I’m looking at a lot of food right now. Acres of food. In cans, boxes, rubber containers, and plastic baggies.
There must be several jillion pallets of dry food and canned goods stored in this warehouse. And it all goes to hungry people.
“We feed people,” says Miss Rita. “Plain and simple.”
Rita is white-haired. Most of Manna’s volunteers are. Rita, like many others, comes to Manna to sort food and fill boxes for hungry people all over the Florida Panhandle.
She tells me that recipients who accept food from Manna often come to the back door so nobody will see them except Manna’s volunteers.
“There’s a lot of shame involved with not having enough food,” an employee says. “We have single moms who are humiliated because they can’t feed their kids. I’ve seen parents cry when they get bags of food.”
“Food is what makes us human. Think about it, food is life.”
She’s right. Food is more important than necessities like money, housing, transportation, clothes, shoes, or Michelob.”
While we are sorting food, someone arrives at
the back door. It is a youngish woman with a tripod cane. She is staggering to the door. She doesn’t want me looking at her when she accepts her bag of food. So I turn my head and avoid eye contact.
“God bless you,” the woman whispers as she takes the bag and disappears.
Whereupon Miss Rita takes me back to the date verification station. This is my job for today.
These gazillions of pounds of food have to individually be checked for quality.
“People donate all kinds of weird stuff,” says Rita. “Sometimes, people donate half-eaten jars of peanut butter, and I just want to slap them and say, ‘Hello, we don’t want your spit.’
Miss Rita is a short, spunky, Rhode Island native who talks with a no-nonsense accent that sounds like a firearm. I get the feeling you wouldn't…