Meet the Mom Who’s Throwing Birthday Parties for Kids in Homeless Shelters Across the Country
Paige Chenault, the founder of The
Birthday Party Project, was recently honored by Toyota’s Mothers of
Invention. The campaign celebrates women who are driving positive change
in the world through innovation, entrepreneurship and invention.
01/23/2019 — A mom from Texas is being celebrated for her efforts to celebrate kids all over the country. Back in 2012, Paige Chenault founded The Birthday Party Project, a non-profit that throws birthday parties for children in homeless shelters. And this year, she was named one of Toyota’s Mothers of Invention. The automaker partners with Women in the World (WITW) to shine a spotlight on and honor female visionaries with the most innovative solutions to today’s most pressing issues around the world.
The path that lead Chenault to creating The Birthday Party Project
was clearly one filled with ingenuity—and heart. The former wedding and
event planner was pregnant with her first child in 2008 and began
thinking about the birthday parties she would throw her daughter. “I was
flipping through Parents magazine, actually, and reading an
article about kids’ birthday parties,” Chenault tells Parents.com. “This
is before Pinterest, of course, and seeing these beautiful images, I
was really excited bout how I could celebrate her.”
Moments later, she was reading TIME. “And the first story
that I opened to featured a little boy in Haiti and he had no shirt on,
no shoes on his feet, sunken eyes, a bloated belly, and I had this
overwhelming feeling, and all I could think was, ‘What about him?’ In
this moment, I literally had a fire in my belly, a punch in my gut. I
was crying hysterically on an airplane, and I remember coming home to my
husband, [and] I just said, ‘I feel like I should be celebrating
children who might not otherwise feel celebrated and using all the
resources we have to do this.’”
Although she was driven to help children all over the globe, she
realized that there were children living in her own city who she could
ask that same question of: “What about them?” It was then that she first
started volunteering at a homeless shelter in Dallas and throwing
monthly birthday parties for the kids there.
During that first party, Chenault says she stood in the corner of the
room, watching the event unfold and realized it was about so much more
than just a birthday celebration. “This is about connection, unity,” she
says. “I realized we were onto something great.” Underlining that
realization: An 11-year-old boy approached her and said, “Thank you, Ms.
Paige. This is the first birthday party I’ve ever had.”
Now, The Birthday Party Project brings parties to homeless shelters every month in 15 cities, including Dallas, Houston, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Chicago, New York, and Washington, DC. They’ve partnered with local shelters and agencies in these cities, like A Safe Haven in Chicago and the Salvation Army in Austin.
“I’m so proud of grassroots efforts, and I think that is what’s so
powerful about The Birthday Party Project,” Chenault says. “From the
beginning, we just used the resources we had at our disposal. Truly,
people just rallied around this idea and showed up ready to celebrate
kids.”
Chenault’s mission is no doubt one that’s worthy of the accolades it
has received, like the driving solutions grant from Toyota’s Mothers of
Invention.
That reward is sure to only benefit The Birthday Party Project’s heartwarming cause: to make every child feel like they matter and to be celebrated.