Groups at HI-Boston
Community service for groups
It is the mission of Hostelling International to promote peace
and international understanding through facilitating travel
and interaction between diverse peoples. We are very proud of
the depth of our relationships and the level of commitment that
we have developed between our hostel (volunteers and staff),
our guests (individuals and groups) and our neighbors in the
community.
For groups, a good service learning project can make the difference
between merely visiting Boston and making a connection with
the community. We can set you up to work with a quality volunteer
organization for a few hours or for a week, as the main focus
of your trip or as a small but valuable component. Service learning
projects are an excellent way to get more out of your visit
to Boston, to get to meet local people and to have an experience
that will stay with you after you depart.
We also have several specific discount programs for groups
who would like to focus on the service aspect of their visit
to Boston. Please click on the links for more details.
Wintertime discount program
Alternative Spring Break
Here are some of the community service organizations with whom
we have worked in the past, and who we are proud to say that
we will work with again in the future. We are constantly expanding
our community involvement, so if your particular interest in
not represented here, we would still be happy to make arrangements
for you.
Greater Boston Food Bank: (http://www.gbfb.org/)
The Food Bank annually distributes 13 million pounds of food
to a network of more than 900 member feeding programs (including
soup kitchens, food pantries and homeless shelters) throughout
the nine counties in eastern Massachusetts. We are also running
a 50% discount program specifically designed to provide volunteers
with the opportunity to work with this wonderful (and very necessary)
service organization.
Rosie’s Place: (http://www.rosies.org/)
Rosie's Place was founded in 1974, when Boston activist Kip
Tiernan saw that women were disguising themselves as men in
order to seek shelter. Through the years Rosie's Place has evolved
from simply providing a place to sleep to offering solutions,
both immediate and long term. Among their programs are lunch
and dinner every day; emergency shelter; permanent housing;
advocacy; clothing; a food pantry; a food cooperative; job training
and more.
Haley House: (http://www.haleyhouse.org/)
The Haley House uses a multi-faceted, entirely volunteer approach
that is based on “the personalist tradition of the Catholic
Worker Movement.”. Their facilities include; a Soup Kitchen,
an organic farm, homeless and low-income housing, and a bakery
that provides valuable job training along with their delicious
pastries.
Community Servings: (http://www.servings.org/)
Community Servings is greater Boston's meals program for people
ill with AIDS. They deliver free, hot, nutritious meals to men,
women, and children infected with or affected by the disease.
With the help of hundreds of volunteers, they prepare and deliver
3,500 lunches and dinners each week to the 700 households, bringing
with them a message of compassion and love.
Morville House: Morville House is home to
a diverse group of elderly people who are eager to share stories
about their lives and to hear about what is going on in the
lives of young people today. The Boston Hostel has had a relationship
with the House and its residents for years, and our staff and
volunteers bring hostel guests ( and food, of course) over for
Thanksgiving every year. But any time is a good time to bring
some snacks and spend some time chatting.
Project Hip-Hop: (http://www.aclu-mass.org/youth/hiphop.html)
“Project HIP-HOP (Highways into the Past: History, Organizing
& Power) uses the history of resistance to racism and injustice
to empower young people to recognize themselves as agents of
social change.” They operate on many different fronts,
including an annual trip to the South that retraces seminal
civil-rights moments and utilizes Hostelling International as
a resource for the journey.
Women’s Lunch Place: (http://www.womenslunchplace.org/)
The Women’s Lunch Place summarizes their services as "
food, friendship, resources, and advocacy for women who are
poor and homeless ". They offer a self-serve breakfast
buffet all morning and a hot homemade lunch, plus shower and
laundry facilities, a quiet room to sit and read, a nap room,
a children's room, and an advocacy room with a telephone, resource
guides, and a typewriter.
Pine Street Inn: (http://www.pinestreetinn.org/)
For more than thirty years, Pine Street staff, donors, and volunteers
have worked together to meet guests' basic needs: a safe place
to sleep, nourishing meals, and clean clothes. Today there are
locations in Dorchester and downtown Boston, and both are always
looking for volunteer groups to serve breakfast and dinner.
Project Bread: (http://www.projectbread.org/)
Project Bread's self-described mission is to “alleviate,
prevent, and ultimately end hunger in Massachusetts” through
providing emergency food, advocating for the hungry, educating
the public, and facilitating research into solutions.
Habitat for Humanity: (http://www.habitatboston.org/)
On-site construction work is the most popular of Habitat’s
volunteer opportunities. They make every effort to incorporate
all willing volunteers regardless of skill level.
Group information/reservation request.