Greenfield Recorder, December 1, 2023
https://www.recorder.com/Col-Hynes-(forDec-1)-Beacons-of-Civilization-53100024
By H. PATRICIA HYNES
Civilization has been described as “the slow process of learning to be kind.” This past summer and early fall, while I stood with peace and justice companions on the Greenfield Common, I witnessed a pervasive culture of kindness.
Karen Boyden, with the assistance of some family and friends, folded and laid out free shoes and summer clothes and, later, fall sweaters, pants and heavier shoes on a table and blanket on the Common. A sign welcomed all passing by to help themselves to “Dippy’s Closet.” Some who chose clothing and shoes, with the advice of friends, left with smiles; others were discreet, not wanting to draw attention to themselves.
Dippy’s Closet, I learned from Karen, is a grassroots, volunteer driven outreach that provides free clothing for men, women and children with the specific goal “to attract homeless folks and individual and families who are struggling financially to purchase quality clothing.” She was first inspired to share her father’s wardrobe when he unexpectedly passed in September 2022; and she began donating his wardrobe to men living in a recovery home in Greenfield.
“It was a great way to rechannel the pain of losing my dad into helping others,” Karen says, especially seeing “so many people living on the streets of Greenfield.”
Karen estimates that, in her nine outreaches on the Common from June to early November, about 50 people have visited weekly and left with clothing. She has widened the circle of donors, including co-workers at the Valley Medical Group Easthampton and the Giving Circle Thrift Shop of South Deerfield.
Asked what this act of kindness for other fellow humans means for her, she replied, “I want to show the folks who are struggling that we do notice, that we do care and they are valued. It is my hope that our little clothing mission might inspire others to serve the homeless. It is not that hard and so incredibly rewarding.”
Karen mentioned being inspired by the Stone Soup Café, seeing their efforts to serve folks in need. And I noticed that some who stopped by Dippy’s Closet then headed to Stone Soup Café, one long block away, for a gourmet, healthy lunch, offered each Saturday noon to 1:30 p.m.
This pay-what-you can community cafe, whose intent is “to build a culture of belonging,” has grown since its opening in 2010 from serving 25 meals to 600 meals each week. Their Community Free Store, an emergency curbside food pantry, was created at the prompting of their guests during the onset of the pandemic. It provides between 80-110 households with groceries,
produce and personal care items at no charge.
In 2022, Stone Soup created a tuition-free, 12-week Culinary Institute career training program for people seeking a new career path, especially those who are seeking employment after a period of incarceration or recovery from addiction. Those accepted into the program leave with a Food Handlers License, a ServSafe Certificate in Kitchen Management, job skills, practicum experience, and references for securing work in the food sector of Franklin County.
Explaining her intense commitment, co-director and chef Kirsten Levitt said; “My life’s passion is to service … humans are hard-wired for service.” Sarah Hilliard, head of volunteers, is motivated by “a lot of love. No human being should be without food,” she says.
Nearby in the Second Congregational Church, Gloria Matlock and volunteer tutors work with up to 20 children, to augment their chances to thrive as they grow, in the innovative Twice As Smart program founded by Matlock in 2018. Her lofty fourfold mission is to:
- Provide after school academic instruction to augment children’s confidence in reading, writing and mathematics leading to a love of learning.
- Cultivate social and listening skills.
- Encourage each child to develop their unique “voice” and to find selfexpression through art and music.
- Expose children to resources, role models and experiences that expand their educational and career possibilities.
Twice As Smart students are Latinx, Black and African American, Native American and white; some are immigrants and many live in public housing.
This model of holistic education is clearing the students’ obstacle-laden path to higher education, jobs and a deep sense of self, a cause to which artist, musician, and former teacher Gloria Matlock has committed her life.
Are these programs using charity to remedy social injustice, as some might claim? Jane Addamswould disagree. In 1892, this eminent social reformer explained that Hull House, her settlement house in a poor precinct of Chicago, was not a charity. Its purpose — and, for Addams, a central obligation of being a citizen — was to help America’s less fortunate make the most of themselves.
“To call this effort [charity] … is to underestimate the duties of good citizenship,” Addams said.
I would add that, with half of Americas either poor or a medial emergency away from economic ruin, these programs in our midst and the thousands like them across our country are beacons of civilization in a nation the pumps the world full of military weapons, while its soul empties from within.
Pat Hynes, a board member of the Traprock Center for Peace and Justice, is a retired professor of environmental health from Boston University. She has published and spoken widely on feminism, environmental justice, and militarism and peace and is a member of the Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom. Her most recent book, “Hope, But Demand Justice,” is available in bookstores and online.