I am in no way a "homeless information guru". I do not claim to know wild stats or information about how many homeless people there are in the United States and so on. I was simply fascinated with an observation I made when I was younger. I then revisited this finding on a vacation last summer to the Pacific Northwest and have been pondering it ever since.
I do not remember ever seeing a person who is Hispanic and homeless. This may be my bad memory but the point is that there aren't very many out there.
In Portland and Seattle Ben and I ran into quite a few homeless people. And it was then that I asked myself, "Self. Have you ever seen a homeless person who is Hispanic?" I really did shock myself. Because I then asked myself, "why not?"
Growing up my dad would occasionally hire Hispanic day laborers to do work on our property or at his company. My dad would drive down to "the place" where the day laborers would hang out and pick up a few for $10 an hour. All of the day laborers were Hispanic. But then... there was this homeless Caucasian bum who lived downtown that would always be out on a corner with the sign "will work for food". And I would think, "Why doesn't he just go hang out with the day laborers and work for food that way? Does he need a special invitation or something?" My point in this is that people who are Hispanic are not afraid to work. Is this why we don't see any people who are Hispanic and homeless?
I was looking around on the San Francisco Chronicle website and ran across a breakdown of homeless by their ethnicity. They found this to be the break down from March, 2007:
31% black
28% white
4% hispanic
Looking at those percentages makes me wonder "why?" Why are there so many homeless people in the United States and why are they homeless? Do the percentages mean anything? Or are my observations meaningless?
No matter what ethnicity a homeless person is I think that as a community of believers we need to do something. I do feel overwhelmed at times. I am simply only one person with a small income to play around with. How do we bring the percentages of homeless down? The deeper question that I have been thinking about is How do we help homeless people without enabling them? Or is that something we don't need to worry about because God is sovereign?
"What I'm interested in seeing you do is: sharing your food with the hungry, inviting the homeless poor into your homes, putting clothes on the shivering ill-clad, being available to your own families."
Isaiah 58:7