They came by the hundreds from all over central Minnesota, lining up to help package meals for Liberians trapped in villages by the Ebola quarantine. West African immigrants and lifelong Minnesotans, parents and grandparents with kids, church and civic volunteers and weekend warriors using a day off to help nameless people a continent away.
Saturday's scene at the River's Edge Convention Center in St. Cloud was the culmination of efforts by several Minnesota nonprofits and task forces to collect and package enough food to fill an entire shipping container with meals for families fighting not just the Ebola outbreak, but now a critical hunger crisis.
While the need was somber, the mood was uplifting.
"Today is beautiful,"said Rosemond Sarpong Owens, one of the organizers. "We are coming out of the arctic blast. In Ghana, where I am from, it is 85 or 90 degrees, no white on the ground. We are here today for Liberia."
Owens said about 700 volunteers worked in three shifts Saturday to package almost 200,000 meals. The goal for the shipment is 285,000. The packages contain life-sustaining staples: fortified rice, soy, goat cheese, protein mix.
Sampson Sarclay, whom Owens described as "the man in charge, small in stature, but very respected," will travel to Liberia to meet the food shipment, which should arrive in about five weeks. It will travel by rail from Minnesota to New York, where it will be put on a vessel and shipped across the Atlantic to Monrovia.
Sarclay, who fled civil war to the United States 1990, says he feels safe from the disease while traveling. "I am protected by the Lutherans in Liberia," he said, pausing as a loud speaker told volunteers that the first shift had just packed 59,000 meals.
The main sponsor, Kids Fighting Hunger, based in Sauk Rapids, hopes to package enough food to feed 1,300 families for a month, said Pam Beard, executive director. "We have almost 700 volunteers and 50 more waiting to help in this huge space with people busy packaging food," she said.