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Modern Woodmen youth club leader and camp secretary Lowanda Johnston
(center) heads up "There's always something to do," she says. "And it makes
a big difference."
How Modern Woodmen members improve their communities
A better place
It's like a snowball or a train running down the tracks.
That's how member Lowanda Johnston, Sesser, 111., sees Modern Woodmen
fraternalism: community-minded activities that keep growing and going to make a
positive impact.
"People see you doing things, and they ask ... did you plant those flowers ...
can you help with this or that?" Lowanda explains. "It makes me feel real
proud."
Lowanda is just one example of Modern Woodmen fraternalism in action - members
supporting projects that improve quality of life. Here we share a glimpse of
three areas of the country touched by members who make their communities better
places to live.
Southern Illinois spirit
Lowanda Johnston agreed to be Sesser's Modern Woodmen youth service club leader
on a temporary basis. That was 10 years ago. She also runs the Modern Woodmen
camp [adult chapter] in neighboring Benton. "Now I wish I'd taken it on 10 years
sooner!" she says.
Lowanda and her members have taken on many projects, including those at the city
park, a hub of activity for Sesser's 2,000 residents. Every June, her youth club
members help get the park ready for the homecoming celebration. The kids pick
up trash, set up chairs and decorate the stage. In 2006 she got the idea for
another park project when a fellow member of the Sesser Homecoming Association
asked, "Have you been in the bathrooms lately?"
Working together
Lowanda's camp members and Homecoming Association members installed privacy
dividers and doors and replaced toilets in the park's rest-rooms through Modern
Woodmen's Good Neighbors Program. The camp contributed $500 toward the
materials, while the city and the Homecoming Association split the balance.
Lowanda's club members joined the group for a Join Hands Day project to clean
and paint the new stalls. They decorated the walls with colorful stamps. One of
Lowanda's youth club moms, Linda Arnold, directed the children."It teaches the
kids," Linda says. "If they're taught to get involved when they're younger,
they're more apt to do it when they're older."
The park projects are some of many projects members in the area have
supported. Sesser camp secretary Joyce Gunter led her camp members to raise
money for a new fence at the cemetery. Lowanda's club members have raised money
for the library. The fundraising activities get people involved, sometimes in
unique ways.
Lowanda's camp partnered with Grace Awakening Church to put on a sock hop and
variety show fundraiser for a single mom facing medical bills from breast
cancer. Members served barbecue dinners, sold raffle tickets, ran a cake walk
and held some wacky contests, one of which Lowanda won easily. "I'm the
hula-hoop queen of Sesser!" she proclaims. More than 600 people attended the
event. When matched by Modern Woodmen (up to $2,500), the fundraiser generated
$5,806.
Members like Lowanda and Joyce have gained a reputation for helping others. When
the representative at the Child Advocacy Office needed a resource to help a
17-year-old who hadn't had new school clothes in three years, she called
Lowanda. Through the Help A Child Program, the club purchased T-shirts, shoes,
jeans and school supplies.
A way of life
The many fraternal activities in the Sesser and Benton area don't stop when a
project is finished. A couple of years ago, members landscaped in front of the
post office, replacing a grassy weed patch with bushes, a concrete bench and
flowers.
"It's kind of an ongoing personal thing for me now," Lowanda says. "I plant
flowers there every year."
From fundraisers to hands-on community improvement projects, Modern Woodmen
programs contributed more than $13,000 to the Sesser/Benton area through the
first three quarters of 2006.
Sesser's mayor of 30 years, Ned Mitchell, sees value in these projects beyond
the dollars. "It brings people together, and I think that's important," he says.
"To put projects like mat together and get people to work together ... it gives
them a source of pride in their community."
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