By Christopher Dawson, CNN Updated
3:03 PM ET, Thu March 28, 2019
(CNN)The
world looks a little brighter from the front porch of your own home.
It's a
sight more than 200 formerly homeless people are waking up to each morning at
the Community First!
Village in Austin, Texas.
And
they can take their time getting used to it; residents are invited to stay for
the rest of their lives.
Community
First! Village is built and run by the nonprofit Mobile Loaves & Fishesto lift the most chronically
homeless off the streets and into a place they can call home.
They
live in about 100 RVs and 125 micro homes arranged on streets with names like
"Peaceful Path" and "Goodness Way."
Heavy
machinery has broken ground on the neighboring 24 acres to add another 310
housing units. When complete, Mobile Loaves and Fishes believes it will be able
to provide permanent homes for approximately 40% of the chronically homeless in
Austin.
Community First! Village
is a 51-acre master planned community for the chronically homeless.
Building
a community that cares for each other
Providing
a home is not enough, according to founder Alan Graham.
"We
believe that housing will never solve homelessness, but community will,"
Graham told CNN.
"Because
within each of us innately are two fundamental human desires to be fully and
wholly loved and to be fully and wholly known and just stuffing somebody into a
shelter or a house with four walls and a roof is nowhere near sufficient. It's
all about the relationship here."
The
51-acre planned village was designed to create a sense of community. The homes
are "micro" on purpose, providing just enough comfort and privacy but
small enough to encourage the owners to step outside. There they find front
porches dotted along stone-paved paths that lead to community kitchens, laundry
and wash rooms, meeting halls, playgrounds, a dog park, a barber shop, an
outdoor movie theater, a medical facility and a community market.
"What
you're seeing is a 250-bedroom, 18-million-dollar mansion," Graham
explains. "And so you come out of your bedroom and down the hallway
metaphorically is the media room or the kitchen. They're going to see people at
the shared kitchens, the movie theater or out in front of the community market
just spending time with each other. So it's really that human interaction that
is so critically important. And when that happens, relationships begin to form,
and that becomes the power of community."
New
residents might initially keep to themselves, but it is hard to resist the
smell of Texas barbecue on the grill, or the sight of fresh vegetables grown on
site and being sliced for the community potluck dinner. Hearing the rhythmic
tunes of a jam session in Unity Hall is an open invitation to take a seat, tap
a foot, and maybe even add a voice to the chorus.
The
village also includes an art studio, an artisan blacksmithing shop,
glassblowing, beekeeping, a community garden and a car care shop. These hobbies
teach new skills and become a source of dignified income.
"We
offer a number of micro-enterprise opportunities on this property that in the
past two years has distributed over one million dollars to the neighbors that
live in this community," says Graham. "From the bed and breakfast,
movie theater and car care business to the pottery, jewelry making,
blacksmithing and organic farming operation. All of this is being done by the
men and women that are here."
In the
heart of the village is a large community center called Unity Hall where
administrators, staff and counselors put together daily activities, counseling
services, job placement and mentoring to help residents find their way.
"These
men and women coming into our community thrive once they rediscover a purpose
in their life," Graham tells CNN. "They need to feel valued as human
beings."
A
movement to end homelessness
Mobile
Loaves & Fishes hopes its efforts will launch a movement across the United
States; a compassionate answer to homelessness.
Every
quarter, they host a three-day
symposium in Austin that teaches attendees how to build similar
communities in their cities.
Similar
ideas have already taken hold. Tiny houses have been used to tackle
homelessness from Seattle to New York.
For
Mobile Loaves & Fishes, it starts with seeing the homeless as members of
the community.
All the micro homes in
Community First! Village offer front porches to encourage neighbors to get to
know each other.
"These
are our neighbors. It's all about the community being inspired into a
lifestyle, a service with this person," Graham says. "And that starts
by going into a relationship with them. So roll the window down, say hello. Go
break bread with them at McDonald's. It starts by seeing one another."
https://www.cnn.com/2019/03/26/us/iyw-town-for-the-homeless-trnd/index.html
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