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San Diego Free Press

Grassroots News & Progressive Views

Homelessness and Hand-to-Hand Combat

June 4, 2012 by Christine Schanes

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Violence:  Is it caused by nature or nurture?  I have often wondered why people hit each other in physical, hand-to-hand fights.  And when people are homeless, living bereft of everything, why doesn’t the fighting stop?

To find out about the nature of violence among homeless people, I asked a 48 year old man who lives on the streets why he fights.  I thank him for the candor:

Q:  From time to time you fight with people.  Why?

Anonymous MFB:  Mostly I fight because people disrespect me.

Q:  What do you mean by disrespect?

MFB:  It’s when someone slanders me, slanders my name, says things that aren’t true in a public forum where everyone else can hear them.

Q:  Can you describe your last fight?

MFB:  My last fight was caused when someone was standing outside a business and disrupting the community.  Certian business people asked me to remove him.

I tried to remove him nicely.  I knew that if he went with me that things would go better for him than if he continued to stay and annoy the business people.  But he wouldn’t listen to my multiple requests for him to leave, so I had to fight him.  I had to hake him out–that’s the only way I know how.  That’s how I fight.

Q:  During the fight, what happened?

MFB:  The fight?  I hit him, he didn’t hit me one time.  I hit him a couple of times until bystanders broke us up.

Q:  When you were young, what were you taught about fighting?

MFB:  I was brought up being told that if I let one person disrespect me, then everyone will.  It’s all about your elders–you respect your elders.  And you don’t disrespect anyone.

Q:  Are there other examples of when you fell disrespected?

MFB:  It’s like letting someone steal something from you.  If you let one person do it, everyone will do it.

Q:  What happens if someone steals from you?

MFB:  You take care of it.  Otherwise you’re easy game, an easy target.  Everyone will take advantage of you, if you lte them.

Q:  You were housed and now you are homeless.  Does that make a differenece in how you react when you feel you are being disrespected?

MFB:  When you’re in the middle of the road, people steal things all the time.  Homeless people get their stuff stolen all the time.  It sucks.

Q:  Who steals homeless people’s belongings?

MFB:  Anyone who wants to.  Both housed and unhoused people steal from homeless people.  Ha!  Homeless people are easy targets.

Q:  Have people stolen from you?

MFB:  Housed people stole my wheelchair.  Twice.  They’ll steal anything because of addictions.  Everyone has vices.  Stealing is just another way of surviving.  It is what it is.

It’s just like the cops stealing homeless people’s cars–their homes–by impounding them.  But not everyone steals.  I was taught not to steal.  I don’t steal from anyone.

Q:  Do you have a general philosophy about life?

MFB:  You have to prepare for the worst, expect the best and accept what’s in between.

 

 

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Christine Schanes

Christine Schanes

Christine Schanes, J.D., Ph.D., is a consultant and public educator in the area of homelessness. Christine is director of two departments within Nos Amis/Our Friends, Inc.: (1) the new Center for Justice and Social Compassion and (2) Children Helping Poor and Homeless People, co-founded by Christine and her two children, Chrissy, age 8, and Patrick, age 6 over twenty years ago. Today, CHPHP is a nationally recognized educational outreach program conducted by children and teens with adult advisors that encourages direct service.
Christine Schanes

Latest posts by Christine Schanes (see all)

  • California Offers Free ID to Homeless People - July 7, 2015
  • Homelessness: Does A Dollar Make A Difference? - November 7, 2013
  • Helping Homeless People Die Indoors - May 29, 2013

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Comments

  1. Anna Daniels says

    June 4, 2012 at 10:47 pm

    Violence against unhoused women is a dirty secret much like domestic violence against women in the housed community. Male on male violence gets coverage; male on female violence not so much. As a society we don’t feel comfortable talking about either of these male on female violence situations.

    • Christine Schanes says

      June 4, 2012 at 10:54 pm

      Anna,

      Thanks for your comment.

      I so agree with you! One of the most challenging things about being a homeless woman, I believe, is the real and threatened danger of violence from a variety of sources. And, as you say, not many people are talking about it.

      I’m wondering where you get your insight into this topic?
      Christine

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