-->
This Is Story #1
See Story #2
Group goes homeless for a night
Abraham’s Tent Youth Sleepout


New Haven, Conn. (WTNH) - They are homeless for a night, but the purpose is to bring light to a serious problem.

It’s called the Abraham’s Tent Youth Sleepout, a fundraiser organized by New Haven’s Columbus House to bring awareness to the more than 700 homeless in the city and neighboring towns.

Parents and students from different churches are sleeping in tents and cardboard boxes hoping to raise money that will support Columbus House.

“I think tomorrow comes the moment when you wake up,” explained Reverend Scott Morrow with the North Haven Congregational Church . “We pack up all our stuff and go home to our comfortable home recognizing the people we are thinking about tonight aren’t able to do that. And tomorrow night will be the same as tonight, for them.”

Abraham’s Tent is a shelter program started in 2009 and run by religious congregations that house a dozen homeless men in church buildings for a week at a time.


Original Source
Updated: Wednesday, 10 Nov 2010, 10:50 PM EST
Published : Wednesday, 10 Nov 2010, 10:50 PM EST

This Is Story #2
Go Back To Story #1
A lesson in homelessness


New Haven, Conn. (WTNH) - Some kids in North Haven got a feel for what it’s like to be homeless after they spent the night sleeping out in the cold to help raise awareness and help the less fortunate.

J.T. Lincoln didn’t have to work too hard to imagine it. He slept in a box all of Wednesday night into Thursday morning as part of the second Abraham’s Tent Youth Sleepout, a fundraiser for the program with the same name.

“Sleeping in a box is what some people have to do every night and the night is a lot longer when you’re asleep in a box as opposed to a bed and you get waken up more easily,” Lincoln said. “I can just imagine how scary it can be.”

JT’s among dozens of young people and adults who slept out in the hopes to raise awareness and more than $20,000 for the plight of homeless folks in Connecticut.

Abraham’s Tent brings together religious congregations and Yale to help with the overflow at New Haven’s Columbus House . The event -- part demonstration, part crusade -- was held at four locations across the state.

“There are probably 670 people homeless perhaps in New Haven and throughout the state it’s probably about four-thousand, so it’s a big problem,” Rev. Scott Marrow from North Haven Congregational Church said. “I think we would all agree that we would want people to have shelter and warmth and not to have to worry from day to day where they’re going to be able to stay.”


Original Source
Updated: Thursday, 11 Nov 2010, 2:14 PM EST
Published : Thursday, 11 Nov 2010, 2:13 PM EST