This was his first time participating in an Operation Ukraine shipment. But in coming days he and his congregation also will help assemble a shipment for Ukrainians.
As Suzanne Bennett walked through the Operation Ukraine warehouse, she named several things the Baghdad shipment includes: winter clothing, brand new shoes, walkers, crutches and canes.
“We’ve got a whole gob of Tommy Hilfiger flip-flops,” she said. “That’s what they use in Iraq, right?”
The products — valued at about $100,000, according to Suzanne Bennett — originate from disparate sources. Cadden picks up hospital linens from Baptist Memorial Hospital-Golden Triangle and food-quality heavy-duty buckets from the Sqwincher plant. A delivery company drops off hospital beds if their boxes become damaged. The charity Soles4Souls offers shoes. The goods add up and create metal and cardboard mountains in the warehouse.
Then Cadden and other volunteers ship the goods to people who wouldn’t otherwise get them.
“Because the Bible says that we’re supposed to take care of the widows, the orphans and the sick,” Cadden said when asked why she makes the shipments.
A hand-written message on one box stating “Hello from Mississippi” illustrates another justification for the shipments.
When people in other countries find out their source, Cadden said, “They’re gonna have a different attitude about Americans.”
A sticker on each box states, “Donated by Churches of Christ” in English and Arabic, which exemplifies an added benefit of the shipments: They are “introducing them (receivers of the shipments) to Christians,” who people in such countries as Iraq might not have ever encountered before, Cadden said.
And then there’s the personal reward.
“The more I’ve given, the more and better stuff that I’ve received,” Cadden said.