All the buzz about climbing unemployment rates and economic distress is enough to depress even the most optimistic person. This recent post on the Pink Slips Are The New Black Blog about how one regular guy has made a difference in improving the lives of thousands should lift your spirits:
CNN recently featured a truly inspiring story about a 44-year-old Jorge Munoz who emigrated to the United States from Colombia in the 1980s.
A school bus driver by day, he spends the majority of his free time feeding hungry people out of his mobile soup kitchen in Queens, NY. He started the program in 2004 and he estimates he’s served 70,000 meals to date. Now it has evolved into a non-profit organization called An Angel in Queens.
From CNN: Asked why he spends so much time to help people he doesn’t know, he
answers, “I have a stable job, my mom, my family, a house… everything I
want, I have. And these guys [don't]. So I just think, ‘OK, I have the
food.’ At least for today they’re going to have a meal to eat.”
Muñoz estimates that food and gas cost approximately
$400 to 450 a week; he and his family are funding the operation through
their savings and his weekly $700 paycheck.
