Food Lion Feeds volunteers at local Greenville food bank
This event took place from 8 a.m. to noon at six different Food Bank Branch locations across central and eastern North Carolina, including the local Greenville branch. Volunteer Day is also a great way for Food Lion leaders and associates to come together and give back to their communities.
650 volunteers from across the state participated in the event. Their goal today was to donate over 652,000 meals across the region, completing 352 meal kits every hour.
This comes at a critical time as the number of people suffering from food insecurity in the region is over 65,000 people. This is an increase of 9,300 people since this time last year. This also includes 24,000 kids and teens under the age of 18, an increase of 4,300 kids from last year as well.
They have been doing this event since 2014 to help address these issues.
'Just wanted to inspire others through being a good human. You never know what the person beside you is going through,' Store Manager for Food Lion, Danielle Bond said.
'While many of us are fortunate, just really take time to give back to your community, and fighting food insecurity is very close to home for us,' Bond said.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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Yahoo
07-08-2025
- Yahoo
Homeowners discover suspected Nazi bunker underground with creepy message scrawled on walls: ‘Beware, the enemy is listening'
A UK couple was taken aback after discovering a World War 2-era 'Nazi bunker' underneath their home. 'It's not something you find every day!' Shaun Tullier, 35, told South West News Service while recalling the 'completely wild' discovery. The subterranean refuge was reportedly located 26 feet underground and was outfitted with bottles, water and even an escape hatch like a Bond villain's lair. He and his wife Caroline, 32, had moved into the domicile in Guernsey in 2021, unaware of the wartime shelter that lay beneath their feet. Having been born in Guernsey, Shaun had been familiar with the history of the Channel Islands, which were occupied by German forces from 1940 until their liberation in May 1945, the BBC reported. They had reportedly turned these idyllic isles into an 'impregnable fortress' in line with Adolf Hitler's orders. However, while the Brit knew that the site had been used as an enemy gun emplacement, he didn't realize it also housed a concealed bunker until he got tipped off by a woman who used to live in the house. She had reportedly contacted Shaun, who works as a carpenter, while he was hawking some chopped boards on Facebook Marketplace. 'She said, 'Oh did you find the rooms below your house?'' Shaun recounted.'I then replied, 'Oh, so there are rooms!', to which she said, 'Yes, we used to play in there when we were kids, my dad filled it in — I know they're at the front of the house.'' That's when he made the decision to uproot the driveway to try and unearth this chamber of secrets. Shaun and his friend ended up using an excavator to remove 100 tons of earth, uncovering the entrance to the underground lair. 'We kept digging down for a while and then finally, the ground just gave way and this doorway appeared,' he said, per the BBC. The space reportedly measured 17ft by 10ft and 17ft by 20ft, and featured a hallway that was 30ft by 4 feet wide. It also housed the remnants of the occupants who sheltered there, including old bottles, water, tins a tiled floor, and an emergency exit. Perhaps most notable was the chilling German phrase 'achtung feind hort mit,' which translates to 'beware, the enemy is listening.' 'You can't really put it into words,' said Tullier, who knew about the bunkers but didn't expect to find one under his home. 'I always knew about bunkers, but when Guernsey people came back to Guernsey after the war, they wanted to fill all the bunkers up,' he said. 'A lot of people still have bunkers here, but they are down the road and in gardens — not underneath the house!' The homeowner was reportedly so enamored with the discovery that he took pains to preserve the historical elements. They reportedly filled the bunker with 80s tons of concrete to encase the walls and steps, and are currently in the process of converting the space into a games room with a snooker table and a gym. The pair hopes to install the floor and finish painting the space by November. They even plan to preserve the eerie message. 'We are definitely keeping the writing — and might get someone that can calligraphy it back on, otherwise it gets lost,' said Shaun. 'Even the air getting to it has faded it a bit.' Ultimately, the Brit believes the restoration is worth it, declaring, 'It's not just rooms for us, it's a part of history.' Solve the daily Crossword


New York Post
06-08-2025
- New York Post
Homeowners discover suspected Nazi bunker underground with creepy message scrawled on walls: ‘Beware, the enemy is listening'
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Newsweek
02-07-2025
- Newsweek
Let the World Listen to Elie Wiesel
On July 2, the world will mark nine years since the passing of Professor Elie Wiesel. But this date should not be one of quiet remembrance—it should be a day of action and moral clarity. Because if Elie Wiesel were alive today, he would be anything but quiet. You may know him as the author of Night, but Professor Wiesel gave us much more than books. As a Holocaust survivor, a Nobel laureate, a relentless defender of the Jewish people, and a fierce, lifelong supporter of Israel, he gave us a blueprint for what it means to speak truth when the world prefers silence. By word and deed, he would confront rising antisemitism. He would call attention to the violent bigotry directed at Jews around the world—and the ideology that undergirds it. He did not, and would not tolerate the way anti-Israel hostility is increasingly used to dehumanize, distort, and deny Jewish identity and history. How can I be sure of what he would do today? Because he wrote and spoke about all of it in his lifetime. We still have his voice; now, it is time we use it. The late Holocaust author Elie Wiesel speaking during a meeting of Israel-bond volunteers. The late Holocaust author Elie Wiesel speaking during a meeting of Israel-bond chair of the newly established Elie Wiesel Archive and Legacy Council at The Florida Holocaust Museum, I have the profound honor of helping to steward one of the most significant collections of Wiesel's personal writings and artifacts anywhere in the world. However, our mission is not simply to preserve these materials. We must activate them to ensure Professor Wiesel's moral and intellectual legacy is not just remembered, but lived. That is why we are launching a new global tradition. Every year on July 2, we will celebrate Listening to Elie Wiesel; A Global Day of Reflection & Action. In addition to its advocacy and education work, The Florida Holocaust Museum will share resources and host programs to make this observance widely accessible in the coming years: communities, classrooms, allies, and institutions of every kind. We call on people to observe the day by engaging with Elie Wiesel's words, just as his loved ones do on his yahrzeit, the anniversary of his death in the Jewish calendar, which fell on June 21st and 22nd this year. At a time when Holocaust distortion and antisemitism surge side by side, we must anchor ourselves in Professor Wiesel's voice: unflinching, urgent, and clear. He reminded us that "not all victims were Jews, but all Jews were victims." He warned us not to equate the Holocaust with other tragedies, not out of indifference to others' suffering, but out of respect for historical truth. While he spoke out on other human rights issues, Wiesel was first and foremost a fierce advocate for his fellow Jews. He never allowed the Holocaust to be universalized or turned against Jews and would be appalled to see that happening now. He was also a steadfast supporter of Israel—not always uncritical, but unwavering in his belief that the Jewish state had the right to exist, to defend itself, and to thrive. He spoke always out of love for it, and in defense of Jewish dignity there and everywhere. Today, we see institutions from universities to Holocaust memorials defaced with slogans that erase or justify Jewish suffering. We see Holocaust distortion and inversion spreading online, weaponizing Jewish trauma against Jews themselves. And we see the silence that Professor Wiesel warned about—the silence of the bystander, the polite equivocation, the intellectualized apathy. In this moment, we need more than education. We need moral courage. And Wiesel gave us the language for both. So, on July 2, read Night, Open Heart, or any of his books or essays. Watch one of his lectures at the Elie Wiesel Archive at the 92nd Street Y, or the Elie Wiesel Memorial Lecture series at Boston University. Explore his life and works at The Florida Holocaust Museum's upcoming Wiesel Collection, the Elie Wiesel Foundation for Humanity, or the Elie Wiesel Digital Archive at Gratz College. Listen to his Nobel Prize address. Let his voice break through the noise of apathy and propaganda, reminding us all of our capacity for good. As he said in Open Heart: "I speak from experience that even in darkness, it is possible to create light and encourage compassion. There it is: I still believe in man in spite of man." On July 2, we invite the world to sit with Professor Wiesel not in mourning but in mobilization. Join us in allowing his conviction to strengthen our resolve. To understand that if we are truly listening, we cannot remain the same. Elie Wiesel may not have lived to see the latest devastating wave of antisemitism, but he did prepare us to confront it. Let July 2 be the day the world listens—and acts. When we let his words serve as our guide, he lives on through all of us. Michael A. Igel is the chair of The Florida Holocaust Museum's Elie Wiesel Archive and Legacy Council. The views expressed in this article are the writer's own.