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Calendar lifts up homeless women


From "NewsDesk" <NewsDesk@UMCOM.ORG>
Date Wed, 12 Nov 2003 18:12:38 -0600

Nov. 12, 2003 News media contact: Tim Tanton7(615)742-54707Nashville, Tenn.
7E-mail: newsdesk@umcom.org 7ALL {550}

By Kim Riemland*

SEATTLE (UMNS) - Joyce Riggins says the worst thing about being homeless
isn't the rainy climate or the lack of privacy in crowded shelters. It's the
way people look at her as if she's done something wrong, or make a point not
to look at her at all. 

"Being homeless is no fun," Riggins says. "I've battled with depression by
being homeless; it's no picnic. And society really kicks us."

Homeless women in Seattle want people to take a closer look at those whom
many try not to see. Several of the women have posed for a 2004 calendar that
captures their pictures and their stories of struggle and survival.

Riggins has been homeless for six months. Being in the calendar makes her
both proud and ashamed, she says. She's had a rough time lately, but she
thinks the calendar's title,  "Beauty and Strength," captures her experience.

"I don't profess to be the prettiest woman in the world, but I know I'm not
the ugliest," she says. "I want the strength, my strength, to come through." 

The calendar is designed to spread compassion and understanding. It's a
project of Seattle's Church of Mary Magdalene and its Mary's Place day
center, which are in the basement of First United Methodist Church downtown.
The Church of Mary Magdalene serves homeless and formerly homeless women.

It grew out of United Methodist missionary Rachel Small's wish to honor the
women as she completed her two-year assignment working with them. Rachel's
mother, Eve Faulkes, teaches graphic design in West Virginia and had given
workshops to the women when she visited her daughter. Small and Faulkes
thought a calendar could help the women raise money for their programs, and
put a face on the issue of homelessness.

"The thing that impressed me about these women was how completely dignified
they were," says Faulkes, who took the photos used in the calendar. "They
also had probably a whole lot more strength than me, a whole lot more faith
than me. We thought it was high time people met a few of those wonderful
women."

"I am Miss January," says Hester Garrett, giggling as she holds the calendar
up next to her face.

Garrett says homeless women often feel invisible.

"That's a terrible way to feel about your life," she says. "No matter what
you are in, you are somebody and your circumstances really have nothing to do
with your inner feeling for what you are."

The calendars are available at www.churchofmarymagdalene.org for $10 each.
The proceeds benefit the Church of Mary Magdalene and Mary's Place.

The women in the calendar hope those who take the time to look closely at
their pictures, and see their beauty and their strength, won't find it so
easy to look the other way.

Says Faulkes: "Look them in the face, don't look away like they are some kind
of lesser being." 

# # #

*Riemland is a freelance writer based in Seattle.

 
 

*************************************
United Methodist News Service
Photos and stories also available at:
http://umns.umc.org


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