When Eileen stops to collect another penny, L’Arche Development Associate Mari Andrew knows it’s a good day.
“There’s a huge difference in showing up to give someone medicine as part of your job and giving medicine to your friend and roommate,” Andrew explained.
Founded on this understanding, L’Arche is present in about 40 countries around the world. The Ontario house in Washington, D.C. is one of four in the area and one of 140 globally. For the core members, this will be their lifelong home. For assistants, it may last as little as a year. But regardless of the time spent with L’Arche, no one seems to leave without being transformed in some way.
The needs of some are physical: help brushing their teeth or using the bathroom. The needs of others are spiritual: a prayer life, time for reflection, a supportive community. For some, it is emotional: a friend that cares, help opening up, practicing patience, learning how to be present.
Andrew has learned this first-hand.
“[Eileen] does what she loves to do every single day…and she would do that anywhere that she was,” Andrew explains, referencing the penny story.
“I’m always thinking [about] where else I could be, what else I could be doing. Eileen has really taught me to be grounded and to do what I love every day, no matter where I am.”
This is what Andrew means by “teaching moments.”
This is L’Arche: men and women, young and old, with disabilities and without—all seeking the healing, hope and love of Jesus under the same roof, one penny at a time.
