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  September 24, 2006VOL. 44, NO. 15Oakland, CA

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Histories
St. Mary-St. Francis de Sales Parish
St. Andrew-St. Joseph Parish

St. Mary’s Center to relocate to church site

Soup kitchen closes after serving meals
for 30 years

USCCB education secretary named chancellor for Oakland Diocese

Anne Rynders named Catholic Woman of the Year

Guatemalan village gets clean water with help from Fremont parish

Migrants risk lives, hope in desert crossing

CCEB issues Katrina assistance report

Catholic agencies
continues to serve hurricane survivors

U.S. bishops’ pro-life official urges
pharmacists not to support Plan B

Activists urge no students for U.S. military school

COMMENTARY
A Labor Day reflection on immigration and work

OBITUARY
Father Vincent Foerstler, O.P.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Soup kitchen closes after
serving meals for 30 years

The Muffin Men had just arrived. Shirley Weber’s gastronomical radar clicked into high gear. What delectable foodstuffs were they bringing that day which could factor into tomorrow’s luncheon menu at St. Andrew-St. Joseph Soup Kitchen, its veteran cook wondered?

The 74-year-old New Orleans native broke into a pleased grin as Frank Spagnoletta and Jack Dice from St. Monica Parish in Moraga set a large cardboard box on the table for her to inspect. She opened the flaps and surveyed a bounteous supply of ham steaks and sausages.

“We’ll have jambalaya,” Weber decided with satisfaction, breathing in the heady aromas.
Their promising aroma of future delicacies joined the tantalizing smells already coming from the top of the stove and the oven. Guests would feast today on roast turkey, gravy, rice, and snap beans. “We’ll have sweets, too,” said the cook, eying some decadent looking chocolate cakes Spagnoletta and Dice had just unloaded from another box.

Interchanges similar to this one become comforting daily rituals since 1986 when Shirley Weber began volunteering at the soup kitchen. She had moved from Louisiana to Oakland to take care of her ailing aunt, who was being looked after by a group of parish kitchen volunteers including Deacon Leo Edgerly, Sr. Edgerly encouraged Weber to join the soup kitchen volunteer corps as head cook, bringing with her years of experience as a restaurant cook.

The Muffin Men pick up day-old bread, pastries and other food donations from supermarkets, delis and bakeries throughout the East Bay for deliveries to St. Andrew/St. Joseph, A Friendly manor, St. Mary’s Senior Center, the Mother Wright Foundation, and sometimes the St. Vincent de Paul Dining Room, “if there’s an overflow,” said Dice. The two men have never eaten any of Weber’s meals because they show up too early in the day. “But we don’t have to sample Shirley’s cooking to know that it’s good. The aromas tell us all we need to know,” said Spagnoletta.

This particular visit from The Muffin Men would be one of their last. In eight more days, on Aug. 18, Weber would cook her last lunch at St. Andrew/St. Joseph’s. The kitchen would shut its doors after 30 years of serving hungry people around the Brockhurst and San Pablo area of Oakland.

On Aug. 27, the parish officially became part of the new Catholic Parish of Christ the Light, which will move to its home – the new cathedral – in two years.

St. Mary’s Senior Center will move into the parish plant in November, where it will continue to provide hot meals and social services to homeless seniors. The old kitchen, along with its brilliantly colorful outside wall of murals depicting the founder, Gertrude Martinez, as well as past volunteers and leaders, will be demolished to make room for a parking lot.

Besides saying goodbye to her Muffin Men friends, Weber also paid sad farewells to the daily guests. And to Mary Lou and Deacon Eugene Stelly, Sr., who have been Weber’s companions in the soup kitchen ministry for the past dozen years: Mary Lou, as kitchen manager, and Deacon Stelly as a daily volunteer and treasurer.

Weber, who insists she is not ready to retire, would like to cook somewhere else, to continue be of service to the hungry and homeless. To say grace with them each day over plates of steaming hot jambalaya and roast turkey, meals she has served up with love in her heart.

“I worry about where they will all go to eat,” she said.

Shirley Weber, master cook at St. Andrew-St. Joseph Soup Kitchen for the past 20 years, prepares a plate of food during one of the final meals served at the Oakland kitchen.
CHRIS DUFFEY PHOTO


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