First, I'd like to thank you for giving us the opportunity to speak here today.
To understand how Maryhouse touches those who are deemed to be poor, I would like to give a short account of our beginnings.
In 1954 Bishop Jean-Louis Coudert invited the Madonna House Apostolate in Combermere, Ontario, to open its first field or mission house. Bishop Coudert asked that we come as a presence in the city and that we try to answer the needs of the people. It's a rather broad mandate.
One of the immediate needs was to provide safe shelter for folks who were coming to Whitehorse for medical reasons. This primarily included pregnant women who were coming in from the communities near their due dates. The doctors asked that they come in. We also had a shelter for men: those coming into the territory to seek employment; those coming from the various communities for medical reasons; and of course those who, because of addictions, needed a place of safety for a night or two. Bishop Coudert also asked us to answer other needs, such as the need for clothing, food, and so on.
In June 1954 three staff workers from the Madonna House Apostolate arrived and began our work. Basically, we answered the door. I believe that on the first day we arrived, a group of Americans travelling through to Fairbanks—soldiers and their wives—had no place to stay here in Whitehorse. Because they were not Canadian, they had no access to any kind of assistance, so we provided a place for them to stay. I think it was just in the front room of Maryhouse. And that's how we started. It was just kind of what we had.
Madonna House and its missions live by begging. We are not funded, so we really do depend upon the providence of God through our friends. As people came to our door looking for help with shelter, clothing, and food, we answered as best we could. If we had the items for their request, we would answer.
Maryhouse and the Salvation Army were the emergency food programs until the Whitehorse food bank opened this spring. Right from the beginning we were handing out food. I believe the Salvation Army was here and then came back, so it wasn't until a little later. We never said we were the food bank, but we were there.
We have clothed many people. Some are the men on the street. Some are people who have arrived here in the Yukon with very few resources. We have helped people re-establish themselves after being in difficult situations. This has included people coming to our shelters trying to get established and women trying to get away from difficult situations. I think we did that right up until 1997. I think it wasn't until right around then that they opened the shelter for women in Whitehorse. I'm not sure.
Sometimes our response has simply been to share a cup of tea or some sandwiches with those who come to our door. We have been of assistance to people needing to leave the territory because of family illness or death who had no other means of leaving. Sometimes—and this is really basic—it is just providing a tank of gas for people so they can get out of town. People would come to us and we would try our best to help them.
This is one example. A few years ago, two women arrived at our door looking for help. They had come in on a bus at 4:30 in the morning, and they were moving from the southern U.S. to Alaska. Of course, they did not realize what going by bus from the eastern part of the southern U.S. to Alaska would entail. We were able to provide them with a place to get cleaned up and we gave them some food for their journey so they could keep going.
Oftentimes when we talk about the poor, we think primarily of the economically poor. However, Maryhouse has tried to respond to all who have come to us. Throughout the years, many people have come to us when they have found themselves in different situations and now and then when they just needed a friend.
Today we continue to give out clothing to people who may technically have a house but who live on the street.
The other day a man came to the door. Oftentimes the men on the street come to the door and ask for mitts, hats, toques, especially in the winter when it's cold. I said to the man, “We don't have any. We're all out. We've given them all away. We have to wait until more come in in donation or we get a chance to buy some.” He said, “I didn't think I needed them, so I left my pair at home.” It was just an interesting thing.
Due to mental illness or addiction, they are unable to maintain employment. Sometimes people come who are indeed working, and some have even more than one job, usually part-time, and they have no benefits. When the car breaks down, the washing machine breaks, injuries or sickness happen, they do need assistance.
I believe that today it is harder to simply categorize people as poor. We do have a lot of hidden poor. Perhaps they are receiving assistance, but it is never enough, and quite truthfully I don't think it will ever be enough, because we live in a society where to outward appearances all is fine and we can get clothing that is decent-looking cheaply, but they would still be living below the poverty line.
People continue to knock on our door, asking for clothing, especially in the winter. A few days ago a man arrived from another province and needed to get clothing to work. We were able to outfit him with some good outdoor clothing and even had a pair of boots that fit. As we were trying to find the items, he told us that he needed it because of his job, which was snow removal. Snow removal is not a good-paying job. It's what you can grab.
A woman whose husband is unable to work and whose grandchildren are experiencing difficulties has come to ask us for help. It's been an ongoing thing. She does have a job, but it's the multiple problems that are going on there.
Through the emergency food program, we know that many people would factor us into their budget. When we had the emergency food program and the Salvation Army also had the program, people would be able to come to us once a month and receive groceries. It wasn't a lot of groceries; it was primarily to help them get over this change between when their cheque ran out and before the new one came. Then, also, when they were able to they would go to the Salvation Army. They had a different timeframe for coming for help.
They did factor us in. Then oftentimes people would say we have the same people, yet we did not have the same people all the time, because if people were able to get work, seasonal work, they didn't come. They didn't need us. They were okay.
I know over the years people would come to us. Oftentimes, people coming in from the communities, men coming in from the communities, would need a place to stay. They have relatives in town, but they still need a place to stay. The relatives would let them stay but it would help if they had a bag of groceries. That was a way of enabling themselves to have safe caring, and of helping their relatives.
We still have a man who would come to the food program and only ask for one or two items. He still comes. He knocks on the door every once in a while and says, “Do you have any Chef Boyardee ravioli? I just need one can. I just need two cans. Do you have any hot sauce?” It's always just one item. I think, why is he still coming to us, but he does. So when we've got it, we give it.
One thing I'd like to say is that at Maryhouse we were invited by Bishop Jean-Louis Coudert, and our mission was for Whitehorse. It's broad. But I don't think Maryhouse thinks in terms of serving the poor. We really try to serve the person who is at the door, and not lump everybody in together.
Thank you for listening.