Seven teens a-knitting

Published December 21, 2011

Each knitter spent about 72 hours making hats for the homeless in Winnipeg. Photo: silver-john

Teenage boys contentedly knitting? Absolutely, when the well-being of homeless people in chilly Winnipeg is at stake.

Earlier this month, four boys and three girls from Miles Macdonnell Collegiate Institute delivered more than 250 cozy hand-knit woollen toques to the Siloam Mission, an urban Christian shelter. “We spent the past year knitting the hats in our spare time at home,” says Giezi Arevalo, 18, who taught the others in the group to knit. “It’s stress-relieving and maybe a bit addictive.”

Each knitter spent about 72 hours making hats. The group also knit toques this year to help the Red Cross raise relief money for the victims of the Fukushima tsunami.

The knitting circle, called Esperanza (Spanish for “hope”), purchased $600 worth of wool and $200 worth of knitting looms and other supplies with a youth grant from United Way. The students hope to keep the program alive at the school after they graduate this spring from its international baccalaureate program.

Author

  • Diana Swift

    Diana Swift is an award-winning writer and editor with 30 years’ experience in newspaper and magazine editing and production. In January 2011, she joined the Anglican Journal as a contributing editor.

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