What do you write in a greeting card to someone you donât know?
Maddy Burkettâs approach was all about bringing a sense of beauty and optimism to the recipient.
âI drew some flowers, and kind of said, âThese are my flowers that I've gotten to see and now they're flowers that you get to see.â They can't respond, but âHow's your day?â and âI hope it's great!â and âlife is beautiful!â and just little things that they can remember in times of need, or, you know, feeling down.â
Maddy, a fourth-year student in the Health and Human Performance program at Dal, was one of about 80 Dal students participating in the inaugural Dal Gives Back event on Sept. 8. Crafting thoughtful cards for seniors in long-term care was one of the activities participants took part in. They also assembled hygiene kits for those in need.
The Dal Gives Back initiative was designed to address community needs identified over the past few years, said Kareina Cadel, Dalâs manager of student experience.
âThis event gave students an opportunity to give back to their community and form a community themselves,â she said.
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Maddy emphasized the importance of giving back to the community, especially considering Halifaxâs rising rent and eviction rates.
âIt's visible even on campus, the effect that homelessness has, and so I think . . . we should take every opportunity that we can to give back.â
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Peter Ordineylli, donor and community engagement officer with United Way Halifax (a partners on the project), said the event allowed students to form a connection with people in the Halifax community who need support.
âThe kits theyâre making are going to Freedom House and Out of the Cold Halifax and Dartmouth,â Ordineylli said. âThe student assembled kits will be kept on-site for people that might need to have a shower and donât have the supplies to do so.â
Lucas Melanson, a second-year engineering student at Dal, wanted to be part of the event to do something good for the homeless.
âI put together some hygiene kits, mostly hygienic stuff like deodorant, toothpaste and toothbrushes, along with some socks for cold weather, and some tissue paper because people always get colds,â he said.
But for Lucas, Dal Gives Back also prompted some bigger thinking â about how his own field of engineering and design can make things more inclusive in the future and help more homeless people out.
The student turnout for Dal Gives Back ultimately surpassed expectations. Cadel credits this to a collaboration across many faculties. Lucas and Maddy, for instance, both heard about the event through email and through their programâs newsletter. Ìę
After seeing so many students get together to help, Cadel emphasized the desire to continue this event forward, hoping to have another one at the beginning of the winter â25 semester.
âMany students were able to connect with each other, and kind of think of themselves as part of the broader Halifax community,â she says. âIt shows that students are keen to find their place in Halifax â not just at ±«Óătv â and be part of giving back in whatever way that they can.â