Pubdate: Sun, 09 Dec 2001 Source: The Herald-Sun (NC) Copyright: 2001 The Herald-Sun Contact: http://www.herald-sun.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1428 Author: Mark Schultz GIVING A VOICE TO THE HOMELESS DURHAM -- Sharyn Jordan was wearing a Band-Aid the first time Edie Cohn drew her. It covered a spot on her forehead where she'd been hit with a beer bottle. It wasn't the first time she'd been hit. Drinking since she was 8, she'd done speed, acid, heroin, cocaine -- and marijuana too, she said, almost as an afterthought Saturday morning. So in 1993 when Jordan found herself in the Durham homeless shelter and heard about a woman paying people $10 to draw their pictures and tape record their stories, she jumped at the chance. "I said, 'I need that $10, I'm gonna get that $10,' " Jordan recalled. "Immediately after that session I took that $10 and got high." Jordan was one of three women who joined Cohn in a panel discussion at the Durham County Library Saturday. The talk, the last in a series on homelessness in Durham, focused on "No Call for Pity," a series of charcoal portraits and interviews compiled by Durham artist Cohn, who started it 10 years ago. The project, funded by the N.C. Humanities Council, has been published as a small book. Several of the portraits are hanging in the library's third-floor fiction room through the end of the year. Cohn, who with big round glasses and a pixie haircut looks almost elfin, didn't set out to chronicle homeless people's lives. She just knew she wanted to use her art for something more than drawing portraits of people the way they thought they should look, rather than how they really were. At the Durham Community Shelter for HOPE, "nobody complained they didn't have a big enough smile on their face," she said. Or because they had a Band-Aid on their forehead. Still, it took the shy Cohn some time to start asking her subjects about their situations. "I didn't ask them questions about their lives," she said. "I guess I felt it wasn't any of my business." Once she started, though, usually with a charcoal pencil in hand, Cohn turned out to be a natural interviewer, Saturday's panel members said. "She just had this face that was so kind," said Reneé Baker, whom Cohn first drew in 1992. "I was like, 'Oh, I trust you!' " Baker's story included drugs, alcohol and domestic violence. But she told the crowd of about 35 people Saturday that she can't remember a lot of it. "Some of that stuff is just not there anymore," she said. "It's not that I don't want to remember." Now 50 and a drug rehabilitation counselor, she says it took her those hard times to get where she is now. Not that she doesn't have some regrets. "Before my mom died, I could see the aging in her face," Baker told Cohn in a follow-up interview this year. "And I often said to myself, how much of that did I cause her to have to come through? Just the pain in her face and how gray she had gotten. And it seems like overnight to me, because during my time of being in the streets and doing my thing, I never stopped once to really look at her! ... I never looked 'til I got clean." Cohn interviewed Tassie Johnson in 1994 at Genesis Home, where Johnson was living with her three daughters after getting out a violent relationship. Pregnant by the man who abused her, Johnson "prayed every night that God would take my life, but every morning he blessed me with life." Still, her daughters initially hated her for taking them to the shelter. "The children did not want to consider ourselves homeless," she said. "Being the adult in the family and knowing we didn't have a roof over our heads, I knew it was homelessness." Johnson's 1994 and 2001 portraits are hanging in the library. At Saturday's discussion she held up a third portrait, a plastic-covered picture Cohn drew of her and her three girls, who don't want anyone to know about their past. "I wish that this was the one in the exhibit," she said. Cohn eventually drew more than 60 portraits. The pictures don't ask people to feel sorry for Durham's homeless -- just to see them as individuals, said Harlan Gradin, assistant director/director for programs for the Humanities Council, who also attended the library talk. "This is an extraordinary example of a project that gives voice to people who are usually not paid attention to, or listened to or cared about," he said, "who many of us will pass on the street pretending this person is not a person." And if there's a message, it's that people who want to change, can, the women on the panel said. Jordan, now married and Sharyn Jordan Holland, got help from the TROSA (Triangle Residential Options for Substance Abusers) and DART (Drug and Alcohol Rehabilitation Treatment) programs. She enrolled in the criminal justice program at Durham Technical Community College and is an administrative assistant for Durham County's teen court. "I love my job," she said, then held her hand just a few inches in front of her chest. "And I keep this [thought] close to me -- how quick I can regress if I pick up a drug or take a drink." Baker, who also treasures her cardboard copy of Cohn's portrait of her, is also proud of her turnaround. This last time Cohn drew her, "I don't think I even took the money," Baker said. "It wasn't about the money this time." For more information about artist Edie Cohn's "Homeless People Project" please see www,homelessproject.org A candlelight vigil in observance of National Homeless Persons' Memorial Day will held at the Durham Public Library Plaza Dec. 20 from 6 to 7 p.m. For more information, please call the library at 560-0123 or the Urban Ministries of Durham at 688-2593. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens