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Some of the baskets currently in Medicine Hat and waiting to be shipped. (CHAT News Photo/Colton McKee)
Comfort and community

Volunteers needed to support grieving families after pregnancy loss

Oct 15, 2020 | 4:31 PM

MEDICINE HAT, AB – Three women in Medicine Hat have put out a call for volunteers across Alberta for the Twinkle Star Project which offers comfort to families going through one of the toughest times imaginable.

The Twinkle Star Project started in 2016 in Regina and it has travelled across Saskatchewan and now into Alberta. Due to that growth, the non-profit group decided it needed an Alberta hub. Enter Angela Stodalka and Amanda Quintin, and project founder Vanessa Braun.

“It started when our founder actually lost her second son to miscarriage and her son would sing Twinkle Twinkle Little Star to her belly,” explains Stodalka. “It’s basically a network of volunteers that knit or crochet baskets in various sizes and we distribute them to hospitals throughout the province.”

The baskets are to hold babies who have died in utero or shortly after birth when a baby’s skin is very frail, she explains.

They offer a much-needed barrier but still allow close contact between family members and the baby and they personalize and humanize an incredibly difficult and dark moment, says Stodalka.

She adds some people use the baskets for burial purposes and others keep them as a keepsake.

“It’s more so just a nice memento to let them know that someone is thinking about them and that they’re not alone,” she said.

Stodalka herself knows all too well what that feels like, and says one in four women experience the same loss.

“As someone who has been through this type of loss, I know how tough it can be to go through this and it’s definitely helpful to know there’s a community out there that’s thinking about you and that it’s very common.”

Medicine Hat is the hub Alberta city for all the baskets. Stodalka says every basket made in Alberta will be transported here to herself, Quintin and Braun, and they will package the baskets for distribution to hospitals throughout Alberta.

The website twinklestarproject.com has more information and the Twinkle Star Project Facebook page has tutorials on how to make the baskets and patterns.

“We’re looking for as many volunteers as possible because we need as many baskets as we can get to send to all the hospitals in Alberta,” says Stodalka.

The Medicine Hat & District Health Foundation has arranged to have the Saamis Tepee lit pink and blue this week for Perinatal Loss Awareness Month, which is October.

The foundation has also organized a Walk to Remember on Sunday at Police Point Park, where people can walk at their leisure from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. You can also have an “In Memory” sign made for the park by registering in advance.