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By Thea Jarvis
As a late winter twilight encircles the city, volunteers steadily
make their way to southwest Atlanta. Their destination, St. Anthonys
Church in West End, opened a night shelter January 24 and willing workers are
arriving early to prepare for evening guests.
In the church basement, which serves as the shelter center, St.
Anthonys parishioner Norma Richardson is already on hand, quietly and
competently directing newcomers to their various posts, bestowing kindly smiles
and grandmotherly reassurances on the novices. Norma has spent two other nights
at the shelter and knows the ropes.
Sister Suzanne Giro, pastoral associate at St. Anthonys,
looks in to be sure things are running smoothly. At 6:45, she begins to worry.
The food hasnt yet arrived and a call is put out to Kathy Leonard in
Dunwoody, the evenings chief chef. Shes on her way.
Thomas, a guest of St. Anthonys who helps with setup each
night, lays the tables in the center of the room with plastic utensils, napkins
and cups. His curly hair wreathes a rugged, handsome face and when he
introduces himself a mellow Mexican accent overlays the greeting. He is happy
to be where he is welcome and useful.
Sister Jean Booms from Saints Peter and Paul arrives seeking
information. She is to drive the evenings guests waiting at Central
Presbyterian downtown to St. Anthonys in the parish station wagon and is
wondering when to start the trip. It is her first tour of duty and she is a bit
apprehensive about making the right connections. Suzanne and Norma give her
directions and encouragement. In the spacious kitchen just off the central room
where guests will eat and sleep, Jude Summerfeld from All Saints and Marion
Edwards, a secular Franciscan from Sacred Heart, wait for guests to start
arriving.
Asked how he became involved at the shelter, Jude answers that he
read about it in the paper. The biggest mistake I made the last time I
stayed, though, was to go to work the next day, he adds with a smile.
Tomorrow Im taking a vacation day!
Sister Suzanne, looking hopefully to the door for the entrance of
the all-important dinner, mentions that the program was recently blessed with
340 pounds of meat from Food Shapers, Inc., a happy sign the the business
community has extended itself, she says.
A cheer goes up as the kitchen door leading from the back parking
lot opens and Kathy Leonard enters, soup and sandwiches in tow.
Her 16-year-old son Dale, a student at Marist, carries the
oversized cauldron. His sidekick Todd brings up the rear with a supply of
sandwiches that would feed the Russian army. They had taken the wrong exit off
the expressway and Kathy apologizes for the delay.
Norma wastes no time in lighting the fire under the soup, a
fragrant blend of vegetables, pasta and meat with a rich tomato cast that
invites tasting. It was a joint effort of several women from St. Pauls
Circle at St. Judes. The sandwiches come with the compliments of circle
families in a subdivision near the parish who put them together as a Lenten
project.
The outer room begins to hum as guests filter in. Most meet at
Central Presbyterian and are transported by van or wagon to the smaller
shelter. A few hop a MARTA bus to arrive at St. Anthonys around 7:30.
It will be a while before all 30 or so men settle in. To pass the
time, checkerboards and card decks come out and small groups make themselves at
home at the tables, exchanging easy conversation and friendly jibes.
The group is small and somewhat intimate. Many constitute an
overflow from the shelter at Central, which exceeded capacity on a regular
basis this year and gave rise to St. Anthonys program.
In the rear of the room is a high stack of vinyl mats, each just
long and wide enough to accommodate a tired body for a nights rest. The
pile diminishes as the men claim their mats and carefully arrange their
sleeping quarters along the outer walls.
James Tiller, tall and gentlemanly, places his mat close by the
reception desk towards the front of the room. It is convenient to the side door
as well, and James explains that he chooses this spot under the window so other
guests wont be disturbed by his early wake-up.
Each night, he asked to be roused the next morning at 4:30
an hour earlier than the general call so he can catch the bus that will
bring him to the labor pool at North Avenue and Peachtree Street.
There, with a little luck, he might find a job with Labor King, a
temporary company that frequently puts on extra hands for the days work.
Unemployment, Eviction
Before he lost his job some time ago, James had an apartment
furnished with his own belongings. Without funds to pay the rent, he was
evicted and his possessions set out on the street. Almost everything was
stolen.
He finds St. Anthonys a lifesaver a
castle, he says as he begins to shed some of the layers of clothing that
have kept away the chill of Atlantas streets.
He explains that he is well-outfitted for any cold that might come
along two coats, a sweater, jacket and shirt, two pairs of pants, along
with sturdy brown shoes and a light canvas hat. All the clothes are worn at one
time. When you have no place to call your own, you tend to travel with your
belongings intact.
James is 47 and a gracious man, taking time to speak with a
stranger who shows some interest in his experiences on the street, playing
cards with one of the new volunteers. He has family aplenty in town, having
grown up in southwest Atlanta, but prefers not to ask them for help. He has his
pride, and St. Anthonys makes him welcome.
Tomorrow, he hopes, there might be a job awaiting him at the labor
pool. If he can get together $5, he can buy a MARTA card that will entitle him
to unlimited transit for a week. This would, perhaps, enable him to look for
something a little more permanent.
As James has been talking, Andrew Meyers from St. Anthonys
has arrived. Young, enthusiastic, ready to do his part, Andrew is marking his
third evening at the shelter, calling the experience a blessing to St.
Anthonys.
Andrew is himself a blessing to the program. When on duty for the
night, he manages to get two or three hours sleep, he says, before returning to
his job as a welder at 7 a.m. His off-work love is cycling, but he still finds
time to deliver food to needy families for St. Vincent de Paul.
Of the shelter, Andrew says it gives him a chance to meet
people to do what Christ would have done.
People need encouragement, he continues. If
youre down and out, youre still somebody.
It is Andrew who welcomes shelter guests and reviews the rules
before dinner is served: no smoking, no drinking, no gambling, no fighting or
arguing, no leaving the shelter area.
Minor grumbling surfaces during the brief address. The men have
heard it before and some feel they neednt be reminded of the obvious.
Most accept it as part of the routine.
Andrew begins a blessing and the grumbling quickly ceases. He
gives thanks for the food and for the fact that the group is together. With a
sincerity that is hard to miss, he asks blessings on the men as they seek work
and requests success for their efforts.
The amen is heartfelt and acknowledged by all.
Dinner Is Served
Checkerboards and card decks are laid aside for the moment. Dinner
is ready, and so are the hungry folks gathered around the tables.
Sister Jean, having returned from a successful run, serves up some
soup with a shy smile. The Marist boys offer two sandwiches apiece to each
guest. They look good ham and bologna and the soup is warming and
hearty.
Over a meal, people either concentrate so hard on eating that talk
becomes irrelevant, or they allow the nourishment to loosen their tongues and
let conversation flow.
At one of the long tables in the middle of the room, 12 or so of
the men are alternately quiet and voluble.
Im not a soup man, Wilson Patterson says as a
volunteer offers to fill his bowl. He is nattily dressed in a yellow
windbreaker and jaunty black hat and looks younger than his 25 years.
He is waiting for a ticket out of here. Home is
Brooklyn, New York and it is there he hopes to return. Six months in Atlanta
has been long enough. For now, he works for a temporary agency and comes to St.
Anthonys at night to save money.
Wilson is bright and well-spoken. He has fared better than some in
an arena where the faint of heart are often early causalities. Getting home is
a present goal, and there is little doubt that he will make it. He might even
return to Brooklyn College, where he already has a year and a half of schooling
to this credit.
Yesterday I worked as a waiter in the Congress Center,
he volunteers, adding that the pay rate is somewhat lower for a daily hire than
for regular staff.
The table talk turns to food and the quality of St. Anthonys
luncheon program is unanimously approved, though some of the dishes are
preferred over others. Many who come to the night shelter depend on the church
lunches for their midday ration.
As culinary likes and dislikes are compared and debated, a voice
echoes from the end of the table: Ill tell you what I dont
like I dont like being broke and poor. The observation is
made with good humor, but the truth behind the statement is clear.
When dinner is over, the men disperse, some to card and checker
challenges, others to a small television in the rear of the room. Andrew
usually brings the set when he comes, knowing it is a source of entertainment
not generally available. (On super Bowl Sunday, Andrew had shelter duty and his
t.v. was the most popular diversion in the house.)
Table Talk
Wilson remains at the table, along with his friend Joshua Binyard.
Joshua is 19 and neatly dressed in a pullover and white shirt. He could easily
be mistaken for an upperclassman at one of Atlantas private schools.
As it turns out, Joshua arrived in Atlanta with a magazine troupe,
the kind that inundates suburban subdivisions with an all-out sales blitz.
I probably knocked on your door, he says good-naturedly to the
stranger on his left.
Joshua is glib and witty, with an optimism that is refreshing in a
room frequently filled with thoughts of failure. After finishing up his
magazine stint around Christmas time, he decided to stay in the city, but
found myself on the streets for three or four days with no food and no
water, he remembers.
He made his way to the Atlanta Union Mission with the help of
someone he had met on the street, and worked at Burger Chef for awhile. But the
job was short-lived because the establishment had over-hired.
Like Wilson, Joshua works when he can, but, unlike his friend,
wants to stay in Atlanta rather than return to his native Connecticut. He hopes
a man he met in Norcross when he was selling magazines might offer him
permanent employment and plans to get in touch with him.
Both Joshua and Wilson agree that city shelters are home to many
out-of-staters who find themselves in a no-funds, no travel limbo without any
apparent hope of resolution.
A Place To Count On
For now, native Atlantans and transients alike need the shelter of
St. Anthonys, a place where few questions are asked and friendship is as
easily given as the food and bedding that is guaranteed each night.
As 9:30 approaches, the men settle into their places on the mats,
drawing the blankets around them and using their outer garments for makeshift
pillows.
Tomorrow is another day. Five-thirty will see the room tidied and
the men off in search of their dream, bolstered by a sweet roll and a piece of
fruit from the church larder. A bus token will provide needed, though limited
transportation, and a ticket issued upon leaving ensures each man a place for
the following evening. Most will return.
Before the lights are extinguished and volunteers go off to finish
up kitchen chores and head for a nights rest in the chapel, Larry Askew
clowns for a quick picture on his sleeping mat.
He asks for a copy of the photo to use in a story he hopes to
write for local publications, an in-depth report on shelters from a
recipients point of view.
Go for it, Larry.
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