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By Msgr. Noel C. Burtenshaw
On a hot--very hot--summer day in 1979, Betti Knott was sitting in
her office in Peachtree Center nursing a deepening resentment. She saw a lot of
bureaucrats around her furiously working at doing very little. It was one
of those days, says Betti, when I realized my life needed more than
the challenge of this government job.
Betti decided to take a walk. On the first corner, in the blazing
heat, she spied a vagabond lady adorned in many dresses (at least five) along
with a raincoat desperately digging in a mound of garbage cans. Betti moved on.
At the next corner, just off the glitter of Peachtree, she passed
a wino with his bottle huddling on the sun-baked concrete. Again she moved on.
One block away a group of panhandlers counted the mornings take and set
strategy for the afternoon.
I returned to the office knowing I needed a new vocation. I
called a friend and told him how I felt. Naturally he said, Well what do
you want to do? I almost yelled, I want to clothe the naked, feed the
hungry, visit the sick. He advised me to think it over.
Betti didnt have to. Three weeks later the same friend
called and said Do you know that Joe Flagan has resigned as head of the
St. Vincent de Paul Society? Heres your chance, I just sent them your
resume.
The government was about to lose Betti Knott.
This bright, cheery 32-year-old native of Key West, Fla.,
exchanged her posh office for one on a side street behind St. Anthonys
school in West End. We have a little building there, says Betti.
It is sort of hidden away but the poor know where we are.
They most certainly do. As head of the St. Vincent de Paul
Society, Betti is one of the poors best friends. And she loves the title.
Its just a problem there is so little to go round.
But we try. We get 120 calls per week besides all those we
already know of. They need everything--money, food, somewhere to stay. We are
on the move for them and we have the most beautiful volunteers working for us.
They are a blessing, a real active blessing.
Betti is talking about the lay parish Vincentians: Men and women
working the footsteps of their founder, Frederic Ozanam, who began this lay
outreach to the poor of Paris in the last century. He placed this work for the
poor under the patronage of St. Vincent de Paul. In the North Georgia area
Betti Knott can count 300 Vincentians. They are on call for all kinds of cases.
Betti outlines some of her cases with the ease of one who is
familiar with desperate need. Take the little old lady in northwest
Atlanta living in a little house near the waterworks. Her pension is $160 per
month. Her house note is $90. Then she pays utility bills. She has nothing for
food and would starve except for the little she gets in food stamps. She comes
to us frequently.
Or take the young woman living on welfare. Her husband
walked out when she had her second child. When you include food stamps she has
less than $200 per month. Her rent is $125, then she pays utilities. Shes
on a waiting list, with 4,500 others, to get into public housing. She cannot
work with her new baby. She must have food, diapers, clothes--and no where to
turn. She turns to us.
The list of cases, one more heart rending than another, goes on.
Betti Knott and her Vincentians are just one of three charitable groups in the
Atlanta area that will give financial aid. The Christian Council and the
Salvation Army give too. Theres never enough to go around.
Betti estimates that the Vincent de Paul Society, parish
conferences and her central offices, distribute $200,000 each year in
charitable donations. This Society is one of the most beautiful reasons
for being Catholic, says Betti. We dont just belong to a
Church. We are a great big universal brotherhood and sisterhood reaching out
with our strength to give hope to the hopeless. It is beautiful.
And there are other thriving arms of help coming from the men and
women of St. Vincent. We have two clothing stores, says Betti
Knott. One is on Clairmont where a lot of poor people live and have great
need. I mean a lot of poor white people. And they trade at that store. The
other is on McClendon in downtown Atlanta. That one is an oasis of help as you
can well imagine.
But they also have a food warehouse, they participate in the food
bank, they take cases from other agencies, theyll get a wheelchair for a
girl who cannot walk and cannot be carried anymore, theyll show the poor
how to get government help. The St. Vincent de Paul people are there on the
job. They are the ever-working, action arm of each Catholic. They carry the
message of mercy to the poor of any denomination.
There is a collection for the work of those unsung heroes of St.
Vincent de Paul in all our parishes on Oct. 3 and 4. Betti Knott has high
hopes, and prayers, for a successful, plentiful result to that collection. But
theres something she wants even more than overflowing coffers. I
want a conference of St. Vincent de Paul in every parish. We now have 25 out of
a possible 65. Some of them are super, the one up in St. Marks in
Clarkesville in the mountains is terrific and they reach out beautifully to the
poor. Well, what I want is one like that in every parish.
We hope this optimistic leader of renewed Catholic action gets her
wish. In the meantime, on the weekend that is ahead, let us give to the poor
person of Christ by giving to the hungry, naked and sick that each day pass
through the life of Betti Knott.
Lets all do it.
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