Home News Homeless moms navigate positive futures with help from Hearts of Gold

Homeless moms navigate positive futures with help from Hearts of Gold

0


Jacqueline Brown was in a New York City shelter with her daughter in 1999 when Deborah Koenigsberger set the young mother on a life-changing trajectory through emotional, financial, professional, and life mentoring – not just money. 

Ms. Koenigsberger shepherded Ms. Brown through her GED tests and helped prepare her for a job working with homeless people. Last year, with funding from her Hearts of Gold nonprofit, Ms. Koenigsberger took the Brooklyn mother and her son on a college tour and later outfitted his dorm room in Iowa.

Why We Wrote This

A mom comfortable in her own life saw the needs of homeless moms and met them. Her nonprofit harnesses resources – big and small – to provide household basics, job training, and new confidence.

“She instilled in me that anything is possible,” says Ms. Brown, recalling the difficulty of raising her kids on her own. “She empowered me to know that if I can do it, I can be a good example for my children.”

Ms. Koenigsberger’s little-known nonprofit sponsors 15 shelters and has raised more than $20 million since launch, helping more than 36,000 shelter residents via a holistic approach that includes job training, early childhood and after-school education, babysitting, tutoring, field trips, and summer camps.  

“My goal is to help homeless moms get their shot. Lots of the families end up in shelters because they never had access to two of the most powerful game changers: opportunity and education,” Ms. Koenigsberger says. 

New York

Deborah Koenigsberger was taking her little boys to the playground one fall morning in 1994 when she stopped short, seeing a mother and her toddler sleeping in a cardboard box. A longtime New Yorker with a comfortable lifestyle, husband, connections, and a business, Ms. Koenigsberger knew she could help women like this – but didn’t know how. 

So, after speaking to a friend who volunteered with homeless single moms, Ms. Koenigsberger began advising these women on how to dress and carry themselves. That December, she shifted money from Christmas presents her sons didn’t need to provide Christmas for 135 shelter kids. She hired a Santa, catered food, and gave each child a big red bag packed with toys and a stuffed animal. Eventually, she added gifts for moms. For two years, Ms. Koenigsberger pretty much funded everything herself.  

The more involved the Manhattan mother and fashion stylist became, the more she realized how dismal life could be for homeless single moms. Many are fleeing domestic violence, slipping away from home with their children and what they could carry. Once assigned a shelter, they may find little more than four walls, beds, patchy privacy, and sometimes shared bathrooms. Worries include vermin, theft, filth, and stigmatizing conditions. Poorly paid, overwhelmed, or inexperienced case managers face burnout. Well-intended rules can complicate finding permanent housing. 

Why We Wrote This

A mom comfortable in her own life saw the needs of homeless moms and met them. Her nonprofit harnesses resources – big and small – to provide household basics, job training, and new confidence.

Within a few years, friends were donating to Ms. Koenigsberger’s Hearts of Gold, a charity that works in shelters with single moms and children. The objective: to empower women to control their futures through education and employment.

“My goal is to help homeless moms get their shot. Lots of the families end up in shelters because they never had access to two of the most powerful game changers: opportunity and education,” Ms. Koenigsberger says.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here