Nearly
15 years ago, St. Boniface church in San Francisco began opening their doors
for homeless people in need of shelter. The effort was started by Father Louis
Vitale of the church, and community activist Shelly Roder, in 2004 and is known
as The Gubbio Project.
Hundreds
of people each day pass through the church, using the pews to sleep on, and
getting blankets from the staff.
“No questions are asked when our guests walk into the
churches; in an effort to remove all barriers to entry, there are no sign-in
sheets or intake forms. No one is ever turned away; all are welcomed, respected
and treated with dignity,” according to the Gubbio Project’s website.
The
facility is still open for local churchgoers who want to visit throughout the
day, but 2/3 of the church is reserved for the Gubbio project.
“This sends a powerful message to our unhoused neighbors –
they are in essence part of the community, not to be kicked out when those with
homes come in to worship. It also sends a message to those attending mass – the
community includes the tired, the poor, those with mental health issues and
those who are wet, cold and dirty,” a representative with Gubbio said.
One
of the main complaints that people often have about homeless shelters is that
they can feel like prisons, and be extremely dangerous as well, but the Gubbio
project seems different. 95% of those surveyed said they always or usually feel
safe at The Gubbio Project, and those who pass through are not treated like
prisoners as they are in many shelters.
Last
year The Mind Unleashed reported that the city of Seattle was planning to set
up razor-wire fencing to keep homeless populations from camping. Then, not longafter we reported that San Francisco was using Robots scare homeless people
away from encampments and report them to police. Also in San Francisco, we
recently reported that the city spent $8,700 installing large boulders under
overpasses to prevent homeless people from setting up camps. There were
numerous homeless encampments in the area until they were recently forced out
of the area, and now the City’s government is doing everything they can to keep
the camps out of the area.
At
least a dozen activists were arrested last month for feeding the homeless in
Wells Park in El Cajon, California. Even a 14-year-old child was arrested.
Authorities say that the law is aimed to prevent the spread of disease, but
activists say that they are criminalizing the homeless.
“It means they are criminalizing homelessness. They’ve
created 4 laws against the homeless. No camping, no sleeping in cars, no
panhandling and no feeding the homeless,” Mark Lane told RT.
Source : themindunleashed.com