Well said Gil!
Back in '93 I got married and we had our son in '94. I worked at a local Fox TV station barely making 15k and my wife worked at Bell's at the mall in Longview, Texas (making much less). We wanted to get out of our apartment but buying a home really wasn't in the cards - heck getting out of the apartment into a renal house was going to be a challenge. My Mom pushed us to apply for a home through Habitat for Humanity, which I generally dismissed as what's the point. This is where Habitat for Humanity has a older home for a needy family but you have to put in "Sweat Equity" in rebuilding the home. Then you end up with a very reasonable mortgage that is near or below what you are currently paying for rent.
Some how with 1,000s of applicant entries from the Greater East Texas area my little family was selected for a home for that cycle. We worked our asses off. Weekends, holidays, after work, any spare time found in our lives. When some person/group was coming to volunteer / work on the house, I dropped everything and we showed up. The house was tiny, ancient, but on a corner large lot and had a bit of "character".
I'd say we got to about 75% complete and my fortunes changed - I got offered a job in Austin, Texas that more than doubled my salary. Which lead me to be able to build & buy my home in Kyle, Texas that I have had since 2000. While in the end we didn't move into that home, getting selected & working on that little house is a time I'll never forget, ever. That opportunity never would have happened with out Jimmy Carter. Truly RIP President Carter, the world is lesser without you here but hopefully your organizations will live on.
In closing, to this day when we think back or speak about that little house in Longview, Texas, we refer to it as the "Jimmy Carter House".