Serving Food, Sharing Humanity: Meet Yvette, a Bread & Roses Volunteer
As St. Joseph Center recognizes Volunteer Appreciation Month, Yvette’s story highlights the power of showing up, building community and creating spaces where every person is met with warmth and dignity.
“People give money, people give food, but you also need somebody to cook it, you need somebody to serve it, you need somebody to clean up after all of that.”
For Yvette, a member of the Thursday volunteer crew at Bread & Roses Café, those words capture why volunteerism matters now more than ever.
“There’s so much need right now,” she says.
A Thursday Shift That Became a Routine
At 80 years old, Yvette has been volunteering at Bread & Roses Café for the past year and a half. What began as a one-time favor soon became a meaningful part of her weekly routine. A friend who regularly volunteered needed someone to cover a Thursday shift, so stepped in to help and never looked back.
“I came to sub and I never left,” she says with a laugh.
Yvette is no stranger to service. Over the years, she has volunteered in many ways, including supporting her children’s school and helping with Meals on Wheels. After retiring, she thought that chapter of life might be behind her. Instead, Bread & Roses Café opened a new one.

A Place That Feels Like Home
Since then, Thursdays have become something she looks forward to each week, not only because of the work itself, but because of the people who make Bread & Roses feel like home.
She describes the volunteers, chefs, kitchen staff and security team as a close-knit group, with everyone playing a part in creating a welcoming space for guests. The longtime volunteer crew brings experience, teamwork and a spirit of joy and service. The chefs and staff lead with warmth and care, while security helps everyone feel safe so volunteers can focus on serving meals and connecting with guests.
Occasionally, students from St. Joseph Center Bread & Roses Training Kitchen join the team. Yvette says they quickly embrace the same culture of care, stepping in wherever needed, noticing what needs to be done and helping without being asked.
“It takes a village,” she says. “Everybody knows their mission. Everybody knows we’re all on the same page.”

Connection, Perspective, and Joy
For Yvette, volunteering has not only been a way to give back. It has also given her something meaningful in return: connection, perspective and joy.
Over time, the experience has deepened her understanding of the challenges many unhoused neighbors face, and it has reminded her of the importance of seeing every person with compassion and humanity.
“I see them now. I see everybody,” she says.
That sense of connection is what brings her back week after week. She treasures the conversations she shares with guests, from catching up on family updates to discussing books with one regular visitor who loves to read.
Serving With Purpose
The experience is so meaningful that she often wishes she could volunteer more than once a week.
“I want to do this until I can’t move,” she says. “I think it keeps me. It’s part of my exercise too.”
As St. Joseph Center celebrates 50 years of service, Yvette hopes to see even more spaces like Bread & Roses Café in the future, where nourishment, compassion and community come together.
For Yvette, volunteering is not simply about helping others. It is also about the joy, purpose and connection that service can bring to everyone involved.
