Wednesday, July 25, 2007

Soles4Souls in NY Times

July 20, 2007

Wayne Elsey was sitting on his couch watching television footage from the Asian tsunami when he saw an image that still haunts him -- a single shoe washing up on shore.

The shoe company executive called his friends in the industry the next day and asked for help collecting new and used shoes for those displaced by the massive wave that killed 230,000 people. All told, they sent about 250,000 pairs.

He collected nearly a million pairs the following year when hurricanes Katrina and Rita hit the Gulf Coast.

Soon afterward, Elsey left the shoe business for good and started a charity that gives shoes to people after natural disasters, but also to the homeless and other needy people. He called it Soles4Souls.

With his group, Elsey has given away nearly 2.5 million pairs of shoes, distributed in 35 countries.

''The simplicity of what we do -- we get and give shoes -- people understand it,'' said Elsey, 42.

Now the charity is trying to give away 1 million pairs of shoes in the Sudan by the end of the year. A civil war in the Darfur region of Sudan has killed more than 200,000 people and displaced millions since 2003.

In the United States, homeless advocates say people don't typically donate shoes to charity or even think about how important they are to the poor and homeless.

''There is a tremendous need for shoes,'' said Michael Stoops, acting executive director for the National Coalition for the Homeless.

''People when they donate to shelters or soup kitchens, very seldom do they donate shoes because most people don't think of shoes when they think of homelessness. But when you think about it, they're on their feet all day, walking around.''

Brenda Peoples and her 7-year-old granddaughter both got free shoes last month when Soles4Souls handed out Crocs -- those colorful, rubbery clogs -- at the girl's school in Nashville.

''It was a blessing to a lot of parents. It was wonderful, and I truly appreciate it because I'm raising her,'' Peoples said. ''It allowed me to use some money for something else.''

After the hurricanes hit, Elsey said he helped create the Web site www.katrinashoes.org. That's when Elsey -- then president of footwear company Kodiak-Terra Inc. -- realized his hobby could be a full-time job.

Soles4Souls gets its shoes from footwear companies, retailers and other groups, who donate shoes both new and used. Many are customer returns, factory defects or excess inventory.
The footwear is inspected for quality, sorted by gender and size, packed into boxes and later distributed to charities or other groups.

''At the end of the day it feels good to me to give back something I know. And I know shoes,'' Elsey said. ''It feels good to give something so simple.''

Associated Press

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