News

9 May 2011

Thank you all!!

Everybody who served with us the last few days, thank you all!!
27 April 2011

Sign up for our next action days!

Next week we'll have new action days coming up. Please sign up with the buttons at the right side of this page.
14 April 2011

Thanks!

Our Helping Hands painting action was a success! Thans to all people who served. We still have to paint 3 more walls, which we try to do the 16th of April. If you are interested, you can sign up here.
24 March 2011

Helping Hands this weekend

This weekend (Friday and Saturday) you have a wonderful opportunity to make this city a bit more beautiful. We are painting a room from a house where someone in a wheelchair lives. It's a project of 2 weekends, so if you're not able this weekend, just look at the next one. Update: it's not finished yet, so keep on looking to this site (or sign in to get our emails).
9 March 2011

iCare – day 5 in review (Afternoon / Dutch)

A review of the afternoon of day five in dutch is posted here http://servethecityleuven.be/icare-dag-5-in-review-middag/
9 March 2011

iCare – day 5 in review (Morning)

Volunteer Breakfast
I arrive at ’55′ at about twenty to nine, twenty minutes before the time when the free breakfast for volunteers is supposed to begin. I find about 10 people abuzz in the pleasant, renovated room of the community center – some are preparing scrambled eggs, coffee, tea, etc. for the volunteers that will start pouring in in a few minutes, and others are having breakfast, before the volunteers arrive, as they will have to be serving others later and won’t have much time to eat. These 10 people are volunteers themselves.

“We thought we might as well eat now, while there’s still no one,” Geert-Jan explains to me. Geert-Jan is doing an internship with Serve the City Leuven. He is from the Netherlands and studies theology at the ETF, a seminary in Leuven. He’s been at ’55′ every day this week, welcoming the many volunteers that participate in Serve the City’s and I-Care’s numerous projects, giving out and collecting the green volunteer t-shirts.

“It is really pleasant to see people come back with a smile,” he says, referring to volunteers that come back to ’55′ to drop off their t-shirts after they’ve completed their projects. He’s not getting paid by Serve the City for what he’s doing. When I ask him why he chose to do this internship with Serve the City, he says he likes that Serve the City helps people to help people: “People appreciate it.”

Among the volunteers in the community center I also encounter Kristien, a Flemish girl who studied theology and now works at the University Parish (UP) (when she’s not busy with preparing breakfast for volunteers at 55). She tells me that she started work at the UP because she did not like the way the community houses were run, and she thought she could do something to change that – instead of just criticizing. At some point her boss at the UP told her that they should do something for the Week of the Volunteer. Serve the City was already doing a lot of things with volunteers in Leuven at that time, so the UP decided to partner with them. This led to the present cooperation: the I-Care campaign. (Did I understand this correctly?)

Anke is another one of the volunteers preparing breakfast. I ask her why she decided to volunteer.
“Serve the City is totally awesome! Why not?” is her reply.

Elien, who works as a nurse with old people, volunteered in a project at Fabota helping underprivileged children with their homework earlier this week. She find this to be a good initiative. She is here today to help with preparing and serving breakfast.

Liesbeth and Nele are also on the breakfast crew. They live at Leo XIII, where the Serve the City office is, and they say that everybody who was at Leo XIII last year learned about Serve the City. This year everybody at Leo XIII is doing some volunteer work, they tell me. “I volunteer regularly, and I like going and doing things for others,” Nele says.

Not every week
Since about nine o’clock, volunteers involved in other Serve the City projects have been trickling into the center and slowly filling the tables in the big room. I go to talk to some of them.

Audrey studies bioengineering and volunteered earlier this week (she did 2 hours of promotion for LOKO, the KULeuven student organization). She says that for her it’s important to discover what is out there beside studying and parties. “It’s nice to help people,” she adds. Her friend Belinda from the Netherlands also studies bioengineering in Leuven. She volunteered to wash wheelchairs a few days ago. She feels it’s nice to help people and takes part in other volunteer organizations. “What’s nice about Serve the City is that you do it once, and you don’t have to do it every week”, she says. Audrey adds: “We do not have that much time. Otherwise we could do something every week.” Hanna from Poland, whom I meet later, also thinks that the possibility to serve a bit at a time is something great about Serve the City. She says there’s nothing like this in Poland. “I know many people who want to help, but don’t want to devote their whole lives to it. I think it’s really nice for international students. After two months of partying, you want to do something constructive,” she adds. Ellen (from Antwerp) and Gaelle (from Wallonia), biology students at the KUL, volunteered to work at the university greenhouse this week. The project was supposed to take 6 hours, but they called some friends, and they finished almost all the work in one-two hours. As Audrey and Hanna, they also tell me that they like voluntary work, but cannot engage every week, because they have other things to do.

Vanya, who’s having breakfast at the same table, studies biomedical science. She cleaned a kitchen at the faculty of social sciences earlier in the week. Why? “Because it’s fun. I have some free time, and I want to do something useful.”

STC Beginnings
In the meantime, Anton has come in, so I go and chat with him. Anton is one of the people involved part-time and year round in planning and organizing Serve the City Leuven, a key figure in the organization. I ask him what I ask many of the volunteers I talk to this morning: “How did you hear about Serve the City?” The answer to this question wins me some insight into Serve the City’s history in this town. Anton first laughs, then jokes, and then tells me about Horace (another key figure for Serve the City Leuven). In May/June 2008 Horace wanted to do Serve the City once in Leuven. He’d recently come back from the US. “I never thought it would work. I thought, this is Belgium, not the US, and that not enough people would show up. I did not tell Horace, in order not to discourage him, but I thought ‘You do your own mistakes’,” Anton tells me. So he was not involved in the organization of the first Serve the City in Leuven. “But I was wrong,” he continues. 50 people showed up, and people thought, we should do this again! This week about 81 volunteers took part in the Serve the City projects alone (not counting the UP projects).

Before I leave 55 to go to the Roerhuis to check out how the volunteers are doing there, I sit down to have breakfast myself. On the table next to me is a group of five students from the Check Republic, Italy, and Slovakia, which are having breakfast before heading to their project.

The Roerhuis
My next stop is on the Brusselsestraat, about five minutes’ worth of cycling from 55: the Roerhuis. Patricia, a lady who’s been working at the Roerhuis since it’s establishment 20 years ago,tells me that it is a place where about 40 handicapped people receive help. 30 of these live there, and 10 come for daily activities. Daniel (MA in water resources at the KUL, from Bolivia) and Jochem (another theology student, from the Netherlands), the Serve the City volunteers, are painting the recreation room of the Roerhuis and talking about Jesus. Daniel has served on about 5 other projects this week. Why? “I like Leuven very much. I felt bad to see so many empty spots (on the sign-up sheets). Some projects were even cancelled because there were no volunteers,” he explains. “I think that volunteering should be made mandatory,” he adds, “Of course it would no longer be volunteering…” Jochem has many reasons to serve. Among other things, he says it’s nice serving because one gets to meet new people. Some of his friends are also taking part in Serve the City, but he opted for a project with someone he did not know. “Many of the people who take part are quite open and goodhearted and have the ability to look beyond their own needs,” he says. “What I like about this project is that they treat us like kings. We are here to serve them, but sometimes…” And as if to confirm his words, a girl from the Roerhuis comes to invite him and Daniel to lunch. Soep & broodjes. Sounds good, and seems like a good time for me to leave them and head towards more mundane tasks after this invigorating and rare (at least for me) dive in the world of Serve the City.

Petar

2 March 2011

iCare – day 2 in review

Serve The City has it’s hectic days, and it’s calmer days. Today was one of those relativly calmer days, giving organisor Anton a moment to breathe, because tomorrow he will face a whirlwind of volounteers running through the office, eager to serve where they can.

The morning went by peacefully at the epic centre of Serve The City (aka the office). T-shirts were washed and dried, copies were made, but most of all: crazy new idea’s were born to meet the needs of this town. As a lovely Chinese volounteer put it: “The biggest need of this city? Sunlight!” Who can disagree with that? As a sollucion we thought of a room at the office with a lot of warm, artificial sunlight, an ultra soft sand-coloured carpet, sea-sounds and beach chairs, so people can come and relax, enjoying the one place in Leuven that would always sunny. Ah, the STC office… place were brilliant ideas are born!

In the afternoon, two cheerful boys went down Ridderstraat,where many low-income families live, to reach out to them. They put flyers in the mailbox of each house, informing the families that STC wants to help them. Michiel: “I chose this project because it fit right into my shedule. I also felt like doing something outside, so I subscribed together with my friend Christof. It was a lot of fun! Only were we done much earlier then planned, because we were quickly out of flyers.”

Another brave flyerer was Doreen, who handed out flyers for Oikonde, an organisation that helps to integrate handicapped people into society. You may know them from their student houses where people with a handicap share a house with students.

My day ended in a nice and surprising way. I payed a visit to Fabotta, a place where children of the Ridderbuurt can come after school. Maureen (resp. of Fabota): “We work with children who start out in life not having the same chances as other kids because of the fiancial background of their families. Education is one of the ways they can get an equal chance in life. So we organise a homework class, where volounteers come by to help with their homework. The kids come by after school, and it’s pretty great! I’m happy with our homework project. The only thing I regret is that our volounteers change a lot. These children have little continuity in their life: for example, some of them move a lot or change schools. So it would be nice if they could have some stability here and build a relationship with the volounteers. Speaking of which, we’re always looking for new ones…

I’m inmediatly interested! As I sit down to interview STC volounteer Bob, who loves to work with children, I automatically start helping a little boy who having a problem with his math homework. It’s so lovely! The child is very sweet and it’s a thrill when he finally understands his assignment. I feel proud and happy! Bob and I end up talking to Maureen to come on a weekly basis, we would love to be part of this nice, loving place where children can be helped and loved.

Okay everyone, that’s it for the 1st of march, stay tuned for more stories from different reporters, and don’t forget to check the awesome pics on the website!

Freya

1 March 2011

Icare – day 1 in review (Dutch)

A review of day one in dutch is posted here: http://servethecityleuven.be/icare-dag-1-in-review/
31 January 2011

ICare is coming up

ICare is a a big action period we organize together with Universiteit Plus, the university and KHL. You'll find more soon on this page.
26 January 2011

Serve, help and fix

Brigette, one of our volunteers, showed us some time ago a great article about the difference between "serve", "help" and "fix". You'll find it at the article section of this site.