| By Gretchen Keiser
A Houston, Texas initiative on behalf of the homeless is being tried in the
archdiocese of Atlanta, and the wider metropolitan Atlanta interfaith
community.
For several years, the Houston religious community has assigned one weekend
as a time to focus on the homeless and also to sponsor a collection to be used
for local shelters, housing initiatives, preventive programs and education on
the topic. Their second collection raised $1.2 million last year for
Houstons homeless programs.
This year, the metropolitan Atlanta religious community Christian,
Jewish and Muslim is trying the same approach, both to raise
consciousness among its congregations and to aid the many church-sponsored
initiatives in metropolitan counties already being undertaken for the homeless,
and, perhaps, to fund a few more.
The archdiocese of Atlanta is an active participant in this precedent
setting endeavor, which is being called the Community Appeal To Address
Homelessness.
Archbishop Eugene A. Marino, SSJ, is one of 14 co-chairs of the appeal,
along with the Episcopal bishop of Atlanta, Methodist, African Methodist,
Episcopal and Lutheran bishops, and representatives of Georgia Baptist
Convention, the Presbyterian Church, the Jewish community, the Greek Orthodox,
United Church of Christ, Assemblies of God and Church of God.
Steering committee members include Father John Adamski, Father Henry Gracz
and Father Richard Kieran, and Catholic Social Services executive director
Steve Brazen.
In the archdiocese, the first weekend in February, Feb. 3 and 4, is the time
when the topics of homelessness is to be addressed and the collection to be
taken.
Funds raised in parishes will be given to the Community Appeal, as will
collections raised in other participating houses of worship. An allocations
subcommittee, which includes Father Adamski, pastor of the Shrine of the
Immaculate Conception, will recommend how the funds should be allocated and
funds will be used for local projects to help the homeless, hence 100 percent
of administrative expenses is being covered by the United Way. The funds are to
be distributed in April.
Father Adamski, whose parish hosts the only Catholic night shelter in the
archdiocese, said he hopes the appeal will be a consciousness-raising
issue about the severe needs of the homeless and the faith imperative to
reach out to them.
It is an opportunity for the faith community to be recognized
as reaching out to our sisters and brothers who live in our communities without
homes. We have a responsibility to them. Our responsibility to them grows out
of our faith. It is a chance to come together with other churches and make that
statement.
The Reverend Charles Bennison, Jr., rector of St. Lukes Episcopal
Church in Atlanta, also worried that public concern about homelessness is
waning, perhaps because it is no longer a new topic, but a familiar, even
discouraging one.
People, I think, have lost interest, said the rector, whose
church sponsors a five-day-a-week soup kitchen, a health clinic and job
placement service for the homeless and a mail drop-off.
If you dont have a house, you dont have an address. You
cant get mail. You cant get a job. The whole system falls apart for
you, the rector said.
The homeless population in metropolitan Atlanta in 1989 is estimated to be
as high as 12,000 with 70 shelters providing only 3,500 bed spaces. Statistics
supplied by the Community Appeal say that 40 percent of the metropolitan
areas homeless are employed; 38 percent are families with children. State
figures estimate that 66 percent of the homeless in Georgia are men, and nearly
half of the men are Vietnam War veterans.
Suburban counties with significant homeless populations include Clayton
County with an estimated 1,200 homeless, Cobb County with an estimated 2,000
homeless, and Gwinnett County with an estimated 3,000 homeless. At least 750
homeless sought shelter in Douglas County in 1989, the statistics say. In the
same time period, 60 women and children were sheltered in Rockdale County and
others were turned away for lack of space.
The need is not going away, it is getting worse, Steve
Brazen said. The appeal is to raise consciousness on this issue with the
feeling that it will take a real concerted effort on the part of the community
rather than a little bit here and a little bit there.
Bennison noted that health care, emergency shelters, and more starts of
low-cost housing are desperate needs. If the appeal succeeds this year, it will
be attempted again next year, he said.
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