Pubdate: Thu, 12 Jul 2007 Source: Martlet (CN BC Edu) Copyright: 2007 Martlet Publishing Society Contact: http://www.martlet.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3140 Author: Kevin Ehman DON'T TAKE HUMAN DIGNITY FOR GRANTED This column is usually filled with worthless yet amusing observations about pop culture and its inhabitants. However, lately I have been ruminating on an issue of, let's say, a higher social importance. I recently made a move from kind of downtown to directly downtown. I have always been able to make the detachment when it comes to the most glaring problems facing the downtown core--homelessness, mental illness and addiction. It's really easy to look straight ahead and say, "Nope, sorry," when asked for spare change, but my new place is making a serious effort to change that. Located within a block of the needle exchange, the view from my deck overlooks a well-known haven for addicts: the steps of a rundown church. On these steps I witness a nightly parade of the ill-fated as they search for a place to get high and hide until the sun comes up. I've taken a few sociology classes, but this certainly isn't described in any textbook. What I assumed would be an occasional hangout for those on the lowest end of the social ladder has revealed itself as a must-see on the Victoria tour of destitution. In the last two months I have had my eyes reopened. Defecating in plain sight. Sharing needles. Mental breakdowns and outbursts on a scale that make my own personal collapses seem like a fucking pony ride in comparison. "Congratulations--you've pointed out that Victoria has a problem with street life. So observant!" I can hear this being said as you read, and I get it. We do an excellent job of identifying the problem, and a horrible job of solving it. But I'm not here to offer a solution, or even to insinuate that I think one is possible. I just want to point out what's struck me most during my nightly observations--the disconnect of basic human dignity that takes place when one lives on the street. This may be glaringly obvious to some, but I always assumed that some things were sacred. Like finding a bush when one has to relieve oneself. The last two months have taught me that nothing remains taboo when people are thrown back to their basic mammalian instinct to eat, drink, sleep and survive. Watching a prostitute apply her makeup in the side mirror of a car doesn't hold a candle to the convulsions of an addict on the sidewalk, and up until now I placed those in the same category of tragic. It takes more than a shopping trip downtown interrupted by panhandlers to open one's eyes to the root of the problem. People can't be expected to give a damn about their health or about getting a job when they don't even care about their dignity. This is a big, big problem. Until we figure out how to return people's dignity, we may as well not worry about affordable housing or a balanced diet--those things follow naturally from the first. - --- MAP posted-by: Steve Heath