- Copper Hills High School teacher Rickee Stewart said she was shocked when she found more than 100 homeless students attend the school in West Jordan, Utah
- ‘One of my students walked up very quietly and said, ‘So, my mom wants to know how I can actually get some of that food,’ ‘ Stewart said
- Wedding invitations included a second insert card asking guests to donate to Donors Choose fund that gives coats and tents for students
- Donations have been pouring in from people not on the guest list – and people who don’t even live in Utah like from New York and California
A Utah high school teacher is getting married next month.
But instead of registering for a blender or stemware, she’s asking for shoes and backpacks to give homeless children at her school.
Copper Hills High School teacher Rickee Stewart said she was shocked when she found out more than 100 homeless students attend her school in West Jordan, Utah.
She learned about the homeless students after the school set up a foot pantry.
‘One of my students walked up very quietly and said, ‘So, my mom wants to know how I can actually get some of that food,’ ‘ Stewart said.
‘It’s very real.’
Copper Hills High School teacher Rickee Stewart said she was shocked when she found more than 100 homeless students attend the school in West Jordan, Utah
‘One of my students walked up very quietly and said, ‘So, my mom wants to know how I can actually get some of that food,’ ‘ Stewart said
This realization prompted Stewart to tell her wedding guests they can donate to her homeless student project in lieu of gifts.
‘I registered for tennis shoes and Converse and backpacks and winter coats for the homeless kids at our school,’ she said to KSL-TV.
Her wedding invitations included a second insert card asking guests to donate to a Donors Choose fund that provides coats and tents for students throughout the school district.
Wedding invitations included a second insert card asking guests to donate to Donors Choose fund that gives coats and tents for students. Donations have been pouring in from people not on the guest list – and people who don’t even live in Utah like from New York and California
Donations have now been pouring in from people not even on her guest list.
People from out of state are even sending in gifts.
‘It’s not me. It’s pure kindness of strangers,’ Stewart said.
It has inspired her to work food bank donations into her classroom curriculum, she said.
‘My hope is that we get to not only have this amazing wedding and start our lives together, but that we are able to put some warmth on all of those kids,’ she said.