Friday 2 February 2018

Homelessness requires more than a helping hand

We can all only do what we, individually, can or are prepared to. However, whatever we feel, whether it be pity, compassion, guilt, fear, even shame for one's own situation compared to that of someone who is homeless - regardless of their reason for being so - means nothing to those who are in a position to genuinely do something worthwhile and positive. 

WE can band together as volunteers, fundraising and working at soup kitchens, opening our homes, offering beds, work, education, blankets, a friendly face and an open conversation. 

Shamefully, until those in power, those who are supposed to provide governance for their own people, especially those who need it most, see past their own feathered nests and beyond what might feather them further, we fight a losing battle. 

I am proud of the work that those who are able and prepared to do provide - God knows it is needed - but it appears impossible to make politicians aware of their responsibility, the shame they should feel for their lack of appropriate action, or indeed the compassion they should feel for their fellow humans, let alone their responsibility to the people they represent. 

Regardless of what an individual may have done for the country, whether it be in the armed forces, as a postal worker, suffering from mental illness or simply turfed out because the council couldn't or wouldn't pay the rent on a private property that wasn't fit to live in, everyone should be treated the same. 

As a human. 

But it should not be down to an individual giving money, or food, or shelter, warmth, comfort, a shoulder to lean on or an ear to bend. It is down to all of us, everyone en masse, represented by the forces of authority and governance. Yet, whether those forces be left or right leaning, socially minded or corporately monetised, they systematically let down or simply ignore those who need their help most - presumably because there's no immediate financial benefit or investment opportunity in it. 

When a government department weighs up the cost of death against budget and decides it is preferable to spending money, as appears to be the case across the benefits system (and that is not just down to the Conservatives, I imagine this has been a factor for a very long time! They just happen to be right at the blunt end), we need to change the manner in which we think about our people and our nation's traditional activities. 

When the most useful, dull, unspectacular causes die out because money is withdrawn from charitable trusts; when volunteers are relied upon to provide public services (manning and providing for drop in centres, food banks, after hours clinics, therapy groups) we need to reconsider where our educational and moral compass is really taking us. 

As individuals we are capable of so much, but as government has consistently shown us, from millions marching against the Iraq war to the rancid manner Health and Welfare are treated, their disgust of and contempt towards the people they govern needs not only to be challenged but called out and changed. And the only way I can see that happening is through education and understanding. 

That's not liberal, or socialist or conservative, that's just human. We all want a quick fix, but there isn't one. And it's going to be bloody hard to persuade those with everything that those with nothing deserve more.

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