Home / Education / Buchholz High Club Creates Care Packages For Gainesville’s Homeless
Buchholz High Club Creates Care Packages For Gainesville’s Homeless
By Samantha Brittingham
December 9, 2016 Education
Natalia Andraka is a Buchholz High school graduation student, but during her down time jane is the president associated with a club that creates tie-dye T-shirts, colorful bracelets and uplifting notes for your homeless.
Andraka, 16, got the reasoning to get started on this club in the summer, but officially began use Warm Hearts this August when school began.?The club has almost 300 members now.

On Thursday, Andraka and the other officers inside the Warm Hearts club met at St. Francis House to supply care packages offering?backpacks, soaps, pencils, blankets along with their signature tie-dye shirts. The holiday to St. Francis House marks initially the fact that club has formally given?donations towards the homeless.
“All within the donations range from meetings at our club,” Andraka said. “We meet twice per month and then we make everything during the meetings. We tie-dye all the shirts, we make many of the bracelets and notes, all aspects are performed by us.”
Three Gainesville businesses also sponsor Warm Hearts by donating personal models like soaps, blankets and shoes.

Derek Akey, Katherine Lobato and Shad Buchanon serve as?officers, along with the list of sophomores divide all the work equally that will help the club be as successful as they can.?Shad Buchanon stated that he can understand how Warm Hearts is transforming him.
“I’ve are more humble, I believe,” Buchanon said. “Before, I liked having nice things. Now I come here and it’s not about having nice things. It’s more information on being happy, having food, such things as that. I’ve be more as a result of earth as a result club.”
The group delivered their handmade shirts to room on the St. Francis House and saw immediate is a result of their work.
“Someone here today walked past us and so they thanked us for our donations, and this just felt really nice,” said Lobato, 15. “It’s much better than getting material goods, just purchasing a thank you or seeing appreciation from someone for that which you’ve done.”
Don Hill was eating at St. Francis House if the Warm Hearts club came over the room.?He asserted receiving donations like that feels good understanding that reading the letter that the club wrote for him was very emotional.
“It brought me to tears, it just did,” Hill said. “It really hit home for my situation.”
The letter read, “Believe in yourself, since i believe in you.”
Their teacher, mentor and sponsor, Brandon Sedgley, said he thinks the club gives Buchholz students an effective way to leave and offer back in the neighborhood. Sedgley teaches AP World History, AP Government and AP Macroeconomics at Buchholz Twelfth grade, but Andraka just means him as ‘the top person ever.’
“Natalia, plus the kids that sort of brought this up, were very interested in it,” Sedgley said. “On my end, Practical goal likely to deny them this opportunity since this is something great. Not only for for the children, nevertheless for Buchholz as well as Gainesville community.”

Warm Hearts is partnering when using the Humane Society in January and expanding the work they do to homeless pets. The club’s next goal is always to produce a journal using a group of interviews and build an ecological kind of homelessness in Gainesville. To merely look for the basis in the homelessness problem.
Andraka said that her main aim, though, should be to bring joy to those whatsoever she’ll and then to destigmatize homelessness.
“We just make an effort to help up to we could,” Andraka said. “Through positivity, we try to grant them the brighter side of life, since you only live once which is trouble.”
