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Jenna Kraynak works on a wheelchair ramp for a Frederick County family at Arlington Diocese's WorkCamp.
photos by Amy Flowers Umble/THE FREE LANCE-STAR

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Sharing faith, helping others
Catholic teens from the Fredericksburg area and Northern Virginia fix 100 houses in one week near Winchester

Date published: 6/27/2009

BY AMY FLOWERS UMBLE

WINCHESTER

--Some 500 Catholic youth spent this week performing hard labor in the summer sun.

And while WorkCamp might sound like the ideal name for a gulag, there was no penance involved.

"I always get questions like, 'What did these kids do wrong?' like it's a chain gang or something," said Kevin Bohli, director of the Arlington Diocese's annual WorkCamp. "But, actually, these kids want to be here. They pay to be here and they prepare all year for this."

High-school-age youth from all over the Arlington Diocese of the Catholic Church--including teens from Fredericksburg, Spotsylvania and Stafford--participate in the annual camp.

This year, the 500 teens worked on 100 houses in the Winchester area.

The camp always picks an area within the diocese, "so youth learn charity begins at home," Bohli said. The diocese stretches from Northern Virginia to Spotsylvania County and west to Shenandoah County.

The teens attend a monthly class and raise $450 each for the privilege of hammering nails, mixing cement, fixing roofs and painting during one week of the summer.

"Every year, the whole time before WorkCamp, I think of what I could be doing that week: going to the pool, hanging out with my friends, watching movies, sleeping in," said Kim Collins, an 18-year old from Alexandria who just finished her third stint at camp. "But as soon as I get in the parking lot with my friends from the parish, I think, 'Yeah, this is why I do it.'"

Collins loves hanging out with friends who share her faith. But she also enjoys the daily 7 a.m. Mass, the hours spent fixing houses and the evening worship services.

"It's a great balance between nurturing my faith and helping others," she said.

The weeklong mission and worship camp started in 1989 with 15 youths. It now has a waiting list, said Bohli, who directs the program for the Arlington Diocese.

But with 500 youth and 300 adult volunteers, the program couldn't get any bigger. The 800 Catholics barely fit into the auditorium of Millbrook High School in Frederick County.

WorkCamp typically takes over a local high school as its base, using classrooms as dorm rooms, auditoriums as chapels and cafeterias for dining halls.


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Date published: 6/27/2009



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