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Asian churches take Thanksgiving to Charlotte refugees
Mike Creswell, BSC Communications
December 17, 2013
3 MIN READ TIME

Asian churches take Thanksgiving to Charlotte refugees

Asian churches take Thanksgiving to Charlotte refugees
Mike Creswell, BSC Communications
December 17, 2013

Fourteen Asian Baptist churches teamed up to deliver 500 meals to Asian refugees in an apartment complex near downtown Charlotte on Nov. 23 in a pre-Thanksgiving blitz to both provide food and get acquainted with the newcomers.

Ralph Garay, Asian church planting consultant with the Baptist State Convention of North Carolina, helped organize the project, with help from the participating pastors. Metrolina Baptist Association also gave support; Bob Lowman, director of missions, took part.

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BSC photo by Mike Creswell

Members of 14 Asian Baptist churches distribute meals Nov. 23 to Asian refugees near downtown Charlotte.

Lunchboxes including baked chicken, noodles and bread were prepared at West Cabarrus Baptist Church in Concord, then delivered by church teams in trucks, vans and cars to the apartment complex located just east of downtown Charlotte within sight of the city skyline.

Scores of Asian children played on the apartment grounds and on one porch an elderly woman stirred a pot of rice. Women carried babies on their backs with cloth wraps. Garay said most Asians living here are from Nepal, Bhutan, Vietnam and a handful of other countries.

Volunteers went door to door to offer food, which was readily received. As word spread about the arrival of food, residents gathered around vehicles where Baptists handed out the lunchboxes and bottles of water.

One girl grabbed a box and immediately started eating.

Garay said most Asian immigrants struggle with learning English, dealing with the culture and getting work to sustain themselves. Many struggle financially at first. “That’s why giving out food is helpful,” he said.

Garay, his wife and two boys came from the Philippines to the United States years ago. Garay was a pastor in California before working with the Baptist State Convention to start new Asian churches. He currently works with some 60 Asian language groups/nationalities in planting new churches.

“Take time to visit with folks and get to know them. Share the gospel if the opportunity presents itself,” Garay told the pastors and lay members who participated.

Lowman visited with Baptist layman Paul Subba, who is from Bhutan but came to the United States after spending time in Nepal, including time in a refugee camp. Subba is an active member of a Charlotte Nepali church.

They drank Nepali tea, which includes spices, salt, pepper and butter along with the tea. The two men discussed the differences in the mountains of Bhutan and Nepal, the world’s highest, with the more gentle, forested ones of western North Carolina.

Metrolina Association workers have counted 180 language/people groups in the Charlotte area, Lowman said, but estimate a more accurate figure would be between 200 and 250. “We’re still finding new ones,” he said.

It’s doubtful many of these immigrants have grasped the idea of Thanksgiving as celebrated by Americans. But as newcomers adapting to a strange land and thankfully enjoying an unexpected meal, the day surely captured the essence of that first celebration back in 1621.