The March 2006 Edition of Street Spirit

A publication of the American Friends Service Committee

 
 

National AFSC AFSC Economic Justice BOSS Website

 

 

In this issue:

Epidemic of Hate Crimes in U.S.

Radical Dream of Economic Rights

Bush's Budget Harms the Poor

Coretta Scott King's Fight for Equality

Disabled Tenant Faces Eviction in Marin County

Bob Mills: An Activist for the Long Haul

"Song of the Magpie": A Review

How Journalists Sanitize Deaths and Executions

"Ten Minutes, Then Jail" in Santa Cruz

Artists Help Homeless Children

"Warmth in Giving": Art of Elizabeth King

A New Book of Street Spirit Poetry

Homeless Youth Learns Empathy on the Streets

U.S. Is Truly an Orwellian Society

Stories and Fables from the Streets

Homelessness and Survival

Poor Leonard's Almanack: On Art and Artists

March Poetry of the Streets


ARCHIVES

February 2006

January 2006

November 2005

October 2005

September 2005

August 2005

July 2005

June 2005

May 2005

April 2005

March 2005

February 2005

 

 

 


Street Spirit is published by American Friends Service Committee.

All works are copyrighted by the authors.

The views expressed in Street Spirit are those of the individual authors alone, and not necessarily that of the American Friends Service Committee.

Survival on the Streets

New Ways to Help Homeless People Survive

by Joseph McCord

Like most people who live in the Bay Area, I am appalled by the epidemic of homelessness, and want to do something about it. I buy Street Spirit and donate money from time to time, but I know that that only helps a little. I'd like to do more. It's hard for me to stop thinking about homeless people because I am only one step removed from their plight. If I weren't receiving disability checks, I would just about be homeless myself.

I've been wracking my brains to come up with some new ideas for homeless people. Here they are, free of charge!

1. Shake hands with the homeless
Homeless people face so many obstacles in overcoming their condition. Some are financial - getting enough money to eat and buy clothes -- and some are social. I think the thing that is most heartbreaking to me about walking down the street on an ordinary day is passing by people who seem forlorn, and knowing that I cannot, on the majority of occasions, do anything to help.

It seems like no matter what people feel about the homeless, how badly they want to help them or how guilty they feel, they avoid them like the plague, for the most part. I include myself in this, most of the time. Homeless people are perceived as being wretched and miserable, and as wanting money. They are perceived as interlopers, not as neighbors.

This creates a big, big problem -- bigger in some ways than the mere fact of not having a roof over one's head. It turns homeless people into a permanent underclass. It induces callousness in people who would otherwise be warmhearted: If I can't even help out the guy who's stranded on the street corner, what on earth can I do to alleviate misery in the world I live in?

Homeless people are treated as if they had bubbles or invisible barriers around them that keep most people away from them most of the time. Renaissance Faires and small-town organizations often have booths offering passers-by the opportunity to kiss someone or knock someone into a dunking pool for $5 or $10. Why not set up a "Shake Hands with the Homeless" booth, offering local residents the opportunity to contribute a small amount to a homeless person, and at the same cross those social boundaries by shaking their hand and having a short conversation?

2. Jobs for homeless people
In some cases, there are jobs that homeless people could do which would be profitable to them. Some people who happen to be on the street, far from being foolish or deranged, are full of wisdom and life experiences. Some of them would make excellent counselors, despite or even because of their lack of "formal" education.

If they were given a short education in peer counseling and a place to work from, they could offer counseling services to the public for a minimal fee or a small donation. People who could not otherwise afford professional counseling would benefit from this, and so would the homeless counselors. For some of them, it might even be an entree into a permanent profession!

3. Donate time and energy

Lots of people would be willing to donate some time and energy to helping homeless people; they just don't want their lives to be consumed by it, and they're unsure as to where to draw the line. If 30 people in the same area each volunteered to house one homeless person one day per month, that would provide complete temporary shelter for one person.

A few hundred once-a-month volunteers in the Berkeley area could reasonably house a sizeable portion of the homeless people here. This sort of ongoing contact with average citizens would help homeless people to develop a greater sense of belonging in their own community, and more confidence in their ability to find a more permanent place for themselves in society. A program like this, if it were well administered, would have the added benefit of allowing the tiny minority of homeless people who are genuinely difficult to get along with to be weeded out of the program.

There are tons of people who would gladly contribute their time and resources in this way -- they just don't want to be stuck housing a homeless person permanently! At a time when so many homeless people can't even find a place in a shelter, this would make a huge difference in many people's lives.

It's something that ordinary people could do that would have far greater immediate impact than volunteer work building houses. It would help homeless people to feel more human and more included, and help a lot of the rest of us to actually live our own ethics in the community! All it needs is somebody who is better at this sort of thing than I am to organize it!


Legalize Nice, Dry Places

by Perfesser Mark Creek-Water

El Camino Real--The Royal Road-is the oldest road in the area. Before it was a six-lane highway for motor vehicles, it was a dirt road for horses and wagons. Before then, it was a mere trail for two-legged and four-legged walkers.

There is a little town called Belmont approximately halfway between San Francisco and San Jose. At the southeast end of the Belmont train station, Ralston Avenue passes under the train tracks. There is a perfect place for homeless and/or houseless folks to sleep at night.

It's nice and dry. It's amazing, almost as if the folks who built this underpass might have designed it to shelter and comfort homeless and/or houseless folks, although I reckon they did not. Imagine: It's night time, wintertime, cold and wet, rain is falling, and you're outside, out of doors, looking for a dry place to sleep...

Me?? I've been houseless during many of the past 20 years. Like a carpenter with 20 years experience, I'm getting pretty good at being houseless, so I'm okay out here. But what about you?? What if you suddenly lose your house or apartment and become a street urchin? Or perhaps this might happen to a son or daughter or niece or nephew. What if, during a wet-weather, rainy, stormy, long night in the Northern California winter, they might want to sleep in that nice, dry place by Ralston Avenue and El Camino Real? And then local police might come and chase them away...

Seriously, folks, it might happen to you, or to a loved one. So here is my proposal: Enact local laws to allow homeless and/or houseless folks to sleep at designated "nice, dry places," like this one. Allow local police to patrol these nice, dry places as they patrol other places.

If somebody is drunk and disorderly, then he or she may be arrested. If they cause no problems, then they might be allowed to sleep there nicely and dryly, in comfort, without any after-midnight police raids, and without any hassle and harass scenarios. Okay?


STREET SPIRIT
1515 Webster St, #303
Oakland, CA 94612Phone: (510) 238-8080, ext. 303

E-mail: Spirit

© 2002-2005 STREET SPIRIT. All rights reserved.

Published by American Friends Service Committee

Editor and Web Design: Terry Messman