I have sent you a series of short letters describing
the plight of a homeless friend living in his car. I wonder just how
many homeless people in Rhode Island are invisible to the authorities .
Has anybody here been able to estimate the number of homeless
individuals or families living in motor vehicles ? According to reports
on You Tube, many of these people represent the American middle class
in free-fall.
Unable to accommodate a 66 year old friend in my
cramped studio apartment, I sent him with ten dollars worth of
quarters to the Warwick Public Library-which still has a public pay
phone ( his cell phone is missing in the chaos of this life-style) . He
got in touch with some senior center which misdirected him to a
non-existent shelter on Howard Road in Warwick. He stopped his junky old
Lincoln Town Car in front of a nice home in the neighborhood. Looking
like an escaped convict, he rang the doorbell and asked the resident for
directions to the shelter. He was redirected to Howard Avenue in
Cranston. This might have been all that is left of the old Welcome
Arnold building. He spent a wretched night in that depressing place with
some 100 bunk beds.
Part of my friend's problem in finding subsidized
housing is his vagabond history. Presently he has a Washington state
license plate. It struck me while reading a sign on a RIPTA bus this
morning : " Please offer these seats to the elderly and persons with
disabilities ". My friend is elderly with disability. Should not public
housing apply the concept of priority here ? " Am I going to die in
my car ? " , my friend asks.
In many ways he is the anti-character of Horatio
Alger's " Ragged Dick ". The theme of " Ragged Dick " is the rise of a
young pleasant fellow -by luck and pluck- from slum life to social
respectability. " Ragged Dave " is a story of a precipitous fall in
early old age from prosperity to squalor. Such " luck " as Dave
encountered on his way down to the lower depths is best described by a
Thomas Hardy - not an Horatio Alger. Alger's universe was fundamentally
benevolent. Hardy's was either indifferent or malevolent. No,
everything is not for the best in the best of all possible worlds .
No comments:
Post a Comment
Comments that are courteous, concise and relevant are always welcome, whether or not they agree with the views expressed here or not. Profanity is not necessary. Thank you for reading “Time Enough At Last!”
Ron