30. März 2026
Look for the Helpers 12: Dignity, Love and Respect
In this episode of Design and Religion: Look for the Helpers , Kim Eppehimer shares the deeper logic behind her work with Friendship House, Limen Recovery + Wellness, and the...
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App kostenlos ladenThis episode centers on Dan Zauderer, founder and CEO of Grassroots Grocery, and his effort to address food insecurity through a model rooted in dignity, volunteerism, and neighborhood connection . Dan explains that Grassroots Grocery is not simply a food distribution nonprofit. It is a movement built around a simple but powerful idea: neighbors helping neighbors. The work uses food as the medium, while the deeper mission is to rebuild community and belonging. A major strength of the conversation is the way Dan reframes food insecurity. He pushes back against the narrow picture many people hold in their minds. Food insecurity is not limited to extreme starvation or visible homelessness. It also includes working families, people in public housing, and households that simply cannot afford healthy, life-affirming food regularly . He makes clear that many people who objectively qualify as food insecure would never describe themselves that way. Shame, comparison, and social stigma distort self-perception. That insight gives the episode unusual depth. It moves the issue from charity language into systems and identity. Dan then outlines the organization’s two main programs. The first is The Great Sandwich Race , a corporate volunteer experience in which teams race against the clock to make sandwiches that are later delivered to community partners serving people in need across New York City. The second is the Produce Party , Grassroots Grocery’s flagship Saturday operation in the Bronx. Volunteers gather in a parking lot, unload donated produce, sort and pack it, compost what cannot be used, and then drive the produce out to about 30 communities through local volunteer leaders called Grassroots Grocers. Dan describes this system as a hub-and-spoke model. It is simple, asset-light, and highly scalable. The episode becomes especially strong when it shifts from logistics to ethos. Dan insists that this work is joyful. He rejects the idea that social action must be fueled mainly by anger. He wants to build a movement that feels celebratory, participatory, and alive. That is why the language matters. It is a “produce party,” not a grim service line. It is a “great sandwich race,” not a sterile volunteer shift. Through those choices, the organization creates energy that invites broad participation across class, age, religion, and background. Dan says plainly that even people with means, even families driving expensive cars, are welcome in the tent if they are willing to show up and help. This openness becomes one of the most compelling leadership principles in the episode. Find out more about Grassroots Greocery: https://www.grassrootsgrocery.org/ Send us a text message letting us know what you think of this episode! Support the show We envision a world where design and religion work together to spread love, empathy, and charity faster than divisiveness, selfishness, and hate. To achieve this, we aim to bring the stories of those driving this change—both big and small—into the spotlight, allowing ideas for positive transformation to spread quickly and reach those who need them most. Nate is the Head Pastor at Red Clay Creek Presbyterian Church https://rccpc.org/ Van is a Service Designer and Illustrator, and his work can be found at https://www.vansheacreative.com/
30. März 2026
In this episode of Design and Religion: Look for the Helpers , Kim Eppehimer shares the deeper logic behind her work with Friendship House, Limen Recovery + Wellness, and the...
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This episode centers on Dan Zauderer, founder and CEO of Grassroots Grocery, and his effort to address food insecurity through a model rooted in dignity, volunteerism, and neighborhood connection ....
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