Close X
Friday, November 22, 2024
ADVT 
Life

Teen baker sweetens lives making desserts for those in need

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 20 May, 2021 10:17 AM
  • Teen baker sweetens lives making desserts for those in need

Vedika Jawa’s mission to sweeten the lives of those in need began when she was just 13, on a family trip to San Francisco. She could not help but see the multitudes living on the streets.

She returned home to Fremont, California, determined to help. Reaching out to homeless shelters, she offered to bake sweet treats. Some managers ignored her; others told her to come back when she was older. But she persisted.

Jawa organized a neighborhood bake sale, collected ingredients in her school and contacted a shelter’s CEO, who eventually allowed her to bake for residents. That was the start of Bake4Sake , her student-run nonprofit that distributes desserts to those in need.

During the pandemic, the project expanded from a handful of friends who helped her bake in her hometown to more than 100 volunteers who now work with 15 homeless shelters in 10 locations across the United States.

“Even though these people get access to meals from food banks and shelters, they often don’t have access to desserts,” said Jawa, now a 16-year-old high school junior .

“We know that they’re going through a really difficult time at this moment. And so, we just want to add a little bit of joy in their lives and show them that they’re cared for and loved.”

At the onset of the pandemic, her work seemed to come to a halt. Some shelters could no longer take the baked goods because they needed to follow regulations to curb the spread of COVID-19.

But she didn’t let it stop her. Through the local food bank South Hayward Parish , she eventually was allowed to deliver the desserts. She also created an Instagram Bake4Sake account, hoping to find more volunteers.

“Instead of just getting responses from my classmates, I actually started getting responses from high schoolers in different states, in different cities," she said.

Now, she hopes that even more people will be encouraged to join her project and open their own chapters of Bake4Sake at a time when illness, job loss and business closures across America have caused a food insecurity crisis.

“So many people have lost their loved ones due to this pandemic. So many people have lost their jobs,” Jawa said. “We think that a simple act of kindness can go a long way for someone who is facing such a difficult time.”

“One Good Thing” is a series that highlights individuals whose actions provide glimmers of joy in hard times — stories of people who find a way to make a difference, no matter how small.

MORE Life ARTICLES

Smoke Alarms Save Lives

Smoke Alarms Save Lives
The risk of dying in reported home structure fires is 54% lower in homes with working smoke alarms than in homes with no alarms or none that worked

Smoke Alarms Save Lives

Groups unite to urge US to extend food aid to schoolchildren

Groups unite to urge US to extend food aid to schoolchildren
A high-profile coalition of educators, activists and philanthropists — including the American Federation of Teachers, the NAACP and the charity World Central Kitchen — is urging Congress to extend and expand emergency provisions that allow school districts nationwide to feed millions of children during the coronavirus pandemic.

Groups unite to urge US to extend food aid to schoolchildren

Women embrace #challengeaccepted, but some ask: To what end?

Women embrace #challengeaccepted, but some ask: To what end?
“Challenge accepted," they wrote — female Instagram users across the United States, flooding the photo-sharing app with black-and-white images.

Women embrace #challengeaccepted, but some ask: To what end?

Plush toys, jewelry, dance lessons - Broadway's side hustles

Plush toys, jewelry, dance lessons  -  Broadway's side hustles
Broadway seamstress Amy Micallef hasn't put her talent on hold while theatres are shut. She's been making plush toys — unusual plush toys.

Plush toys, jewelry, dance lessons - Broadway's side hustles

Can I get a job? Wife tries it all for nursing home reunion

Can I get a job? Wife tries it all for nursing home reunion
One hundred and 14 days. That’s how long Mary Daniel went without seeing her husband after the coronavirus banned visitors from his nursing home, separating the couple for the first time since he was diagnosed with early onset Alzheimer's seven years ago.

Can I get a job? Wife tries it all for nursing home reunion

VIRUS DIARY: Keeping New York alive, one song at a time

VIRUS DIARY: Keeping New York alive, one song at a time
Outside, the soundtrack of sirens wailed, each another death blow to the city that had nurtured my development as a musician for so long. But from inside my life on lockdown, an unexpected reconnection to my catalogue of sounds was handing me hope for New York's future.

VIRUS DIARY: Keeping New York alive, one song at a time