Dr. Maurice Guéret elected Chairperson of TRUST

Dr Maurice Guéret is a medical graduate of Trinity College Dublin who has worked as a family doctor in his native Dublin city for almost twenty years.

He edits the Irish Medical Directory and writes a ‘Rude Health’ column in the Sunday Independent. Maurice has served as an elected member of the Eastern Regional Health Authority and the South Western Area Health Board and has been a fearless critic of bureaucracy, waste and greed in all of their guises.

Maurice ran as an independent for Seanad Éireann in the Trinity constituency in 2002 and 2007, missing out on one of the three seats by finishing in fourth place most recently. He describes himself as a sceptical optimist and has been a friend, board member and trustee of Trust for many years.

Numbers queuing for food parcels at friary doubles

by Jennifer Hough

MORE than 700 people queued outside a Dublin friary yesterday for free food parcels — double the numbers the centre normally feeds.

From early morning, crowds began to gather, afraid they might miss out on the basic food packs, which contain staples such as bread, tea, sugar, and tinned food.

Brother Kevin Crowley, who runs the day centre of the Capuchin Friary on Church Street, Dublin 7, said he was deeply saddened that so many people were presenting for free food and that yesterday was the first time they had ever run out of supplies.

He said it is not just homeless people, but people who have lost their jobs and are finding it difficult to make ends meet.

He said the crowds were made up of different age groups and nationalities, but there were now a lot more young people and families living in difficult circumstances.

“I was talking to one young man who felt terrible that he had to come here for food, but he said he was hungry and had no choice.” He said the numbers coming to the centre for meals had also greatly increased.

“We might normally have 250 people for dinner, yesterday we had 430,” he said. All food at the centre is free.

Br Crowley said running costs are e1 million annually, e450,000 of which was a Government grant.

“We raise the rest ourselves and rely on the generosity of people.”

Br Crowley also noted the number of foreign nationals in need of aid. “They have no family supports to rely on,” he said.

Alice Leahy, founder of Trust, a charity for homeless people, said it was a “very fearful time” and that there had been a dramatic increase in the number of foreign people using the charity’s services.

She said more than 50% of the people it sees are not Irish. She urged foreign embassies to play a role, and contribute something to help people from their countries. She said a Lithuanian man was recently buried in Trust’s plot in Glasnevin cemetery and the only people at the funeral were the social worker, the charity workers and the priest. “You would have thought he could have been repatriated,” she said. “That is something which would have happened 30 years ago.”

Another worry, Ms Leahy said, was for people who were becoming suddenly homeless.

“Those who have lived on streets for many years somehow learn to cope, but if someone loses their job and finds themselves homeless it is a shock and very difficult for them to cope. There will be a big psychological effect that is not addressed.”

“We will pull through the current crisis if we are united in our concern for each other”

“I have no doubt we will pull the current crisis and prosper again, but we will only do that if we are united in our concern for each other”

Alice Leahy, Director & Co-Founder, TRUST

“Are you mad?” I can still remember vividly being asked that question, one morning in the early 70s, by a leading Consultant in the hospital where I worked, and where I had just set up the first intensive care unit of its kind in Ireland. That is the only question that occurred to him when I told him I was leaving my highly secure, pensionable job, as he saw it, to go and work full-time with people who were homeless.

Mind you I did not tell him that I was going to be paid a wage that equated to the dole at the time, and that I would be working in a run down building, or he might have tried to have me certified.

The remarkable thing about that fateful meeting is how it foreshadowed similar experiences I would have in the years that followed, especially after I helped to set-up TRUST in 1975. When you try to do things in a different or new way, even for people who find themselves outsiders in society, you meet resistance. When you upset the status quo you generate real fear, and even hostility, because there are always people with a vested interest in doing things the way they have always been done, regardless of the cost to others. Sadly that also applies to the health, homeless and social services.

The Celtic Tiger years produced much that I found very unacceptable, but one of the good things about the transformation of this country, was that more and more people were not afraid to leave their comfort zones and try new things. We were not intimidated by the doubters, the naysayers and brushed aside the questions like “….are you mad?”

To get through the current crisis we need to rekindle and nurture that spirit. President Obama summed it up well in three words: “yes we can!” In my own case, the importance of the belief that we can make a difference for others by treating them with dignity and respect has kept us going, and allowed us to resist those who might like to see us close up shop because we refuse to conform.

I do not want to labour the point, but people often assume that because you want to help people no obstacles are placed in your way. Unfortunately, that is not the case, as I quickly found after I left the hospital. I sought out a well known priest in the inner city for his views, when I was doing research into the health needs of people who are homeless, and I remember vividly being told “go to university, you can never do anything if you don’t study social work”. And later, the leading civil servant who said after TRUST was established that “it would only last six months!” Mind you, we are working to put ourselves out of business because in an ideal world there would be no need for our service.

Hope is definitely not
the same things as optimism.
It is not the
conviction that something
will turn out well, but
the certainty that something
makes sense, regardless
of how it turns out.
Václav Havel

We do not just provide health and social services for people who are homeless, we also try to share our insights and experiences, to help create a more tolerant and understanding society so that fewer people might find themselves excluded. To do that we all have to “waste more time with people”. The power of that idea was brought home to me one day by our late former Chairperson Professor James McCormick, when he gave me an article from the British Medical Journal, written by Simon Challand, a former Medical Adviser in Uganda about the advice he had received from “an African Bishop with a smile –“ “Waste time with people”… You Europeans are always concerned about projects and budgets. The African does not worry about them –just waste time with people”. He gave me this advice in 1996 shortly before I came out to work in Uganda. Since then his words have kept coming back to me, and I reflect on their truth and wisdom and how difficult it has been for me, as someone with European values and attitudes, to apply them.”

If we make time for others, in our families, at work and in our communities we will transform the country we are living in. Now more than ever, when new pressures and strains are evident everywhere, and people are hurting and feeling real pain, we must not shut our eyes, or be afraid to help others.

Something became disconnected during the Celtic Tiger years because we lost touch with what is really important. We are now paying the price because we allowed rampant greed to almost destroy our economy. But we have a chance to start over, to begin by doing things differently, and recognising that the quality of our lives are determined by what we do for others and not how much we can exploit them.

I have no doubt we will pull through the current crisis and prosper again, but we will only do that if we are united in our concern for each other. That type of concern can build a real unity of purpose. A caring and considerate Ireland, that makes necessary sacrifices for the future, while protecting those who cannot look after themselves, will far surpass for what was ever achieved during the so called Celtic Tiger years.