AIRLINE LAYOFF SURVIVORS SAY THEY'LL REALLY MISS CHURCH'S SUPPORT CENTER
Aloha Tuesdays coming to end
Photo gallery: ShareAloha Tuesdays ending |
By Dan Nakaso
Advertiser Staff Writer
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HALAWA — Six months of comfort food, much-needed back rubs, resume-writing advice and donated clothes for job interviews will end Tuesday with the final weekly gathering of former Aloha Airlines employees.
Since April, survivors of what's been called Hawai'i's worst mass layoff could always look forward to Tuesdays at Wellspring Covenant Church. They could reunite with old coworkers, have a good cry over the loss of their beloved airline and get a couple of bags of donated groceries to help them through unemployment.
The church has offered to continue hosting the weekly gatherings. And companies and strangers are still donating everything from baby wipes to platters of food to help the Aloha employees each week.
But former Aloha flight attendant Valerie Sugawa, who created the weekly event, said the two dozen volunteers who have been helping the Aloha workers "needed to see an end."
So former flight attendant Lyn Correa stood in a tiny knot of former colleagues this past Tuesday inside Wellspring's sanctuary — next to a neat rack of donated business clothes — and contemplated a future without Tuesdays at the church.
She looked around at a scene that included people bringing fresh desserts and steaming trays of stew and beef short ribs — and Sugawa cutting hair for free — and said, "We're going to have to move from withdrawal from Aloha Airlines to withdrawal from this. Everybody's saying, 'I can't believe it's going to be the last one.' It's really sad. How are you going to get through this by yourself?"
But former flight attendant Angel Pablo prefers to believe that something positive will come next.
Pablo and his wife, Bernice, were in the same Aloha flight attendant class 19 years ago and now have a 14-month-old daughter, Anela, as they struggle to find good-paying jobs in a depressed Hawai'i economy.
"It is sad," Angel said. "This has been a place where people can come and bear one another's burdens. But there are a lot of positive things that can come out of sadness."
Wellspring was happy to host the Tuesday events when church members Valerie and David Sugawa came up with the idea after Aloha shuttered its passenger service in April.
David created a Web site — www.sharealohahawaii.org — to coordinate donations to Aloha workers who could use them.
Valerie had left Aloha a year before the shutdown put 1,900 of her former colleagues out of work.
"She felt really worried by what was happening with the Aloha employees," said Dale Vallejo-Sanderson, Wellspring's senior pastor. "It started with her wanting to give free haircuts. Now there are massages, there's shave ice, there's all kinds of food."
Within a couple of weeks, Aloha workers who were so depressed that they could not leave their homes managed to show up at Wellspring "and we felt we needed to keep it going," Vallejo-Sanderson said.
Week after week, month after month, volunteers like Chad Imano would come. He gave up his Tuesdays as a financial manager to come to his church and provide free massages.
The return for volunteers has been a never-ending stream of hugs and thank-you's.
"They say, 'You've been here every week for us,'" Vallejo-Sanderson said. "'Thank you for listening. Thank you for letting us cry on your shoulder.' It's been nothing but gratitude. And it's just moved me and touched me how much they care for their Aloha family."
On a wall of the church's sanctuary sits notes from church members about what Wellspring means to them. And it includes an anonymous note from a former Aloha employee.
"I first came to Wellsprings on Tuesday with ShareAloha and found the people to be so warm and caring," the note reads. "My husband and I felt comfortable right away. We've been looking for a church that would be a good fit for us and it looks like we've found it."
Other former Aloha workers have also become part of Wellspring's congregation, Vallejo-Sanderson said.
But that wasn't the point of creating the Tuesday events.
"We just wanted to help them transition to the next season of their life," Vallejo-Sanderson said.
It will be hard, but it is time for Valerie Sugawa's former colleagues to move on, she said.
The tears will flow a little harder on the final Tuesday. And she has made little gifts for each person who has shown up over the last six months to help them remember their Tuesdays at Wellspring — a gift that she wanted to keep a surprise until the final gathering.
But presents really won't be necessary.
No one is soon going to forget what she created.
Former flight attendant Nitima Nedorolik watched Sugawa give yet another free haircut Tuesday at the church and said, "she's been an angel. Simply an angel."
Reach Dan Nakaso at dnakaso@honoluluadvertiser.com.