Life changed overnight for one Texas mom when people on the internet learned she was sleeping in her car with her four kids after being evicted. After a fundraising drive surpassed its goal by tens of thousands of dollars, the mother communicated her shock and gratitude to the local news media, saying she felt “very blessed.”
Kenia Madrigal, 29, and her four children—Michael, 11; Benjamin, 8; Sarah, 3; and Sophia, 1—had been sleeping in their SUV since the hardworking mom lost her job in June 2020. She fell into rent arrears, and the family was forced to vacate their mobile home in Harris County.
“It’s hard because my daughter keeps asking me when are we going to go home,” she added, “and we don’t have a home ... It’s so hard to hold it together.”
The mom was denied state assistance. She eventually found another job paying $11.50 an hour but could not afford an apartment.
“Kenia is a hardworking, optimistic, brave mother of 4,” Monroe wrote. “In the beginning of the COVID lockdown, she was laid off ... during this time, her children’s father became more and more distant.
“These funds will go towards a safe home for Kenia and her children,” Monroe continued. “They will also fund her children’s education for this new virtual school year.”
The funding drive took off, raising over $60,000 in just 24 hours, a life-changing sum of money for the young struggling family. To date, over 2,000 people have donated.
“My goal was to get enough to get into a place,” she added, “and now I can actually give [my children] a home.”
It wasn’t just monetary donations that came in for Madrigal and her four children.
Executive director of the nonprofit Kids’ Meals Inc., Beth Braniff Harp reached out to offer food supplies. “During this pandemic, we don’t want anyone going hungry,” she said. Northwest Assistance Ministries (NAM) also came forward, wanting to connect Madrigal, and others like her, to invaluable resources.
NAM’s chief advancement officer, Brian Carr, shared, “We want to make sure that families ... get the help they need as soon as possible. We don’t want them living in their cars.”