The Lighthouse Up Capital Campaign Video

Check out our Up Capital Campaign video!

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Thank you to Dale for sharing his story. We are so grateful for his help in the kitchen, he truly ‘pays-it-forward’ everyday at the Lighthouse.

 

 

If you would like to donate go to:

www.upsaskatoon.ca

Heads Up Fundraising Event this Wednesday!

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This Wednesday the Lighthouse is hosting a Heads Up Fundraising Event with C95, Magic 98.3, and the Bull 92.9 live on location. Tune in to hear stories of transformation, recovery, and hope from those we serve. Call and make a donation to help expand our services and renovate our supported living suites.

If you are in Saskatoon, come down for a tour to see for yourself why the Lighthouse is an important part of your community. We will be serving coffee and treats, and a chili meal over the lunch hour. Give a donation in person and join with us as we continue building people Up!

The Lighthouse Up Capital Campaign


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Dube family donates $1 million to Lighthouse shelter

 BY JONATHAN CHARLTON, THE STARPHOENIX MAY 31, 2013
Dube family donates $1 million to Lighthouse shelter

SASKATOON, SASK.: MAY 31, 2013 — Leslie and Irene Dube spoke after it was announced of they were the first to donate in the amount of $1 million dollars to the “UP” fundraising campaign in support of the Lighthousre support livingMay 31, 2013. (Gord Waldner/ The StarPhoenix)

Photograph by: Gord Waldner , The StarPhoenix

Carmen Schick has been living at the Lighthouse Supported Living shelter since last January.

Schick, 40, was in a motor vehicle accident in 2001 and had a tough time recovering.

“I was unable to care for myself, I was pretty banged up, and lots of emotional scars. I just couldn’t do it on my own, I was in and out of the psych ward and I was sick of it, something had to change,” she said.

She had been living in group homes but they weren’t working out. The Lighthose was a much better fit — in fact she’s now mentoring some of the other clients.

“Some independence but still with some support. For making sure your meds are all taken care of, and doctors appointments are booked. There’s help here if you just access it,” she said.

So Schick was shocked when she learned of the $1 million donation from Leslie and Irene Dube to the $4 million capital campaign for the facility.

“I haven’t been this happy in a long time. I’m even more happy now our rooms are getting done,” she said.

“This place has just been growing in leaps and bounds. It can only get better now.”

Dubes and Clients

Campaign organizers made the announcement at the Lighthouse on Friday. Leslie Dube said those more fortunate have a responsibility to help others.

“You can see when you walk around here what the clientele is like, it’s a very touching, emotional thing, to walk by without giving them a helping hand,” he said.He said the facility serves an important role in the community.

The Lighthouse provides emergency womens and mens shelters, as well as long term supportive housing and affordable housing. It also operates two transitional homes.

The capital campaign plans to expand and renovate the facility, including 68 individual rooms, an atrium, art room, gym and an education and employment centre.

“We don’t want people to have to live on the streets, we want everybody to live with dignity. I mean they have a right to it, their born with the same creation as we are, and it should not be that we have so much and just ignore those and walk by them and let them fall through the cracks,” Dube said.

He hoped Friday’s event would kickstart the rest of the fund raising, which is scheduled to be completed in just six months.

“It’s a charity that touches the heart of people but they have to see what’s happening here to really realize how important it is to help us out,” he said.

It’s an ambitions target but they have now a good head start, said campaign co-chair Leslie Courtney.

“Today’s donation was important because of the size of the donation as well as the importance of who it’s from. It’s from Les and Irene, they’re leaders in our community, and we’re counting on support from other people in the community that have the capacity to help us reach this goal,” she said.

The former Capri Place tower will now be known as the The Dube Lighthouse.

© Copyright (c) The StarPhoenix

Read more:

http://www.thestarphoenix.com/Dube+family+donates+million+Lighthouse+shelter/8463105/story.html#ixzz2VByDSyXx

 

Initiative takes aim at prostitution in Canada

From The StarPhoenix

About 15 per cent of men pay for sex, according to statistics compiled by Melissa Farley at the Prostitution Research and Education website.

The majority of these men are 24 to 27 years old, fathers and college-educated men.

Statistics like this are one reason why the Christian & Missionary Alliance denomination established a justice initiative known as Defend Dignity to address the issue of prostitution and lobby for its abolition in Canada.

“We call ourselves an abolitionist organization,” Rev. Tyrone McKenzie, pastor of Lawson Heights Alliance Church, says. “Our aim is to get a groundswell of support for the issue by making connections with churches, women’s and faith-based groups, and non-governmental organizations.”

Defend Dignity came out of the work Regina-born Glendyne Gerrard was doing in C&MA women’s ministry and her personal experiences connecting with poor and oppressed women. Gerrard is now Defend Dignity’s director.

“She kept coming in contact with women affected by prostitution,” McKenzie says, “and as that contact grew, Defend Dignity became an organization of its own.”

Defend Dignity focuses on advocacy at the local and national level. The group works to connect locally with informational forums in churches across the country, and federally with members of Parliament. The organization has strong ties with the Evangelical Fellowship of Canada, which does most of the work at the federal level.

EFC’s political analyst Julia Beazley will be in Saskatoon to speak at a Defend Dignity forum being held on Sunday at Circle Drive Alliance Church, beginning at 6 p.m.

Amanda Stephenson, one of the event organizers, says the forum is travelling to a dozen cities across Canada. In Saskatchewan, Defend Dignity will hold events in Regina, Prince Albert and Saskatoon.

A group of experts will speak on the topic of prostitution in Canada. One of the speakers is Beatrice Littlechief, a former prostitute who is now an emergency services manager at Soul’s Harbour, a rescue mission in Regina. Other speakers include a police officer from Calgary, a political analyst, a representative from the Missing and Murdered Aboriginal Women organization, and Jordon Cooper from The Lighthouse in Saskatoon.

A number of civic, provincial and federal politicians will also be in attendance to hear what the general public has to say on the issue.

“The purpose of the event is to get information out there,” Stephenson says. “People attending can participate by texting their questions throughout the event and having them answered by the panel.”

Stephenson says there will be a networking component to the evening, as “10 different local organizations, including The Lighthouse, The Bridge, Salvation Army and John School (which rehabilitates johns) will be on site with information booths.”

McKenzie says the biggest reason he is involved in Defend Dignity is because it is evident in scripture that Jesus cared for women who were affected by prostitution and sexual exploitation.

“As a follower of Christ, I, too, need to have compassion and advocate for victims of violence and prostitution,” he says. “The second reason is that there is a real need for men in our congregations to come to grips with the issue of pornography, which drives the whole prostitution industry. I find the statistics on pornography to be shocking.

“If I could do one day over again, it would be the day nude pictures flashed around playground in Grade 5. For many men, that was their first exposure to pornography, and in one way or another, they were affected. I believe no matter where we’ve encountered pornography, we can address the topic and take steps toward personal healing and wholeness. In our congregation, we’re trying to provide a solution for our men by getting them involved in the Harbour of Hope at The Lighthouse doing handyman renovations.”

One member of Parliament told the group if 50 MPs received 60 letters a month on a particular issue, and seven to 10 personal visits, that could be enough impetus for the government to put the issue at the top of its agenda. The event will provide an opportunity to write letters on the subject of prostitution to MPs, the prime minister and the minister of justice.

Stephenson says Sunday’s forum is free and open to everyone.

“We’re encouraging youth and young adults to make it a priority,” she says. “I grew up in Saskatoon and lived a very sheltered life. I didn’t know the realities of trafficking and prostitution until a couple of years ago.

“So many people, especially in the church, don’t want to admit it exists. But it does. This event is purely educational, to let people know what’s happening in our city.”

© Copyright (c) The StarPhoenix