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Korean helps homeless at Thanksgiving

United Methodist News Service
NASHVILLE, Tenn.—Korean United Methodist Sam Lee is living the American dream.
He came to the United States five years ago from Seoul, South Korea, to study at Vanderbilt University’s Owen Graduate School of Management. He now owns Khan’s Mongolian BBQ in downtown Nashville.
More than being a successful businessman, he is an example of how one person can make a difference in the lives of hundreds of people in need—especially at Thanksgiving.
Since his first day in business, Lee has been helping the city’s less fortunate.
“The first customer was homeless, and he asked me, ‘Could you give me a cup of coffee?’” Lee recalled. “At the time, I worried about my business so I asked him, ‘This is my first day of business. Please go somewhere else.’”
That encounter and others with homeless men and women—who asked for food or rummaged through the restaurant garbage—stayed with Lee.
A few months after his business opened, he joined a Bible study group at Nashville Korean UMC. He was inspired by the story of Jesus washing the feet of his disciples.
“He (Jesus) said, ‘You should do like I do,’” Lee said.
On a rainy Friday last year, Lee cooked meals and took them to a downtown park where homeless people gather. He prepared 20 servings for the people in the park.
“I told them, ‘Jesus loves you.’” Lee said.
He also wrote his message on each foam takeout box, along with the reference, “John 3:16.”
Every Friday for months, Lee would take his boxed meals to the park until the crowd he served grew too big for one man to manage.
“There is more and more people coming, so there is lots of mess in (the) park,” Lee said. “So maybe residents near park, they don’t like. So the police come in there and talk about the problem.”
Lee needed to find a better place to feed his new friends. He turned to his church and Pastor Paul Kang for help.
“We have a young men’s group at our church,” Kang said. “As soon as they found out he was doing this, they jumped in and volunteered.”
Kang’s church partnered with McKendree UMC, a downtown congregation with cafeteria facilities to accommodate hundreds.
“We’ve got a big building here, and we don’t mind sharing it,” McKendree Pastor Tom Halliburton said. “We are excited to be a part of what God wants to do down here.”
Lee now finds he can serve more than 100 with the help of the two churches. And each Thursday, church members sit down to share dinner with their homeless friends.
Homeless advocate Steve Reiter of Nashville said a little food could conquer many problems.
“If people are fed, they are less likely to commit a crime,” Reiter said. “If people are desperate and hungry, they make poor decisions.”
And then there is food for the soul. As much as they appreciate the meal, men and women at the dinners said they looked forward to the company and friendship of the church members, who always seemed willing to listen.
Robert Smith, homeless for almost seven months now, comes to the program every week.
“If you let them know what you need and what’s going on in your life, they will try and help you out as much as they can,” he said.
Lee cooks for this crowd every Thursday, and Thanksgiving Day will be no different except the food will be extra special.
“We plan to serve some traditional Korean food,” Lee said.
Some of the homeless people said they have chosen life on the street because relationships at home were strained. Many felt they had no one they could go home to.
Cole Barnes said he no longer speaks to his family. He plans to be at McKendree for the holiday meal. It means a lot to Barnes that Lee and his friends will spend their Thanksgiving there, too.