Sunday, August 1, 2010
Human Dignity and Self Worth
This past week, I had two separate lunches with two older, African American gentlemen.
My church prepares and serves lunch several times a year at the Benton Harbor Soup Kitchen. Serving starts daily at 11:30. From my experience, typically there is an initial rush from the clients who are waiting in line for the Kitchen to open. Inevitably, there is a lull and the number of clients coming through the line slows. I like to use this time to enjoy one of the meals that we have prepared. It is my way of ensuring that the food we have prepared is tasty and hot. (I am not a chef, but I do like to eat.)
It is also a time when I can join one or more of the Soup Kitchen's clients for a meal. This Saturday I plopped my food tray down next to an elderly African American gentlemen. Some poor people are distinguished looking. This gentleman was one. His clothes well worn, yet well tended to.
I inquired about whether he was a life long resident of Benton Harbor and found out that he had moved to the area about 30 years earlier from Alabama, having been born in the South. His reason for moving to the area was employment. I enjoyed his conversation, quite philosophical actually, about the dignity and value of human activity and employment.
The importance to him of meaningful and gainful employment as a younger man could be expressed in one phrase: Self-worth.
Earlier in the week, I was blessed to share a luncheon meal with notable West Michigan artist, Paul Collins. Mr. Collins has painted the rich, the famous, the poor, and the working class. Fascinating fellow who has traveled to the Middle East, Japan, and many other locals.
Mr. Collins' art pieces are expressions of individual humanity. As an artist, he is able to capture the beauty, the dignity, the soul and self-worth of the individual.
There's the connection. Two people. Two residents of West Michigan. And although they may express it in different ways, they both understand that each person has dignity, value, and worth whether they be in a corporate board room or in a Soup Kitchen in the back of the Salvation Army.
Mr. Collins web page can be located at:
collinsart.com
The Benton Harbor Soup Kitchen serves a luncheon meal 365 days a year from its location in the back of the Salvation Army building in downtown Benton Harbor.
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