newsletter hope to help feature

1
``A soft pillow’’ is what Paddy misses most when he lays his head down to sleep on the cold concrete. At first glance it is not obvious that Paddy is one of Belfast’s rough sleepers. He looks much younger than his 42 years, his trainers are gleaming and he has a close-cut trendy hair- cut....later on he tells me he used to be a barber. But tonight Paddy will not crawl into a cosy bed, rather he will sleep outside trying to avoid the abuse and spit dished out by passersby or being kicked and urinated on by the drunks who spill out of the pubs after closing time. Paddy, who is originally from west Belfast, was one of the homeless people I met on Friday night when I joined the Hope to Help team from the Abundant Life Church which brings coffee and sandwiches to the city’s invisible inhabi- tants. A father of four, he recently became a grandfa- ther and tears fill his eyes as he shows me a pic- ture of his baby grandson on his mobile phone. But this is where the tale of seemingly happy domestic life ends. A few years ago Paddy tried to kill himself by setting fire to his house. He was convicted of arson and sent to jail. His 20-year marriage sub- sequently broke down. “There was only me in the house. I was only trying to end my life, but I’m sure to God it must have frightened my ex-wife.’’ Since being released from jail he has been in and out of hostels and living rough for about four years. He’s also been in and out of psychi- atric units for his depression. “I was locked up for my own good. I would have been a harm to others, not intentionally, like, but by harming myself, maybe smashing a car straight into a wall.’’ Paddy is a slight man; his cropped trousers revealing seriously skinny ankles. When asked if he can remember the last time he ate, he has to think for a while before answering ‘Wednesday’. Like most of the other rough sleepers I meet, Paddy has the glazed eyes and total coherency of the long-term alcoholic. “I started drinking when I was 14. I liked the wee buzz, the feeling it gave me. But then I became dependent on it. The longest I was ever sober was two and a half years. But I wasn’t sober. I just wasn’t taking alcohol, my head was still mad. I’ll never beat the drink, it’ll torture me to the last day of my life.” When we meet, Paddy is surrounded by other homeless people but he says there’s no friend- ship on the streets. “What you do is you keep yourself awake, because if you’ve nice shoes, a lighter or a phone they’ll (other rough sleepers) take them off you.’’ And the worst thing about sleeping rough? “I couldn’t pick one thing............... not having a soft pillow. A soft pillow is a clear conscience. A bed of rock is the opposite.’’ Hope to Help is part of Dignity, an umbrella organisation for a number of Christian based street teams who work with the homeless and rough sleepers on the city’s streets. We meet at 10.30pm in a building in the uni- versity area, where around 10 young volunteers have given up their Friday night to pack sand- wiches and snacks into bags and take to the people on the streets. We leave at 11pm. It’s after this time that most of the hostels in Belfast are full and it’s then we can make contact with anyone who will be sleeping rough. Spilt into groups, we visit different parts of the city. Our first stop is Botanic Avenue, a student area just minutes from the affluent Malone Road. It is here we meet Paddy and another rough sleeper, David. Originally from Newtownards, David, 48, was kicked out of his home by his father at the age of 15. He has been sleeping rough ever since. A polite and intelligent man, David describes himself as a ‘’lost soul’’. “I went to London and have been drifting every since. I’ve slept rough in Edinburgh and been back and forward to Northern Ireland. We are not all bad people; we’ve all got a story to tell.’’ David will sleep outside Botanic Train Station tonight. This is his patch. He’s been sleeping here for three years. He sits on a piece of card- board and swigs cider from a plastic litre bottle. He’s been drinking since 8am this morning. “I don’t drink because I want to. I drink because it’s a necessity.’’ David has been in jail for ‘’serious crime’’ and is barred from every hostel in the city. “I’m barred from hostels I’ve never even been to. So what road do I go to get help? “Where’s the justice. I get £37 a week to live on, but because I live on the streets I have to eat in cafes. If I spend £3 on my breakfast, £3 on my lunch and £3 on my dinner that works out at £56 a week. It doesn’t add up - and I can count, I’m not stupid! “So many’s a day I don’t eat. Christmas day is just another day: Concrete.’’ David says sleeping on the streets is danger- ous and lonely. “The police kick you and move you on. You don’t get a sleep, it’s a rest. It’s never a proper sleep. “Everyday I don’t exist. You get that far down you start to believe that. You’ve no self-esteem.’’ Like Paddy, David says he doesn’t have any friends on the street. “You have acquaintances. You don’t trust any- body because they would stab you in the back. You put your trust in the Lord. He’s the landlord on the streets.’’ The last time David slept in bed was November 2008 when Hope to Help took him to a rehab centre in Bradford. 14 News Letter, Thursday, July 16, 2009 Competition WIN How to Enter: To be in with a chance of winning answer the following question and text NLMILL followed by your answer, name and address to 81800 or Tel: 0901 2933 141 Q. In which county is the Mill Park Hotel Located? This week the News Letter is offering six lucky readers the chance to win a superb weekend break at the Mill Park Hotel, Donegal Town. Situated in the historic town of Donegal, overlooking Donegal Bay, the hotel is ideally located for a perfect holiday base from which to discover the many tourist attractions of Ireland’s North West. The Mill Park Hotel’s facilities include the specious open plan hotel lobby with a magnificent towering fire-place in beautiful Donegal stonework and enhanced by traditional wooden ceilings crafted using traditional Irish techniques. The 4* hotel is famous for outstanding cuisine and combining the very best of traditional hospitality with a friendly efficient service. By supplying your telephone number you’re happy to receive SMS/MMS messages from Johnston Press plc, publishers of the News Letter. Johnston Press (or via its agents) and its business partners may contact you about new promotions, products & services. Please add the word STOP at the end of your message if you do not wish to receive these. For quality and training purposes we may monitor communications. Rules: Texts cost £1 plus your standard network charge. This will be charged to your mobile phone bill. Calls cost £1 at all times. Lines close at midnight on Sunday 19th July. Usual Johnston Press rules apply for a copy contact the Promotions team at 2 Esky Drive, Carn Industrial Estate, Portadown BT63 5YY. Service is provided by g8wave London N7 9AH. a superb weekend break at the Mill Park Hotel, Donegal 'SIX BREAKS TO BE WON' CURRENT ONLINE SPECIAL OFFER: 3 nights for the price of 2 138 Per Person Sharing: Enjoy 3 nights bed & breakfast in one of our luxurious double rooms. (Includes the 3rd night free)* For more information go to: www.millparkhotel.com *Prize subject to availability, must be pre-booked, excludes bank holiday weekends. News Letter, Thursday, July 16, 2009 15 FEATURE www.newsletter.co.uk 17 37 FEATURE www.newsletter.co.uk 17 37 Every night in Belfast a group of Christian volunteers bring food and friendship to the people who sleep rough on the city’s streets. HELEN MCGURK joined the Hope to Help team and heard some of the heartbreaking stories from those left out in the cold. Hope to Help team get ready to go out onto the streets His face lights up when he sees the group approaching him with coffee and something to eat. “They are my friends. They are priceless and beautiful. They give you comfort.’’ As we leave to bring food to other rough sleepers, I ask David what is dream is. “Peace’’. And then he adds: ``A one-bedroom flat, with a wee kitchen.’’ Naomi O’Kane founded Hope to Help last November. She says that on average 12- 20 people will sleep rough on Belfast’s streets every night. The majority are men, aged 30 upwards. There are 31 hostels in the Greater Belfast area with an esti- mated 800 beds. When these are full, there is often nowhere else for the homeless to seek refuge. “They have secret places where they sleep; they’ll not tell anyone because they don’t want to get their sleeping bag nicked. It’s a dog eat dog sort of thing,’’ she says. Naomi has a great rapport with people like David and Paddy. She sits on the pavement beside them, chatting and listening. Having been homeless her- self for a while, she can empathize with their situa- tion. “My life took a turn for the worse and I ended up in Women’s Aid. After I got my life back on track again, I became homeless. But I was one of the hid- den homeless, sleeping on a hard floor for about five weeks. I had a car, I had a job, I just didn’t have anywhere to sleep.’’ But what really prompted Naomi to do something about the plight of rough sleepers was when she discovered that two homeless people she used to walk past every day in a doorway of a fish and chip shop had died on Christmas Day. “That really impacted me. I thought this can’t be right, this is Belfast.’’ I ask Naomi why some people end up falling out of society into the world of the homeless rough sleeper? “Many of the people on the city’s streets have an alcohol, or drug addiction which keeps them on the streets. Such addictions are often but a symptom of other tragic circumstances, domestic violence, abuse at home, or physiological illness. Many of them have stories of some sort of relationship breakdown that has happened; either the loss of a wife, or child, or a breakdown of a marriage, or long-term relationship. These are the real causes of involuntary disaffection from our society. Addiction is often the mask of inner personal pain.” She adds that some people become ‘’institution- alised’’ to the streets. “In the case of one person we know, he’s almost addicted to the street and the camaraderie - he has a ‘family’ on the street, so it’s very hard for him to break away from that. Some people don’t like the rules and regulations that there are in hostels or rehab places, they feel it’s too strict.’’ Naomi has heard some horrific stories from the street, like the woman who has been sleeping rough for 30 years and has regularly been sexually assaulted. Most shocking, she says, is the attitudes of other people. “I stayed on the street one night in Bradford, you could just see the looks that people gave you, the way they were treated.The hours drag, the cold goes into your bones, your body feels like it’s been kicked up and down the street because you are lying on concrete. Then there’s the regret that they have ended up like this. That’s why I think some of them end up more addicted to drink, they take the drink to drown the regret.’’ At around 1am we drive down Great Victoria Street and meet Isobel, a pretty Romanian girl sell- ing plastic flowers outside a city centre bar. An overweight man with tattoos, gold chains and ear- rings is making a pass at her. She doesn’t have enough English to tell him to leave her alone. Around the corner another young Romanian man is selling the same imitation flowers. Nick arrived in Belfast two days ago and is hoping to make money to send home to his wife and baby son. Hope to Help will keep an eye on them both. Driving home we pass David. He is sitting in the same spot outside the train station, which is where he will spend the long lonely hours that drag towards morning. Unlike him, and Paddy, and the other poor souls who have no place to lay their heads, I am going home to a warm bed. And a soft pillow. For that I am truly thankful. If you would like to get involved with Hope to Help contact Naomi O’Kane on: 07545233205 I couldn’t pick one thing............... not having a soft pillow. A soft pillow is a clear conscience. A bed of rock is the opposite Daniel, with Naomi O’Kane, founder, Hope to Help and the volunteers Bringing hope to the homeless Paddy, left, with a volunteer from Hope to Help Romanian flower-seller, Nick

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Newslettter feature on hope to help after coming out with us on the streets of Belfast.

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Newsletter Hope to Help Feature

``A soft pillow’’ is what Paddy misses mostwhen he lays his head down to sleep on the coldconcrete.

At first glance it is not obvious that Paddy isone of Belfast’s rough sleepers. He looks muchyounger than his 42 years, his trainers aregleaming and he has a close-cut trendy hair-cut....later on he tells me he used to be a barber.

But tonight Paddy will not crawl into a cosybed, rather he will sleep outside trying to avoidthe abuse and spit dished out by passersby orbeing kicked and urinated on by the drunkswho spill out of the pubs after closing time.

Paddy, who is originally from west Belfast, wasone of the homeless people I met on Fridaynight when I joined the Hope to Help team fromthe Abundant Life Church which brings coffeeand sandwiches to the city’s invisible inhabi-tants.

A father of four, he recently became a grandfa-ther and tears fill his eyes as he shows me a pic-ture of his baby grandson on his mobile phone.But this is where the tale of seemingly happydomestic life ends.

A few years ago Paddy tried to kill himself bysetting fire to his house. He was convicted ofarson and sent to jail. His 20-year marriage sub-sequently broke down.

“There was only me in the house. I was onlytrying to end my life, but I’m sure to God itmust have frightened my ex-wife.’’

Since being released from jail he has been inand out of hostels and living rough for aboutfour years. He’s also been in and out of psychi-atric units for his depression.

“I was locked up for my own good. I wouldhave been a harm to others, not intentionally,like, but by harming myself, maybe smashing acar straight into a wall.’’

Paddy is a slight man; his cropped trousersrevealing seriously skinny ankles. When askedif he can remember the last time he ate, he hasto think for a while before answering‘Wednesday’.

Like most of the other rough sleepers I meet,Paddy has the glazed eyes and total coherencyof the long-term alcoholic.

“I started drinking when I was 14. I liked thewee buzz, the feeling it gave me. But then Ibecame dependent on it. The longest I was eversober was two and a half years. But I wasn’tsober. I just wasn’t taking alcohol, my head wasstill mad. I’ll never beat the drink, it’ll torture

me to the last day of my life.”When we meet, Paddy is surrounded by other

homeless people but he says there’s no friend-ship on the streets.

“What you do is you keep yourself awake,because if you’ve nice shoes, a lighter or aphone they’ll (other rough sleepers) take themoff you.’’

And the worst thing about sleeping rough?“I couldn’t pick one thing............... not having

a soft pillow. A soft pillow is a clear conscience.A bed of rock is the opposite.’’

Hope to Help is part of Dignity, an umbrellaorganisation for a number of Christian basedstreet teams who work with the homeless andrough sleepers on the city’s streets.

We meet at 10.30pm in a building in the uni-versity area, where around 10 young volunteershave given up their Friday night to pack sand-wiches and snacks into bags and take to thepeople on the streets.

We leave at 11pm. It’s after this time that mostof the hostels in Belfast are full and it’s then wecan make contact with anyone who will besleeping rough.

Spilt into groups, we visit different parts of thecity. Our first stop is Botanic Avenue, a studentarea just minutes from the affluent MaloneRoad.

It is here we meet Paddy and another roughsleeper, David.

Originally from Newtownards, David, 48, waskicked out of his home by his father at the ageof 15. He has been sleeping rough ever since.

A polite and intelligent man, David describeshimself as a ‘’lost soul’’.

“I went to London and have been driftingevery since. I’ve slept rough in Edinburgh and

been back and forward to Northern Ireland. Weare not all bad people; we’ve all got a story totell.’’

David will sleep outside Botanic Train Stationtonight. This is his patch. He’s been sleepinghere for three years. He sits on a piece of card-board and swigs cider from a plastic litre bottle.He’s been drinking since 8am this morning.

“I don’t drink because I want to. I drinkbecause it’s a necessity.’’

David has been in jail for ‘’serious crime’’ andis barred from every hostel in the city.

“I’m barred from hostels I’ve never even beento. So what road do I go to get help?

“Where’s the justice. I get £37 a week to liveon, but because I live on the streets I have to eatin cafes. If I spend £3 on my breakfast, £3 on mylunch and £3 on my dinner that works out at £56a week. It doesn’t add up - and I can count, I’mnot stupid!

“So many’s a day I don’t eat. Christmas day isjust another day: Concrete.’’

David says sleeping on the streets is danger-ous and lonely.

“The police kick you and move you on. Youdon’t get a sleep, it’s a rest. It’s never a propersleep.

“Everyday I don’t exist. You get that far downyou start to believe that. You’ve no self-esteem.’’

Like Paddy, David says he doesn’t have anyfriends on the street.

“You have acquaintances. You don’t trust any-body because they would stab you in the back.You put your trust in the Lord. He’s the landlordon the streets.’’

The last time David slept in bed wasNovember 2008 when Hope to Help took him toa rehab centre in Bradford.

14 News Letter, Thursday, July 16, 2009

Competition

WIN

How to Enter:To be in with a chance of winning answer the following question and text

NLMILL followed by your answer, name and address to

81800 or Tel: 0901 2933 141Q. In which county is the Mill Park Hotel Located?

This week the News Letter isoffering six lucky readers thechance to win a superbweekend break at the MillPark Hotel, Donegal Town.

Situated in the historic town of Donegal, overlooking DonegalBay, the hotel is ideally located for a perfect holiday base fromwhich to discover the many tourist attractions of Ireland’sNorth West.

The Mill Park Hotel’s facilities include the specious open planhotel lobby with a magnificent towering fire-place in beautifulDonegal stonework and enhanced by traditional woodenceilings crafted using traditional Irish techniques. The 4* hotelis famous for outstanding cuisine and combining the very bestof traditional hospitality with a friendly efficient service.

By supplying your telephone number you’re happy to receive SMS/MMS messages from Johnston Press plc, publishersof the News Letter. Johnston Press (or via its agents) and its business partners may contact you about new promotions,products & services. Please add the word STOP at the end of your message if you do not wish to receive these. For qualityand training purposes we may monitor communications.

Rules: Texts cost £1 plus your standard network charge. This will be charged to your mobile phone bill. Calls cost £1 atall times. Lines close at midnight on Sunday 19th July. Usual Johnston Press rules apply for a copy contact the Promotionsteam at 2 Esky Drive, Carn Industrial Estate, Portadown BT63 5YY. Service is provided by g8wave London N7 9AH.

a superb weekendbreak at theMill Park Hotel,Donegal

'SIX BREAKSTO BE WON'

CURRENT ONLINE SPECIAL OFFER:3 nights for the price of 2€138 Per Person Sharing:

Enjoy 3 nights bed & breakfast in one of our luxuriousdouble rooms. (Includes the 3rd night free)*

For more information go to:www.millparkhotel.com

*Prize subject to availability, must be pre-booked,excludes bank holiday weekends.

News Letter, Thursday, July 16, 2009 15

FEATURE www.newsletter.co.uk17 37 FEATUREwww.newsletter.co.uk 17 37

Every night in Belfast a group of Christianvolunteers bring food and friendship to the peoplewho sleep rough on the city’s streets. HHEELLEENNMMCCGGUURRKK joined the Hope to Help team and heardsome of the heartbreaking stories from those leftout in the cold.

Hope to Help team get ready to go out onto the streets

His face lights up when he sees thegroup approaching him with coffee andsomething to eat.

“They are my friends. They are pricelessand beautiful. They give you comfort.’’

As we leave to bring food to other roughsleepers, I ask David what is dream is.

“Peace’’. And then he adds: ``A one-bedroom flat,with a wee kitchen.’’

Naomi O’Kane founded Hope to Help lastNovember. She says that on average 12- 20 peoplewill sleep rough on Belfast’s streets every night.The majority are men, aged 30 upwards. There are31 hostels in the Greater Belfast area with an esti-mated 800 beds. When these are full, there is oftennowhere else for the homeless to seek refuge.

“They have secret places where they sleep; they’llnot tell anyone because they don’t want to get theirsleeping bag nicked. It’s a dog eat dog sort ofthing,’’ she says.

Naomi has a great rapport with people like Davidand Paddy. She sits on the pavement beside them,chatting and listening. Having been homeless her-self for a while, she can empathize with their situa-tion.

“My life took a turn for the worse and I ended upin Women’s Aid. After I got my life back on trackagain, I became homeless. But I was one of the hid-den homeless, sleeping on a hard floor for aboutfive weeks. I had a car, I had a job, I just didn’t haveanywhere to sleep.’’

But what really prompted Naomi to do somethingabout the plight of rough sleepers was when shediscovered that two homeless people she used towalk past every day in a doorway of a fish and chipshop had died on Christmas Day.

“That really impacted me. I thought this can’t beright, this is Belfast.’’

I ask Naomi why some people end up falling outof society into the world of the homeless roughsleeper?

“Many of the people on the city’s streets have analcohol, or drug addiction which keeps them on thestreets. Such addictions are often but a symptom ofother tragic circumstances, domestic violence,abuse at home, or physiological illness. Many ofthem have stories of some sort of relationshipbreakdown that has happened; either the loss of awife, or child, or a breakdown of a marriage, orlong-term relationship. These are the real causes ofinvoluntary disaffection from our society.Addiction is often the mask of inner personalpain.”

She adds that some people become ‘’institution-alised’’ to the streets.

“In the case of one person we know, he’s almostaddicted to the street and the camaraderie - he hasa ‘family’ on the street, so it’s very hard for him to

break away from that. Some people don’tlike the rules and regulations that there arein hostels or rehab places, they feel it’s toostrict.’’

Naomi has heard some horrific stories from thestreet, like the woman who has been sleepingrough for 30 years and has regularly been sexuallyassaulted.

Most shocking, she says, is the attitudes of otherpeople.

“I stayed on the street one night in Bradford, youcould just see the looks that people gave you, theway they were treated.The hours drag, the coldgoes into your bones, your body feels like it’s beenkicked up and down the street because you arelying on concrete. Then there’s the regret that theyhave ended up like this. That’s why I think some ofthem end up more addicted to drink, they take thedrink to drown the regret.’’

At around 1am we drive down Great VictoriaStreet and meet Isobel, a pretty Romanian girl sell-ing plastic flowers outside a city centre bar. Anoverweight man with tattoos, gold chains and ear-rings is making a pass at her. She doesn’t haveenough English to tell him to leave her alone.Around the corner another young Romanian manis selling the same imitation flowers. Nick arrivedin Belfast two days ago and is hoping to makemoney to send home to his wife and baby son.Hope to Help will keep an eye on them both.

Driving home we pass David. He is sitting in thesame spot outside the train station, which is wherehe will spend the long lonely hours that dragtowards morning.

Unlike him, and Paddy, and the other poor soulswho have no place to lay their heads, I am goinghome to a warm bed. And a soft pillow.

For that I am truly thankful.■ If you would like to get involved with Hope toHelp contact Naomi O’Kane on: 07545233205

II ccoouullddnn’’tt ppiicckk oonneetthhiinngg.............................. nnootthhaavviinngg aa ssoofftt ppiillllooww.. AAssoofftt ppiillllooww iiss aa cclleeaarrccoonnsscciieennccee.. AA bbeedd ooffrroocckk iiss tthhee ooppppoossiittee

Daniel, with Naomi O’Kane, founder, Hope to Help and the volunteers

Bringing hope to the homeless

Paddy, left, with a volunteer from Hope to Help Romanian flower-seller, Nick