For the past 20 years, Vonda Knipfel has worked as the suppertime cook at The Salvation Army’s Waterston Centre in Regina. It is a job she loves that has helped bring stability to her life. However, the journey to get there was not an easy one.

Knipfel is a survivor of the ’60s Scoop, a period in which a series of government policies allowed authorities to remove Indigenous children from their families and place them in foster care or adopt them out to non-Indigenous families. Despite the uphill battle she had faced since childhood, Knipfel always showed resilience.

Paying It Forward

In the fall of 2003, as a single mother of four children, Knipfel became unemployed. While looking for a job, she and her children started volunteering with The Salvation Army. Initially, the purpose was to keep her pre-teens off the streets.

“I lived only five blocks away from The Salvation Army. It was a safe place for my three daughters to go and volunteer,” says Knipfel.

The Salvation Army had been present in Knipfel’s life before that. In the 1990s, the Army provided Christmas hampers for her children. It was something her family was always thankful for.

“My kids were absolutely thrilled and ever grateful for everything that we received. The Army did a lot for my family during Christmas,” she says.

New Opportunities

In January 2004, while volunteering, Knipfel was asked by a member of The Salvation Army if she knew how to cook. She said yes, and within a day she was hired as a cook at the Waterston Centre, a transitional shelter for men. “I was doing volunteer work around the city trying to find work. This opportunity landed on my lap,” she remembers.

Since then, Knipfel has enjoyed every bit of her job. She tries to make meals as interesting and delightful as she can for the 50 to 60 residents she serves daily.

“There are so many people here with interesting stories. They are all here for different reasons. Whether it be addiction or mental health, they all have their own stories. I like to listen and be supportive,” she says. “They tell me a little bit every day. They trust me.”

A Grateful Survivor

Today, Knipfel looks back and reflects on how this opportunity with The Salvation Army changed her life. “The Salvation Army has been a constant in my life since the 1990s. They had a huge impact. They pretty much took me out of poverty,” she shares. “I bought a house recently—a five-bedroom house big enough to move my daughter and her kids in.”

Looking forward, Knipfel hopes to continue to work for The Salvation Army until she retires. Currently, she is also working on a personal memoir she hopes to publish, in which she describes her journey as a Scoop survivor.

Comment

On Thursday, October 24, 2024, Dr. Sunday Akin Olukoju said:

What a heart-lifting story of survival, strength, and salvation! Thank you for sharing your story of selflessness and striving. Thank you for producing perseverance from suffering, and character from persevering, and hope that never disappoints from your character formation according Brother Paul's submission in Romans 5:3-5.

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