kids being able to sit together and eat as a little family.- Merle Fast, Anselma House
Another woman at first was hesitant to make anything herself. Over time, the staff learned she knew how to cook, but the partner she had left would always yell at her for not cooking things correctly, so she was hesitant to do anything in the kitchen.
Once she realized she could cook without fear, she was a regular in the kitchen.
The dining room has tables that can be rearranged based on how intimate you want your meals to be, and the women will eat together. Sometimes they bake cookies and share them.
"When I think of my kitchen, that's kind of where life happens. The family does its thing in the kitchen and dining room and that's the very same thing in a shelter," Fast said.
Eat as a family
As they connect with other women and children in the shelter, they realize they're not alone.
"They say, 'Man, somebody really cares about us.' That's one of the goose-bumpy ones for me," she said.
Fast said kids can go to school with good lunches and people don't have to worry if they'll have food on the table the next day.
"You see moms and kids being able to sit together and eat as a little family."
As the women get back on their feet and move out of the shelter, the food bank continues to be there for them, Campbell said, to help them in times of transition "while they're getting jobs, while they're getting improved incomes to be able to meet their own needs and to feed their families."
She said low income continues to be one of the root causes of food insecurity.
For Fast, she knows the food they're able to provide goes a long way to begin the healing for the women and children who turn to the shelter.
"Food speaks to something deep in people," she said, adding the women are safe in knowing, "Okay, I've got good food and a good place. Yeah, that's good."