Drogheda Independent

ONE members take to the streets to highlight cause

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MEMBERS of the O.N.E.

(The Organisati­on of National Ex-Service Personnel/

Óglaigh Náisiúnta na hÉireann) raised public awareness and aid for the homeless

Irish Defence Forces veterans it supports, by situating veterans in specially-created Tricolour sleeping bags around the streets of Dublin last week.

Dubbed ‘Sleeping Flags’, the symbolic act, which challenged protocols around the treatment and representa­tion of the Irish flag, is to represent both the homeless veterans who died on Dublin’s streets, which was the catalyst for O.N.E. setting up its first homeless hostel, and the reality facing current and future veterans if the charity is unable to keep its doors open.

To date, O.N.E. has helped hundreds of homeless male and female Defence Forces veterans who have served abroad in conflict zones including The Congo, Lebanon, Syria and the Mediterran­ean, or at home during The Troubles. Many come to O.N.E. with depression, disabiliti­es, PTSD, or having suffered family breakdowns, with little support to call on.

Drogheda man Ollie O’Connor, CEO of O.N.E., “Our first homeless hostel opened in direct response to a number of veterans dying on the streets of Dublin. Since then, we’ve helped over 900 homeless veterans from all over Ireland who could have faced the same situation. These Sleeping Flags are bags we never wanted to make, but if we can’t get enough funding, our veterans will end up back on the streets”.

Set against Ireland’s current homelessne­ss crisis, the preventive services O.N.E. offer are more vital than ever, providing over 16,000 bed nights every year, between Dublin, Letterkenn­y and Athlone, and with 95% of the veterans they help moving on to permanent housing.

“The men and women we’re helping have a special affinity with the Tricolour. These are fathers, mothers, brothers, sisters and our next door neighbours who joined the Irish Defence Forces to serve their country. When they joined up, they were young fit men and women. They didn’t put up their hands to become homeless veterans.” For more informatio­n on the Sleeping Flags Appeal, or to make a donation to O.N.E. visit sleepingfl­ags.ie

 ??  ?? Ollie O’Connor
Ollie O’Connor

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