Monday, June 28, 2010

Remembering who she is. . .

She is his daughter.  She isn’t his mother, his wife, his nurse, his social worker.  But it’s been years since she’s been just a daughter.  It’s been years since he’s acted anything like a father.

When she was 8, she became aware he was different from other daddies.  He was gone a lot.  He laughed too hard and at all the wrong times.  He always carried a bottle in his hand.  He never  came to school plays, never drove her to McDonald’s for a treat, never told her she was good at softball.

When she was 12, her mom said enough was enough and suddenly he wasn’t there at all.  She realized she missed him sometimes — discovered there were little things about him she’d never really thought about.  Like the way he always had a stick of gum for her in his pocket; like his silly grin, his spiky hair.

When she was 17, she got a job at Sonic.  Within a few weeks, he started coming around — usually drunk, smiling, hungry — looking for a free meal.  She would grab a break, bring him a hamburger and ask him where he had stayed the night before. She began to worry.  She and her mom sat together during the 10 o’clock news on channel 9 each night just in case…

When she was 18, it finally happened.  Stumbling along a busy street just after dark, he lurched into traffic and was hit by an SUV.  The driver waited with him until the ambulance and police arrived.  ”He came out of nowhere,” the driver said.  She and her mother saw the newscast and wondered as usual.  The police knocked on the door minutes later, directed by a phone number crumpled in his pocket.  He is alive, the cop told them, but he is seriously injured.  The two women prayed it was the wakeup call he needed.

When she was 21, she stopped believing his life would change.  She was deep into her junior year of college  — a major in social work, a minor in criminal justice — and didn’t want to think about him anymore. For a year after the accident, he’d been in rehab, trying to hold his memory together in a skull that was broken into what seemed like puzzle pieces.  Then he got kicked out of rehab for drinking and had circulated through a series of recovery centers, more for the warm bed and food than to overcome his addiction.

He showed up at Sonic one night, and she watched wearily as he crossed the parking lot, weaving and waving in her direction. She fed him a hamburger and watched again as he drifted back to the street.  Later she heard he was at a mission downtown — Kansas City Rescue Mission.  She shrugged and thought, “Here we go again,” and turned her attention to school.


When she was 22, she learned her dad was graduating the Mission’s recovery program.  She battled skepticism, and opted for hope.  ”Maybe it’s real,” she thought.  She watched his progress from a distance, then closed the distance mile by mile as her hope grew.  She stopped worrying about him and began to talk to him … about sports … about school … about God.  She hugged him.
When she was 23, she counted two years of sobriety then swept away her last dusty thoughts of worry and wonder.  He told her he was fine and screwed his face into a look of disgust when she asked him if he would ever drink again. As he prepared to leave KCRM and move to his own place, she hoped it would be close to the home she shared with her mother — maybe he’d could come for dinner once in a while.
He is still broken in so many ways, but she wants to be near him.  He has spiky hair and a silly grin and gum in his pocket.   He loves her and worries about her.  How is school? he asks.  Are you dating?  Is he good to you?  This is how she remembers and she thinks to herself, I am  his daughter.
MO


Read more stories like this one .at the Kansas City Rescue Mission's blog.

Thursday, June 24, 2010

Empty schools housing the homeless?

That is just what may happen in Kansas City, Missouri! 

This past June,  the Kansas City, Mo's school district closed for good more than 20 schools to save money(sound familiar Cleveland and Detroit?), but members of Kansas City's Homelessness Task Force hope the buildings could soon re-open with a new purpose.

Read more by visiting  the Kansas City Press.

Join the Kansas City Rescue Mission in praying that the city uses these vacant schools to further God's kingdom in amazing ways!  Join We Care in prayer as we serve the homeless of Cleveland!

Thursday, June 17, 2010

Abandoned by his family and left homeless. . .

. . . New York City youth, Orayne Williams earns college scholarship!

In less than two weeks, some 50,000 city high school seniors will graduate.

Few of them will have overcome as many obstacles as Orayne Williams.

Abandoned by his family and living alone in a homeless shelter, the 18-year-old immigrant has not just endured, but excelled.

With a 91 average and three Advanced Placement classes under his belt, he's headed for college with a fat scholarship and big plans.

"I've been through hell," said Williams, a senior at Bedford Academy in Bedford-Stuyvesant, Brooklyn. "School is my way out."

Born into poverty outside Kingston, Jamaica, Williams grew up with no water or electricity, scrounging food from the street and avoiding gangs.

He was 12 when his mother sent him to Florida with only the clothes on his back. He was taken in by relatives who he says abused him and dealt drugs.

He found refuge in school, arriving early and staying late.

"It was like my savior," he said. "The only thing I had."

In 2007, Williams was reunited in Brooklyn with his mother and an infant half-sister, who were homeless. The three lived in motels and shelters, sharing one bed.

"It was impossible to focus on school," Williams said. "My mom and I fought like crazy."

In November, Williams' mother kicked him out, and a social worker found him a spot at a shelter for young men in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, where he lives now.

The young man gets up for school at 5:30 a.m. and studies on his bed because there is no desk. He brings to school a bagged lunch made by shelter staff.

He works hard to blend in with the students who have homes and families and support.

"When I tell people I'm homeless, they're surprised," he said. "Most of the kids at my school still don't know."

Cluny Lavache, assistant principal at Bedford Academy, said Williams' positive attitude in the face of adversity has spurred people to help him.

"He touches your heart," she said. "He has a lot of people looking out for him."

Wayne Harris, who works in the Department of Education's Office for Students in Temporary Housing, is one of those people.

He helped him apply for college and financial aid, and let him use the phones and computers in his office.

This fall, Williams will be a freshman at upstate Sullivan County Community College, paying for his first year with $15,000 in grants. He hopes to become a doctor.

"I feel blessed," he said. "So many good things are happening to me."