NDG Food Depot helps many people in many ways - Action News
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Montreal

NDG Food Depot helps many people in many ways

Daybreak's Shari Okeke meets with various Montrealers to find out why they turned to the NDG Food Depot and exactly how the Depot is helping them.

Daybreak's Shari Okeke finds out who the NDG Food Depot is helping and how

Montrealers who use the NDG Food Depot have access to a large variety of food, including fresh produce. (Jason Boychuk/CBC)

CBC Montreal raised over $44,000for theNDG Food Depot inour annual charitydrive.

Daybreak's Shari Okeke sat down with several Montrealers who say the Depot has made a real difference in their lives.

'I feelblessed'

Eleonora Zawislak says there's no shame in seeking help when you need it. She turned to the NDG Food Depot after losing her job a few years ago. "I collected unemployment but then I used up my savings...I said, 'Oh my God so I need a little bit of help,'" she said. (Shari Okeke/CBC)

Eleonora Zawislak says she first came to the NDG Food Depot when she lost her job beforebecoming eligible for a pension. She ran out of her savings and needed help accessing food. Now she volunteers at the Depot and is a regular participant in community kitchen workshops, where she learns new recipes that she loves to make for her 90-year-old mother.

"There's many people, in different levels [of need,] thatneed a helping hand and I feel blessed coming here," Zawislak said.

'Everyone was accepting me'

Analt Rodriguez was shy to admit she needed help from the Depot when she arrived in Montreal from Mexico a year and a half ago. Now she's employed by the Depot, learning new recipes in cooking workshops and still shopping at the Depot's market. "I can even buy organic eggs," she said. (Melinda Dalton/CBC)

Analt Rodriguez is a single mother of three daughterswho came to Canada from Mexico about a year and a half ago. Fruits and vegetables were so expensive she nearly had to cut them out of her dietcompletely. Then she and her kids started getting sick. So despite feeling embarrassed, she turned to the NDG Food Depot for help and was pleasantly surprised by the experience.

"Once I was there, everybody was accepting me and so respectful and so nice," said Rodriguez, who now works at the NDG Food Depot at the reception desk as well as at the Depot's Good Food Market on Fridays.

She also takes part in cooking workshops and now loves making recipes she never imagined she could cook.

"I dare to buy different ingredients that normally I wouldn't consider," she said.

Shari Okeke brings us the stories of Montrealers who use the NDG Food Depot, a food bank that has also become a community institution.