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The
Atlanta Journal-Constitution: 8/7/03 EQUAL TIME By
ED LORING Woodruff Park is sacred
ground in the center of our beloved city. For too long, Woodruff Park
has been contested space. The business community, Georgia State University and
several mayors have worked to frighten downtown workers and now suburbanites who
are moving downtown seeking an atmosphere like the sterile mall from which they
have come. No one in a position of
power and prestige has had the courage to admit we are faced with an endless
dilemma until the homeless are housed. Instead, we criminalize the poor and send
them to jail or wandering endlessly to nowhere. It is time to face the truth or
Atlanta is going to die, from downtown to the intown neighborhoods. Many police are tired of
spending their adult lives waking up those who have no place to sleep. This
newspaper ridicules Judge Howard Johnson for his resistance to criminalizing
homelessness. Atlanta-Journal Constitution
columnist Colin Campbell supports the police who want to undercut the power of
judges who disagree with them; this foreshadows deep wounds to the democratic
way of life by ignoring and subverting the separation of powers. Now Mayor Shirley Franklin
has, not by law but by executive order, said we cannot feed the hungry in
Woodruff Park because it's a health hazard. She brought Horace Sibley, chairman
of the Homeless Commission, to side with her. The Fulton County Health
Department is her foil. Surely she stayed up late
thinking this one up. She should have helped us with our sewage system, which
spills human feces into our creeks and rivers and creates health hazards. The powers that be are being
dishonest. Not having a house is a health hazard. We welcome the hungry and feed
them any and everywhere we can, Woodruff Park included. Many more mothers will lose
children from starvation and malnutrition if we continue on the course the mayor
and the AJC prescribe for us. Two things increase in value
when you step on them: Persian rugs and the Church of Jesus Christ. Many of
those who are feeding in the parks are saying that no mayor or newspaper can
stop us. Like the Rev. Martin Luther
King Jr. in Montgomery, we will defy the executive order, defend democracy and
seek justice in the park that is for all of us, rich and poor alike.
Ed
Loring, a
Presbyterian minister, is a founding partner of Open Door Community, a downtown
ministry to the poor and homeless.
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