Don't Believe the Stereotypes
by Donald Whitehead
Like so many others in the
land of the free and the brave, sometimes referred to as America, I looked at
life through sunglasses. I saw only
what I wanted to see, read only what I was supposed to read and did only what I
was suppose to do. But a funny
thing happened on the way to the fortune 500 Club.
I joined the navy and I realized there were people around the globe a lot
less fortunate than me and my countrymen here in the land of plenty.
I sought a new direction in
my life - I wanted to help. I believe I joined a fight that was very worthwhile,
a fight to help save the world from ultimate destruction through the waste and
exploitation of our natural resources. I
still believe it's a very worthwhile fight and I continue my efforts, though not
as strongly. But recently I was
touched by an even more desperate and worthwhile fight--the plight of the
homeless. Like so many, I was
apathetic to the seriousness of this issue because of the misinformation and
misrepresentation associated with it. It
wasn't until I myself experienced the horror and despair of being homeless that
I could fully understand the problem.
I was made to believe that
the homeless were worthless bums who just wanted a free handout.
After all, how could someone possibly not find a job in the good Ole USA.
I thought the face of the homeless was the panhandler who just needed
enough for his next drink or drug. True
enough, his face is included in the many I see daily as I serve bowls of soup in
the Drop-In-Center. But he is a
small minority.
The faces I serve are faces
of hungry children with tattered clothes, the faces of the mentally handicapped,
incapable of gaining the most menial of jobs, the faces of senior citizens, once
as productive as you or me. I see
the faces of men who fought hard to protect this
great country of ours, new victims of the horrors of the carnage they
encountered.
I also see the other side -
the city council who wants them to move on.
Who sees the problem through dollar bills. I see the many vacant buildings, a gold mine for developers,
a sanctuary for the homeless.
I have but one goal in
writing this article - for each and every person that reads it to come and see
for yourself. Get involved.
And most of all, don't believe the hype.