Botelle students show heart, support troops

NORFOLK — Students at Botelle Elementary School have shown that they are part of a small school with a big heart.

For the past several months, the school community has donated countless items to an ongoing care package program that collects and ships much-needed supplies to United States soldiers serving in Afghanistan.

The program’s donation box has been a welcome fixture at the school’s front entrance since the middle of last year, according to Botelle School Principal Peter Michelson.

Since then, he said, it has been regularly filled with food, snacks, toiletries and other everyday items that are considered small luxuries to many of those now serving abroad.

“It’s been pretty impressive what people have brought in,� Michelson said. “And we plan to continue the effort and keep the project going.�

In addition to donations, the program also encourages students to send letters and cards to the soldiers. This is something that the school community has also embraced, Michelson said.

“We’re a small school,� he said, referring to the 144 students who attend Botelle. “But we are also a very generous one.�

The care package program was started about a year ago by Falls Village resident Jane Little-Bear.

After thinking for some time about doing something to show support for the soldiers, she finally decided to move forward and try to make a difference earlier last year.

“I really wanted to help these soldiers,� Little-Bear said.

She went online and researched organizations that facilitate care package programs by identifying individual soldiers and units that would like to receive items. After finding a small handful of reputable groups, Little-Bear regularly began sending boxes.

“It started off just with me doing it myself,� she said. “But then I wondered if I could rally the community, too.�

A short time later, she approached Botelle about working together to boost the program’s donation levels.

“They have been fantastic,� she said of Botelle’s students and staff.

Little-Bear, who also has a donation box set up on the front porch of her Route 7 home, said even the smallest donation can mean the world to a soldier serving overseas.

“Because a lot of them don’t even have contact with family,� she said. “And it helps them know that somebody cares.�

Suggested donation items include:

• snack items (individual sizes are preferred)

• shaving cream (non-aerosol)

• nuts of all kinds

• toothpaste

• trail mix

• paperback books

• dried fruit

• paper/pens

• coffee

• CDs

• tea

“But anything is wonderful,� Little-Bear said. “As long as it can go into a box, it doesn’t matter what it is.�

Currently, she is working specifically with two soliders. One is a first sergeant in Afghanistan who is in charge of a unit of 115 men and women.

“And everything I send he dishes out to them,� Little-Bear said.

The other is also a sergeant serving in Afghanistan. He has five other men working with him up in the mountains as mortar specialists.

“And there are so many others out there,� she said.

Little-Bear said she would like to take on more soldiers, but is hampered by the financial constraints of running the program. Every box that is sent to the soldiers costs $11.95 to ship.

“But we pack that box as full as it can get,� she said with a laugh, adding that each shipment takes two to three weeks to reach its destination. “So, as long as it is under 70 pounds, we can ship it for that price.�

Much of what can be safely shipped, however, is dependent on the weather. In the summer, anything that might melt in the scorching Afghani summer sun is discouraged.

But with the winter season just around the corner, many of the soldiers look forward to one of their favorite delicacies from home: chocolate.

“Everything is appreciated. It all makes a difference,� she said. “Every day they get a box, it’s just like Christmas.�

To make a monetary or dry goods donation to the soldier care package program, residents may drop off items
at the box in the Botelle School, 128 Greenwoods Road East, Norfolk, or the bin on the front porch of Jane Little-Bear’s home at 413 Route 7 in Falls Village.

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