Posted by on Feb 7, 2016 | 8 comments

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Well, I’ve been thinking about the men and women and especially, kids, who, mama says, live out on the streets here in Nice, and in nice neighborhoods, and everyone in the quarter seems to give them change or food or just tolerate their presence and walk on by and nothing can be done for they have no place to go.

“The concept of family has broken apart,” says Jean-Luc, a shelter worker in Tournon, just north of Valence. “Kids end up on the street with every reason not to make it: no connections, no jobs, no experience and no qualifications. These young people are let down by social policies. It’s as if they were told, ‘We don’t care about you.’ We need a youth policy big bang.”

Read the full article.

There is a group very near to our big shopping center on the main street of this town, and they hang around in back of a grocery called Casino where the food bins are located and so are probably waiting for things to be thrown out so that they can eat.

There are more and more everywhere, it seems. In Italy, in France, in the USA, and mama remembers many on the streets of Santa Monica, California years ago. But there was a shelter for them during the winter, even though many of them chose to stay on the street.

What can be done? Many of these men and women are not well, mentally, and many turn to alcohol, become alcoholics who simply must drink and so cannot get any kind of menial work anywhere. Who can blame them? Often a passerby will give them food, or in one case, a friend of mama took a homeless person to MacDonalds to get him something to eat, but he didn’t want to go. He only wanted money for liquor.

Mama says she saw one altercation between a supermarket guard and a homeless man, just the other day, but he was drunk and not able to stand well and so wandered off, and stopped trying to enter the store.

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“I am hungry.”

There seems to be no easy solutions to the problems of those who sleep and wake on our streets.  Mama spoke to a toothless man the other day who was kind and smiling and charming and who explained that there was no recourse for him but to beg.  He was not a drinker, just a man who came on hard times and needed to eat.  He had a very neat backpack and sleeping roll with him and at night he sleeps in an uptown neighborhood in protective doorways.

Like the homeless Emilia in Rome. I wrote about her some blogs ago (Upheavals).  I watch her from my window and she talks merrily with everyone, especially the attractive businessmen, saying “Ciao” to all and they wave and smile back as if she were a dear, old friend.  Mama bought her some tennis shoes because hers were so tight and painful, but mama thinks she sold them.  We’ll never know.

Just something to think about. I wish I could come up with more answers.

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But I just don’t have any that seem to work…