Youth Share Thanksgiving Meals
Intro:
Thanksgiving can be a lonely time. Some teenagers are making sure
elderly shut-ins get a taste of a traditional holiday meal and a visit from
eager young cooks.
Script:
(Locator: Los Angeles, California)
(Knocking at door)
Walter Nishinaka: “Hi. Happy Thanksgiving. We have a
turkey dinner for you.”
Jim Kurita: “I wouldn’t have any Thanksgiving if it
weren’t for these fellas with the church. We just
appreciate what they’re doing for us.”
Darryl Ramos-Young: “Today is the day before
Thanksgiving and it’s our Turkey Lock-In.”
Walter Nishinaka: “The Turkey Lock-In is a sleepover
that we have for the youth in our church. What we do
is assemble the turkey dinners for people who don’t
have families.”
April Nishinaka, Centenary United Methodist Church:
“We start the night before Thanksgiving. We prepare
the turkeys, the stuffing…”
Nikki Young: “…the side stuff, so like, the gravy,
the cranberry.”
Caitlin O’Brien: “…and pumpkin squares.”
Nikki Young: “Pumpkin squares.”
Darryl Ramos-Young: “It’s a full, traditional
Thanksgiving meal with the turkey and all the
fixings.”
April Nishinaka: “And then, in like the morning, we
finish preparing the food. And then package it.”
Marissa Vensel: “We load up carts with the boxes of
food and we walk them over to the shut-ins.”
Darryl Ramos-Young: “They walk together, pushing
their carts along the sidewalks and helping each
other through the streets of Little Tokyo. One of
the facilities is Tokyo Towers…”
Volunteer: “She wants to take a picture of you
guys!”
Darryl Ramos-Young: “…a senior, subsidized
residential facility.”
Caitlin O’Brien: “So a lot of the people we drop the
food off to don’t speak English. But we still get
the message that they’re thankful.”
(Woman bows as elevator closes) “Sayonara.”
Darryl Ramos-Young: “The second facility is a
low-income housing facility.”
Staff person: “Thank you.”
Walter Nishinaka: “That’s why these lock-ins,
they’re really successful because we can work
together. If we couldn’t work together these things
wouldn’t be possible.”
Walter Nishinaka: “Give me that one and Jess, you
can follow me for that one.”
The Rev. KarenFay Ramos-Young, Pastor, Centenary
United Methodist Church: “All of the youth know that
part of their faith journey is serving others. They
have to roll up their sleeves and know that’s part
of praising God.”
Jim Kurita: “Thank you very much.”
Walter Nishinaka: “Happy Thanksgiving.”
Jim Kurita: “Thank you.”
Scott Nishinaka: “One of the things I was taught, at
least in this church, was that everybody is family.
And being able to reach out to people who may not
necessarily have family can certainly feel it
through us.”
Marissa Vensel: “Getting a chance to be with the
entire youth group for one day out of the year where
we can help people but also bond.”
Walter Nishinaka: “My sister showed me what to do,
you know when it was my first lock-in and it was
their last lock-in. That’s our job as the older
generation for this new generation of youth member
is to show them. ‘this is how it’s done.’”
Darryl Ramos-Young: “Many families have their own
traditions every year. Whether it’s traveling to
Grandma’s house or being in charge of a certain
dish…
(Group poses for photo)
Darryl Ramos-Young: “…Our church family has its own
tradition and that’s the Turkey Lock-In.”
Tag:
The youth group prepares nearly a hundred
Thanksgiving meals each year during the Turkey
Lock-In. Church members donate the ingredients.
For more information, contact Centenary
United Methodist Church at 213-617-9097.
Posted: November 29, 2011