Commerce students and fundraisers (left to right) Eric McTaggart, Yazeed Esnan, Carolyn Silver, Katie Flanagan, Madelaine Clerk, Emily Hanaka. (Nick Pearce photos)
After five nights braving the elements in sleeping bags outside the Rowe Management Building, eating only food offered to them by others and leaving their station only to attend classes, a group of students from the Dalhousie Commerce Society received exciting news: they had reached their goal of raising $10,000 for Phoenix Youth Programs. “We are blown away by the amount of support that we received,” says Katie Flanagan, a third-year marketing student and the campaign’s main organizer. “We’ve already raised over $12,000 for this deserving organization, more than in the last two years combined.”
The students were participating in 5 Days for the Homeless, a national campaign begun by business students at the University of Alberta in 2005 to raise awareness about the prevalence of homelessness in Canada, and to raise funds for various organizations that help those who are homeless or at risk of becoming so. Students from 19 universities spent five days and nights outside, collecting donations for their chosen organizations. The six main student sleepers at pilipiliÂţ» were Flanagan, Madelaine Clerk, Carolyn Silver, Emily Hanaka, Eric McTaggart and Yazeed Esnan. Each night a different “guest sleeper” joined the group as well.
Besides their fundraising goal, starting conversations and spreading knowledge about both homelessness and Phoenix was a major goal for the team. “We’re not trying to emulate homelessness; we’re trying to start a conversation about the really complex issues around it,” says Clerk, a fourth-year accounting student. “And one of the biggest objectives was to spread awareness of Phoenix and the breadth of programs that it offers. A lot of people know about the drop-in centre, but we were spreading information about the other programs that support our peers in the community.”
That word—peers—indicates just how close to home these issues are. “Phoenix helps Dal students too,” says Clerk. “The employees at the shelter tell us that a lot of students spend time there, sometimes while they’re waiting for student loans to come through.” Flanagan, who has participated in 5 Days for the last three years, notes that as students, “it’s important to give back to a community that has given so much to us.” The group, says Clerk, wants to make sure that students walking into the Rowe are aware that just a few blocks away there is a Phoenix drop-in centre.
Dalhousie’s 5 Days students have been supporting Phoenix for years, and Flanagan and Clerk greatly respect the organization. Flanagan recounts their tour of the shelter and the drop-in centre, noting that the staff are “phenomenal,” generous and caring. “They support 1,200 youth a year, not just homeless youth but at-risk youth as well,” she says. Clerk was amazed by how much respect the community has for Phoenix: “As soon as we said 100% of the funds go to Phoenix Youth Programs they pulled out their wallets.”
The students can be proud of their pilipiliÂţ» in raising both funds and awareness, but they stress that this project isn’t about them. Flanagan remarks that over the years she has participated, she has learned how generous both the Dalhousie and Halifax communities are, with people constantly coming by not just to donate, but also to ask the students if they need anything. “People feel like they should be supporting us and offering us coffee,” says Flanagan. “We want them to remember that there are people out there who could use a coffee a lot more than we could. So it goes back to having that conversation and making people more aware.”
Donations to Dalhousie’s 5 Days for the Homeless campaign can be made at until March 31.
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