Learning about the Hope House program in the Austin region of Texas is an eye-opening and heartwarming experience. Nina’s Hope House is just one of the program’s residential group homes. Of the four, this one provides permanent housing and care for profoundly intellectually disabled adults. Hope Houses are safe havens with 24-hour supervision and living assistance for childhood through adulthood, with residents who live there “for as long as it takes.” Jared Sudekum is the HCS Director, a passionate, grateful and caring individual who loves creating environments that nurture, cheer and teach the special residents here.

A raised garden bed with stone walls

Many wooden raised garden beds in a fenced in area

A small raised bed with plants growing in it

A fenced in garden

A History of Compassion

In 1966 Ms. Rose McGarrigle relocated to Austin, Texas, her origins in pre-war Berlin. She recognized the desperate need for care and housing for children with severe physical and mental disabilities. Often victims of neglect and isolation, children in the Austin area were welcomed into her private home where she provided support, comfort and the necessities of daily life. Not all children had the means to get to her home, so Rose would pick them up in her red VW bus. In 1976 when her home was no longer large enough to house all her residents, with donated land and funding from the state of Texas, the first Hope House was constructed. Most of the adult residents at Hope House today were “Rose’s children” in 1967.

The Gardens

The Hope House facilities’ adjacent gardens have been resurfaced with fresh soil and are planted with crops that can thrive in this warm region. This is not a region where pumpkins or sweet corn can thrive, but local nurseries donate a range of vegetable plants and flowers. Many of the residents are able to hold a watering hose and pick vegetables; some can sow seeds. At harvest time, residents are often surprised at the tasty and colorful tomatoes and cucumbers that they’ve watered over the weeks. All is organic, the seeds are collected, and the produce goes, primarily, to the residents. Jared is a great fan of the shishito peppers. There is also a particular interest in growing luffa, which provides tactile stimulation when residents peel it, play with it and paint it.

The gardens give the residents creative things to see and do, and they enjoy the bright colors. Jared has also created a successful herb garden and a flourishing butterfly garden, including esperanza, columbine, milkweed and bluebonnets. Jared has also planted pomegranates and trees and foresees chickens and rabbits on the property soon.

Rose’s Dreams Come True

The Hope House residential facilities now consist of four group homes – three in operation at this writing and a fourth underway. The new building will be used initially for the emergency placement of kids and will eventually be turned into a day care and commercial kitchen. The kitchen will allow the program to prepare and sell what they raise in the gardens. Building, painting and labor is all done on a volunteer basis and much of the materials needed are donated by the community and neighboring agencies. The program does a bit of fund raising through sales of some of the residents’ artwork at the local market.

By next summer the resident population here is expected to grow to 28. They will be at capacity around 45. Jared says there is such a need here, and in this time it’s difficult to hire staff. Most of Hope Houses’ residents have Medicaid or Medicare, but it takes a village to operate a program like this, and Jared Sudekum’s selfless energy and compassion is exactly what’s needed in a setting like this one. Rose McGarrigle’s last words were a request that her “children” be cared for.

You can donate to Hope House in many ways. They maintain an Amazon wishlist of supplies and household items necessary to keep things running smoothly.

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