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An impressive catch
of Peter fish at Calvin College has netted $6,300 for two organizations
dedicated to ending world hunger.
Members of Calvin's
Social Justice Coalition (SJC) and worship apprentice team gathered
this week and spent three hours counting the coins and bills in the
400 Peter fish, plus an assortment of bags and jars of loose change,
turned in by Calvin students.
The proceeds will
benefit Bread for the World and the Christian Reformed World Relief
Committee (CRWRC).
"I was really
shocked," says Jason Fileta, a Calvin senior from Wheaton, Ill.,
who, along with Dave Cieminis, a CRWRC representative, had set a goal
of $2,000 for the project. "It gave me a lot of faith in the student
body here."
The Peter fish
is actually a plastic, fish-shaped bank which was distributed across
the Calvin campus during the October 4-8 World Hunger Week.
The story of the
Peter fish is told in the Biblical book of Matthew when Jesus tells
Peter to go to the lake and throw out his line. The first fish he catches,
Jesus says, will in its mouth have a coin which Peter should use to
pay the temple tax.
The CRWRC believes
that the Peter fish is an excellent symbol for its annual world hunger
campaign and has been using the fish as a fundraiser for years. So many
years, in fact, that Calvin students who picked them up around campus
this year remembered them from their childhoods.
"I knew if
I had seen something like this as a student, and I thought I could make
a difference, I would want to be involved," says Cieminis, who
graduated from Calvin in 2004.
Now a planned
giving and communications assistant with the CRWRC, Cieminis was confident
the Calvin campus would respond to the Peter fish project.
"I had faith
in the Calvin community," he says. "I knew there were a lot
of students who cared about international issues, poverty and world
hunger."
Cieminis hopes
the Peter Fish will return to Calvin next year during World Hunger Week.
In fact he envisions casting the nets even wider to include other colleges,
saying simply: "This seems to work in a college setting."
~words and photo
by media relations staff writer Myrna Anderson
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