Cork Simon launches its Christmas campaign of hope

At the launch of Cork Simon’s ‘More Than A Gift Christmas Campaign’ at the Montenotte Hotel, were Head of Fundraising at Cork Simon, Rachel Stevenson with MC and Broadcaster Jonathan Healy (left) and Paul Sheehan, Head of Campaigns and Communications at Cork Simon. The campaign aims to highlight how people’s support for Cork Simon has a long-lasting, positive impact on the lives of men and women experiencing homelessness in Cork. (Picture: Brian Lougheed)

Cork Simon Community have launched their More Than A Gift Christmas campaign at the Cameo Cinema, Montenotte Hotel, which aims to highlight how people’s support for Cork Simon has a long-lasting, positive impact on the lives of men and women experiencing homelessness in Cork.

Speaking at the launch last week, Head of Fundraising, Rachel Stevenson said, “Everything we do depends on the generosity and participation of the wider community here in Cork. No matter how people support us – be it donating, sponsoring a room, organising or participating in a fundraiser; every act of kindness helps to change lives and save lives. It’s much more than a gift.”

DONATIONS HELPING TO CHANGE LIVES

Cork Simon’s More Than A Gift Christmas campaign draws on the real-life experience of Ruairí (individual’s name has been changed to protect his and his family’s privacy) who was eventually pushed into homelessness following a traumatic childhood experience. His own words, “No one wants their child to grow up to be homeless on Christmas Day” were the inspiration for the campaign.

Rachel Stevenson said, “Ruairí’s story, in his own words, will be dropping into every household in Cork in the coming weeks. He talks of his loving Cork family, of a traumatic experience outside the family home at just ten years of age that was the root of his homelessness, and of his struggles to keep body and soul together. No one wants that future for their child – on Christmas Day or at any time.”

Ruairí recalls reaching “rock bottom” three days before Christmas not knowing how to deal with sleeping rough. But he says he “started to heal” when he got his own bed, his own room and a support worker at Cork Simon to help him deal with the root cause of his homelessness.

“None of that would have been possible without the care, compassion and generosity of the wider community here in Cork”, says Rachel Stevenson. “Every donation, every gift of kindness we receive, is offering men and women like Ruairí a way out of homelessness. It’s saving lives. It’s changing lives. What better gift could we give at Christmas?”

ORGANISE A FUNDRAISER

“No one deserves to be homeless”, says Ruairí. Speaking of the generosity of people in Cork who helped change his life, he says, “It can lift the burden of decades of pain. I’d have remained that little boy in pain – with no hope and no future. For the first time in a very long time, I felt loved. I felt cared for. I felt wanted.”

Cork Simon’s More Than A Gift campaign in the run-up to Christmas is asking people throughout Cork to give the gift of hope and a new start for the men and women it is supporting right now by donating, sponsoring a room or organising a fundraiser like a Cork Simon Christmas Jumper Day. Details at www.corksimon.ie