Empty bowls full of dreams for Widener students

Empty bowls full of dreams for Widener students

CHESTER - It's a dirty job, but volunteers at Widener University were happy to do it.



More than 150 participants came out on Martin Luther King Jr. Day to get their hands covered in clay and create handmade bowls to benefit relief efforts in Haiti.



"This is quite a new experience for me," said Widener junior Alison Whartenby, after she coaxed her slab of clay out of a mold and began decorating it. "But it's going towards Haiti and that's really important, especially now. I wanted to do something to help."



Widener partnered with the Community Arts Center, based in the Wallingford section of Nether Providence, to make and sell handmade bowls for the Empty Bowls Project, an international effort to end hunger.



Community Arts Center instructors showed volunteers of every age how to roll out and shape bowls out of clay, and even gave demonstrations on an electric potter's wheel.



The bowls will be glazed and fired at the center, then brought back to Widener for a luncheon and sale on Feb. 18. The bowls - filled with hot soup donated by Aramark Food Services - will be sold for a $10 donation toward a to-be-determined Haiti relief organization.



"If Martin Luther King were alive today, he'd be focusing his attention on those in need and the issue of hunger," said Widener President James T. Harris III, who also came to try his hand at making bowls. "It's inspiring to see my students, faculty and colleagues come out for a project that will directly address the issue of poverty."



But the project had other benefits. Organizers said it was about bringing people from across the community together, to get out of their comfort zones and create a little art.



"It gives a lot of people, who might not be familiar with clay, a time to create," said Bob Deane, a teacher at the Community Arts Center. "Everybody is an equal here. Almost nobody who has volunteered today has done clay before, so your age or your profession, that's all moot."



The Empty Bowls Project will be followed up by Widener's annual celebration of King's life tonight, hosted by the Black Student Union. The event will include performances by the Widener and Chester High School gospel choirs, the PRAISE dance group and a variety of spoken word and dance performances.



The commemorative service will be held at 7 tonight, at the Widener University Alumni Auditorium, East 14th Street, Chester.



The bowls will be available for sale at a luncheon held from noon-2 p.m. Feb. 18, at Widener's Lathem Hall, 13th and Potter streets, Chester.



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January 19, 2010


 
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