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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Friday, October 7, 2005

They need your kokua

By Catherine E. Toth
Advertiser Staff Writer

Shannon Miyazaki, left, plays balloon volleyball with Sally Ono, 85, right, and other nursing-home residents at Hale Pulama Mau in Liliha. The Golden Key International Society at UH-Manoa is hosting a mini-carnival for these residents as part of Make a Difference Day.

JOAQUIN SIOPACK | The Honolulu Advertiser

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MAKE A DIFFERENCE DAY

What: National day of helping others

When: Saturday, Oct. 22

How: To register your project, see www.makeadifferenceday.com.

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PROJECT IDEAS FOR MAKE A DIFFERENCE DAY

Can’t think of anything to do for Make a Difference Day? Well, we can. Here are a few community service project ideas you can make into your own. You also can check out www.makeadifferenceday.com:

  • Organize or join a beach cleanup. Grab a trash bag and gloves and start picking up litter at your favorite beach. Or pitch in to help the Sierra Club, Hawai'i chapter; visit www.hi.sierraclub.org.

  • Collect food for the Institute for Human Services, which provides daily meals and a 24-hour emergency shelter with support services for men, women and families. Get more information at www.ihs-hawaii.org.

  • Round up folks to paint over graffiti in your neighborhood. According to Keep America Beautiful, graffiti cleanups cost the U.S. more than $8 billion annually. And research shows that graffiti results in more graffiti, vandalism and crime. See www.graffitihurts.org for ways to organize a cleanup crew.

  • Clean out your bookshelves and donate your books to your local library. (For a list, see www.librarieshawaii.org.) Or take them to the Friends of the Library of Hawai'i for its annual book sale. You can drop off books at its processing center at 690 Pohukaina St. See www.flhawaii.org for more information.

  • Collect new or nearly new and cleaned work outfits and donate them to Dress For Success, a program that helps low-income women get and keep jobs. What they need: interview-appropriate skirts, pants, blouses, blazers and shoes. Call the YWCA of O'ahu at 538-7061 ext. 235 or visit www.dressforsuccess.org.

  • Save up to three lives by donating blood. Make an appointment with the Blood Bank of Hawaii online at www.bbh.org. Or if you feel really ambitious, organize your own blood drive with your company, school or church. To find out how, call 845-9966.

  • Organize a fundraiser to help hurricane victims. Set up a bake sale at your office or collect recyclables and donate the refunds. For a list of ways to help, visit the American Red Cross, Hawai'i Chapter at www.hawaiiredcross.org.

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    Hatsuko Takata, 102, plays bean-bag toss with Shannon Miyazaki at Hale Pulama Mau. For Miyazaki, helping the elderly is her way of giving back to a community she feels is often overlooked and ignored.

    JOAQUIN SIOPACK | The Honolulu Advertiser

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    It may seem like a small thing.

    But to the residents of Hale Pulama Mau at the Kuakini Medical Center, it's the world.

    Any time there's a special event or program — from hula performances to balloon volleyball — these nursing-home residents get excited. They love — and need — that connection to the world outside the hospital walls.

    "They look forward to it," said Jayne Desamito, therapeutic recreation coordinator at Hale Pulama Mau. "You can see it. Their eyes just light up."

    Their need for this interaction prompted the Golden Key International Society at the University of Hawai'i-Manoa to action.

    Society members are planning a mini-carnival for the more than 200 Hale Pulama Mau residents on Oct. 22, nationally known as Make a Difference Day. Volunteers are organizing carnival-style games such as ring toss and table bowling to stimulate them mentally and physically.

    That day, they will join the millions of others nationwide who are doing something positive for their communities, from beach cleanups to fundraising for breast cancer research.

    "We decided to focus on giving back to the elderly," said Shannon Miyazaki, 25, a member of Golden Key and part-time recreation assistant at Hale Pulama Mau. "It's nice for them to get that interaction with younger people ... And it's a fun event. They always have a good time."

    NATIONWIDE EFFORT

    Make a Difference Day, sponsored by USA Weekend magazine in partnership with the Points of Light Foundation, is a national day of helping others. Last year, more than 3 million people participated in community service projects such as collecting books, feeding the homeless and building homes. More than 26 million Americans are aided by these efforts each year.

    In its 15th year, Make a Difference Day gets people to care about the communities they live in, to help their neighbors and to ultimately make this world a better place.

    Nursing care homes, such as Hale Pulama Mau, need volunteer groups to come in and provide interactive activities for their residents, many of whom don't get daily visitors.

    The activities Golden Key is planning are ideal for these residents, Desamito said. They're not too difficult to do, but they require mental focus and physical ability. Even small movements — hitting a balloon or tossing a ball — are helpful for residents. They can stay stronger longer. And the movements mimic everyday actions such as brushing hair or putting on a jacket.

    "It's dual-purpose," she said. "They're having fun and they're doing something for their health."

    HIGHER GOALS

    Last year, parents at the Star of the Sea Early Learning Center collected gently used shoes to donate to needy children in Iraq.

    Without much advertising, they managed to get enough shoes to fill two 27-inch TV boxes.

    This year, they hope to do better.

    Instead of shoes, they hope to raise funds for the school by collecting recyclable cans and bottles. The goal: 100,000 items, or $5,000 in refunds.

    The money would be used toward, among other things, scholarships for families who can't afford the tuition at the Early Learning Center.

    "The purpose is to raise money for the school, but at the same time do something we can feel good about and keep the environment clean," said Yamane, 40, of Kaimuki, whose two sons attend the school. "It teaches the children the importance of recycling ... and how to make a difference."

    That's really the point — to make a difference in your community by pulling together to support a common cause.

    Hawai'i residents are doing that in more than one way this year.

    In their 10th year of participating in Make a Difference Day, Jacki Sorensen's Aerobic Dancing ladies are collecting cans of Spam for the Hawai'i Foodbank.

    The Hilo Bay Watershed Advisory Group is organizing a cleanup along the 4-mile beach from James Kealoha Park to Carlsmith Park.

    Read Aloud America and three O'ahu Rotary Clubs — Pearl Ridge, Pearl Harbor and Honolulu — will install bookshelves in the 27 classrooms at Lehua Elementary School to encourage reading.

    The Windward Ahupua'a Alliance is planning two events on Oct. 22. The first is the Clean Kapa'a Quarry Road in Two Hours Blitz Contest. The second is to continue turning a former dump site along the road into a park for workers and volunteers who use the area.

    Even The Advertiser is getting in on the act, with a crew working to help out Manoa Valley Theatre that morning.

    There's really something for everyone, for every community.

    For Miyazaki, helping the elderly is her way of giving back to a community she feels is often overlooked and ignored.

    "It's a community that deserves attention," said Miyazaki, who plans to study geriatric medicine. "The elderly are really important. ... There's something special there. I want to help them improve their quality of life."

    Reach Catherine E. Toth at ctoth@honoluluadvertiser.com.