US Catholics, Buddhists helping
poor and homeless together
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| A homeless man sleeps on the ground in Mew Tork City. (2017 Getty Images) |
The Green Affordable Housing Project is uniting Catholics
and Buddhists in three US cities to provide a home for poor and homeless
people, sending a delegation led by Bishop Nicholas DiMarzio of Brooklyn to
visit the Vatican.
By Devin Watkins
A delegation of Catholic and Buddhist leaders from the
United States visited the Vatican this week to promote an initiative giving a
helping hand to city-dwellers facing poverty and homelessness.
The Green Affordable Housing Project seeks to provide
environmentally sustainable buildings for homeless people and low-income
elderly in Brooklyn, Chicago, and Los Angeles.
The Pontifical Council for Interreligious Dialogue invited
project representatives to Rome in honor of the late-Cardinal Jean-Louis
Tauran.
Bishop Nicholas DiMarzio of Brooklyn led the interreligious
group, and spoke to Devin Watkins about the initiative.
“The Green Affordable Housing Project speaks to the spirit
of Laudato Si’. It was a proposal that came from Cardinal Tauran before he
died,” Bishop DiMarzio said.
Cardinal Tauran’s idea, he said, was for Buddhists and
Catholics to cooperate on a project inspired by the encyclical’s teaching.
Bishop DiMarzio said the late-Cardinal hoped it would
provide help for “those who are in poverty”, especially the homeless and those
who are disabled. Solar panels, some other type of energy saving device, or a
roof-top garden are added to make the projects “green”.
Interreligious service project
Buddhist leaders in each of the three cities will
participate in the service-oriented initiative, making it an important
milestone in interreligious dialogue.
Bishop DiMarzio said Catholics would take care of the
administrative areas, such as construction and funding. “Whereas the
Buddhists,” he noted, “would be giving some of the supplementary help to the
projects.” The houses will have meditation rooms. “They may come and teach
meditation, or something that they could contribute that is specifically their
own,” he said.
Interreligious dialogue, Bishop DiMarzio said, has four main
elements, which are spiritual, social, service, and theological.
“The service one has never really happened that well, to
show that we can work together in a service project. That’s what Cardinal Tauran
had envisioned” for the Green Affordable Housing Project.
City-specific needs
The initiative even addresses the specific realities of each
city.
In Los Angeles, the project will build houses for men and
women in Skid Row, an area where some 6,000 homeless people live. In Chicago,
the project will expand Mercy Housing, which provides a permanent dwelling for
poor and homeless people.
“In a particular way,” Bishop DiMarzio said, “I’m very proud
of my own project in Brooklyn and Queens, because as we’re planning for the
future we recognize that we’re in what they call an ageing tsunami.”
His city’s project is particularly focused on both homeless
and low-income elderly. They often struggle to pay rent and may suffer from
physical and mental disabilities.
Bishop DiMarzio said that, by 2030, New York City will
increase in size by another 2 million people. Nearly half of them will be
senior citizens.
“The Baby Boomers are coming,” he said, “and they’re going
to be living in the city. And they’re going to have more need for supportive
housing and subsidized housing.”

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