Poshard Presents Poetry to Support Saluki Food Pantry

Glenn Poshard stands at a podium in SIU’s Student Center ballrooms, reading poetry to an audience seated in rows. The event raised funds and food donations for the Saluki Food Pantry.
Glenn Poshard reads poetry during an event at SIU’s Student Center ballrooms. The program, which drew dozens of attendees, raised funds and food donations for the Saluki Food Pantry.

By Ava Steffens

Dr. Glenn Poshard, former SIU system president, Illinois senator, U.S. congressman, and longtime humanitarian, presented a poetry reading that raised funds and collected food donations to support the Saluki Food Pantry. The program featured poetry, written by both him and other authors, detailing his life and various adversities that continue to inspire him and his wife, Jo Poshard, to continue to passionately advocate for people in the Southern Illinois region.

While the presentation, titled “Life’s Beginnings and Endings” was free, dozens of attendees made donations in the form of non-perishable food products, checks, and cash to support the Saluki Food Pantry at SIU upon entry.

As part of a regional poetry series, Poshard’s event in the Student Center Ballrooms supported SIU students and families facing food insecurity and hunger.

Poshard, who grew up in a two-room house without electricity in rural southeastern Illinois, has first-hand experience with food insecurity, as detailed in his original poem “Hunger.” He said relying on the generosity of others to have basic needs met often comes with a stigma.

“I was probably eight years old when my father came home from the township to get surplus food,” Poshard said. “I knew how hard it was for him, not being able to find work because he had one arm, and the shame and judgment he felt. I know what hunger does to people, especially children.”

As an adult, Poshard served in the Korean War, working with orphaned children and deepening his commitment to helping others. After returning to the U.S., he earned three degrees at SIU Carbondale and later became SIU system president.

“The university experience is not an easy one,” he said. “I want people to understand that a little help could go a long way, especially in taking pressure off students in sustaining themselves.”

He emphasized that although his father had little to give, he always found ways to do what he could to help others. Inspired by his father’s generosity, Poshard dedicated his life to helping others. He and Jo Poshard now lead the Poshard Foundation for Abused Children at John A. Logan College in Carterville.

“Jo and I wondered how we could help. I know for me, poems were always there for me, so I put the presentation together and traveled throughout southern Illinois to raise money for food pantries,” he said. “The pantry here serves the students so well.”

About one-third of college students experience food insecurity. Since 2016, the Saluki Food Pantry has provided thousands of students and families with up to three days of food per household at no cost, helping them focus their energy on their education and their futures.

In addition to accepting donations through the Poshard poetry reading, the Saluki Food Pantry welcomes gifts made online or to be dropped off in the Student Center administrative office, located on the second floor, from weekdays between 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.

“If you want to feel good about life, be a giver,” said Poshard. “My father gave me that gift.”

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