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Young Journalist Award 2006 Senior Division Runner up
Simple plan, incredible purpose
Louise Wruck, All Hallows' School, Brisbane, Qld.
Close your eyes and envision your life.
Not too shabby? Now close your eyes and envision your life without
a family, without employment, without a bank account and without
a home. You have just become one of the thousands of homeless who
struggle to survive on the streets of Australia.
Fortunately, there are some who see the homeless differently. There
are people, although they are few, who know the homeless are not worthless,
unintelligent, or even very different to ourselves. The members of
St Joseph’s College are clearly part of this category.
The Catholic all-boys high school situated on Gregory Terrace runs
a community outreach program called the Eddie’s Van, after their
founding Christian Brother Edmund Rice. The man responsible for the
coordination of the van is Mr Damien Price, the Dean of Mission at
Terrace.
When I asked Mr Price why the van was formed, he quoted a saying: ‘conversion
only happens in a relationship.’ In other words, a genuine relationship
with the poor is the only way to effect positive change within the
community.
Of a Monday morning, a Tuesday night, and every other working day of
the week, the Eddie’s Van is loaded with food and donated clothing
by the Terrace volunteers and driven to particular locations around
the CBD of Brisbane.
From Wickham Terrace to the Botanical Gardens to Kangaroo Point, it
meets with the most disadvantaged section of Australian society: the
homeless. It offers aid to those who live on the streets, under bridges,
in squats and in boarding houses; those who suffer mental illness as
a result of drugs or alcohol; those who’ve run away from home
and have nowhere to go.
The volunteers bring aid to an average of thirty people every time
the Eddie’s Van ventures out of the gates of Terrace. It is their
hard work—the teachers, parents and students of Terrace—that
makes the program possible. They give up countless hours of their time
to the homeless of Brisbane, ensuring that they have somewhere to turn.
The prospect of young Johnny, hair gelled up into spikes with earphones
dangling from his pocket, eyelids drooping from a long night of tapping
away at the controller of the latest video game, offering comfort to
the poor and destitute seems a surprising one, but Mr Price says they
never have a shortage of volunteers. In fact, they actually have more
volunteers than they can use.
‘Boys love that kind of thing—it’s kind of fair dinkum, you
know?’ he said. ‘The fact that they want to do it indicates that
they see it as important for them.’
When I asked Damien if the van provides any services other than food
and clothing, he replied that the main thing is ‘building a sense
of community, a sense of family and a sense of being safe.’ He
went on to explain to me that the food isn’t really that important,
that if they need food they can go to a homeless shelter. The main
service that is provided by the volunteers is simply talking to the
homeless. Their aim is to ensure that these people feel that they are
worth spending time with and worth listening to.
I was touched by the directions Mr Price gives to the volunteers. ‘We
want you to spread out and we want you to do what we believe Jesus
did. Jesus met people and he came into their sacred space … that
presence said to the person: You are beautiful. You are special. You
are loveable.’
Most moving of all were Mr Price’s final comments. ‘They
treat me as me and labels don’t mean anything. You get out there,
and you’ve got the eggs and the sausages and the homeless guys
around and you feel a sense of community. For that hour of the day
you don’t have to play a particular role, you just have to be
you.’
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