Rachel Brown looks at the current controversy regarding homelessness on the streets of Exeter and asks if the, “Homeless drug addict” stereotype is more of an excuse for general apathy towards the homeless population.
“But look! You can get a fiver out of the cash machine over there!” went the feared retort fired at the passer-by who had “engaged”. On the receiving end, I mumbled a doubtful defence and hurried away, probably to buy “the good bread” from Marks and Spencer. In the wake of Exeposé’s front-page article which said that drunken, Jack Wills donning Exeter students are the target of boozed-up beggars who really have accommodation, we must reflect: do intimidating experiences justify our detachment from homelessness when it is in our streets and actually, “it” is sat outside Sainsbury’s looking mournful and clutching his dog for warmth?
![Photo Credit: Hotpix [LRPS] via Compfight cc](https://exeposedev.wordpress.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/03/homelss-man-and-dog.jpg?w=604)
We are talking about people as unique as you and me, and what actually happens with the blanket approach is we stereotype and may end up giving nothing of ourselves to homelessness. It’s time to stop, make eye contact and realise the burden is on us to know what the right thing to do is. We must engage. That involves finding out what local support resources are really like and giving our time or money to the right ones. When safe, we must talk with those homeless in our community’s streets. Who is the homeless person sat outside your Sainsbury’s? Well, we didn’t exchange names but his canine pal did get a tin of dog food from me!
Rachel Brown
Hopefully he had a can opener too! Is the assumption that a homeless person is a drug addict an unfortunate reality or just an excuse for us not to part with our pennies? Write a reply below or post a comment to the Exeposé Comment Facebook Group.