Baltimore Sun Sunday

Warm scarves and sentiments for needy in area

-

SCARVES, suggested that England repurpose the event in Baltimore, a city which as of January 2017 had an estimate of 2,669 homeless people, according to a report provided by the Mayor’s Office of Human Services.

“I was like, ‘I’ll totally do it,’ ” said England while sitting in a coffee shop in Locust Point, her fiery red hair adorned with a crown of flowers. It was a project that fell into line with many of the art-abandonmen­t and random-acts-of-kindness events that England has already hosted around the city in hopes of spreading love and cheer.

The first Scarf Abandonmen­t project was a success, she said, generating hundreds of likes and shares on social media. She received around 300 scarves from around the country, and welcomed hats, gloves and other cold-weather accessorie­s. On the day of the installati­on, seven volunteers helped attach the scarves with heartwarmi­ng messages to a fence on the corner of North President and East Fayette streets, where many homeless people congregate and sleep at night.

It’s one moment, one act. England doesn’t maintain follow-up contact with any of last year’s recipients. But this year’s event comes after a week of sub-freezing temperatur­es. And, as one homeless advocate sees it, the effort benefits both recipients and givers.

Jessica Watson, owner of Point North Design Studios in Federal Hill and a volunteer during last year’s event, said hanging the scarves took around 20 minutes. Watson, 34, and England said they were almost immediatel­y swarmed by people asking “What do you have?” which made it difficult to get a picture to document the moment.

But Watson said seeing people read the positive messages and “smile as they [were] walking away, it feels really good.” It challenged the misconcept­ion that making a difference requires a lot of money or connection­s.

“I think what Mary has done with this event is show it doesn’t matter who you are, you can still have a positive impact in the community and do something that can mean the world to someone else,” Watson said.

This year, England expects an even larger turnout.

More than 800 people RSVPed for the event and more than 5,000 have noted that they were interested on the Scarf Abandonmen­t Project’s Facebook event page as of Jan. 3. England says she’s received scarves from nearly every state and from countries including Canada, the United Kingdom and Germany. In addition to her P.O. box, volunteers from at least five places within the city, including Watson’s studio, offered to be dropoff locations for scarves for several weeks. England has also hosted multiple dropoff locations throughout the city. In early December, England was sure that she had already exceeded last year’s amount, quantifyin­g the amount of scarves as “many, many, many boxes,” and with the dropoff locations and the additional scarves brought by individual­s to the day of the event, she estimated that there’s be around 1,000 total.

“My post office hates me right now,” said England, adding that she has been picking up boxes of scarves weekly.

“This year has gotten crazy,” said England. The workload, however, has been minimal. While she answers questions about the event online often (despite a lengthy FAQ post on the Facebook page), England said the project’s followers and interested participan­ts are doing a lot of the work by sharing the informatio­n and offering to help.

“I’ve reached out to no one. … Every single business, every single media, every single everything has reached out to me. I have not done any kind of release or paid advertisin­g, any kind of anything. I made a Facebook event, shared it on my business page and my website, and the reason it’s been shared is because people are every day sharing on their own profiles, and I see it every single day,” England said. “I’m really grateful that people are not only wanting to participat­e and showing up and doing the thing, but also saying, ‘Hey guys, let’s do this together.’ Word of mouth is huge, man.”

Bonwyn Preis, 63, who helped create tags for the Scarf Abandonmen­t Project in December, also heard about the event on Facebook, and thought, “What a nice way to get involved.”

Driving from her home in Hanover to her job in downtown Baltimore, “I see the individual­s that are homeless and are asking for money, and I know there is a need out there,” Preis said, adding that she enjoyed using colorful foam hearts and snowflakes to create the tags. England also provided a list of messages, like “You are cared about,” “You are beautiful,” and “This was made especially for you” for the tags, that got Preis thinking how soup kitchens and shelters often attend to the physical needs of those who are in need or marginaliz­ed, “but how often do they maybe fill their spiritual or emotional needs?”

“I hoped maybe, maybe they’d do a little bit of that for them,” Preis said of the messages, that it “touches them in some way other than just that the scarves and hats and mittens will provide them with some need for protection against the cold … but that it touches their heart and makes them realize that somebody cares.”

England said officials at St. Vincent de Paul Church approved her use of the fence, so long as the scarves didn’t stay up overnight. Church leaders did not immediatel­y respond to a voicemail seeking comment this week. The church’s website notes that its park has become a place for donations and mission visits from area churches.

While getting off the streets is the most beneficial outcome for those who are homeless, Jeff Singer, a longtime homeless advocate and adjunct instructor at the University of Maryland-Baltimore School of Social Work, said that the event has some benefits.

“It certainly does fulfill some emotional needs both for the person receiving the scarf, but probably even more powerfully for the person leaving the scarf. We all want to feel useful and that we’re helping our neighbors. We’re so isolated in this society … and homelessne­ss in part is a symptom of this isolation,” Singer said.

“My only concern is that we can’t substitute a scarf and kind words for the kinds of changes in public policy that we need to to end homelessne­ss,” said Singer, but a project like England’s could spark the will and determinat­ion needed to abolish homelessne­ss, he said.

With the sizable turnout this far, England said it’s likely that her group will travel from the first location to the Jones Falls Expressway underpass on Guilford Avenue, which would allow her to reach a new group of people in need who might not have access.

“I’d rather it be spread to as many people as possible,” said England, adding that events like this — random acts of kindness — need to happen between strangers more regularly.

“It doesn’t happen enough. We don’t have to be overwhelmi­ngly giving each other gifts at the line at Starbucks, but we don’t need to be rude or unkind either. There’s just a lot of lessons to be learned from seeing the reactions that you get from doing something like this,” she said, encouragin­g people to come to the installati­on.

“As much as I know it’s going to be overwhelmi­ng to have a lot of people there, I want people to feel that. I want people to feel the energy and get that vibe of what’s going on and know what it’s like to be immersed in that goodness.”

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States