One of my first mentors on the streets was the great Genny Nelson, co-founder of Sisters Of The Road. Genny has mentored dozens of organizers, agitators, policy makers, writers and artists over the years. Her life’s work has a footprint on both Portland politics and how we work with people experiencing homelessness.
Genny once told me, “Israel, offering compassion without judgment is one of the most challenging things you’ll ever do when working with the poor. Keeping at it day after day, week after week, and maintaining that compassion will be the hardest. The only way to find the space to carry on is to practice non-violence and to believe in love.”
At the time, I was an angry young man. I had grown up in industrial middle-America where violence was often times a way of life. The idea of accepting non-violence was new to me. Offering unconditional love to complete strangers was challenging.
Street Roots is built on the premise of meeting people experiencing poverty where they are at. It’s not easy. Poverty is cruel and inhumane, it’s violent and irrational. Regardless of people’s circumstances or experiences — individuals and families can find a home at places like Street Roots and Sisters Of The Road.
Saying that, it’s not just Street Roots. There are a lot of social service agencies in Portland that believe in these basic premises and were influenced by Genny Nelson and Sisters — Saint Adre Bessette, JOIN, Right 2 Dream Too, Dignity Village, to name a few.
Thousands of people experiencing poverty and those who have dedicated their lives to the work carry out these philosophies and are tied to a larger historical movement, regardless if they know it or not. The idea of offering hospitality in the form of compassion and love, regardless of the situation is something that runs very deep in the experiences we have and of those that came before us.
These ideas and philosophies were born out the Catholic Worker movement and the work of Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin in the 1930s and 40s. They were influenced by the work of those before them dating back to the Civil War and before.
The great agitator and organizer Utah Phillips once said, “The long memory is the most radical idea in this country. It is the loss of that long memory which deprives our people of that connective flow of thoughts and events that clarifies our vision, not of where we’re going, but where we want to go.”
Together, we are a part of something bigger and working towards a better tomorrow. That includes you, that includes me, that includes all of us embracing something more. Something that gives people that opportunity to be successful, regardless of their circumstance. That means offering hospitality and compassion without judgement. It means accepting non-violence as a way of life. It means embracing love.