"Michelin Guide for the Poor"

MrBrianMrBrian Posts: 2,672
edited January 2007 in A Moving Train
Italy's homeless have their own "Michelin guide"

By Philip Pullella
Wed Jan 10, 10:37 AM ET



ROME (Reuters) - It looks like a guidebook, with its glossy pages, fold-out map, and tips on where to eat and sleep in Rome. The only difference is that its readers are homeless.

The new edition of what its authors have dubbed a "Michelin Guide for the Poor" was presented on Wednesday as promoters warned that the ranks of the have-nots in Italy's capital were growing.

The guide, created by the Sant' Egidio Catholic peace organization, is divided into sections covering the basic needs of the homeless or poor -- "Where to Eat," "Where to Sleep," "Where to Wash Up."

Some 2,000 sleep on the street, not far from luxury hotels and world renowned monuments like the Forum and the Colosseum. Some 3,000 sleep in charity shelters and 2,000 others in dilapidated abandoned buildings.

"Rome is 'home' to some 10 percent of people living in extreme cases of poverty in Italy," said Mario Marazziti, a founding member of the Sant' Egidio group.

The numbers have swelled after two waves of enlargement of the European Union in 2004 and 2007 relaxed entry requirements for immigrants.

The 176-page guidebook, titled simply "Dove" (Where), tells the poor and homeless where they can get free meals -- either at Catholic parishes or city-run centers or mobile soup kitchens, which are marked by a drawing of a small sandwich on the map.

Volunteer organizations where the homeless can either spend the night or bathe -- marked by a small shower head on the map -- are also listed with instructions on how to get there on foot or public transport.

The guide, now in its 17th edition and which has spawned copycat editions in four other Italian cities as well as in France, Spain and Austria, also contains pages on legal and medical assistance.

"This is such a good guide that we give it to everyone coming out of jail," said Raffaella Milano, Rome's councilwoman for social services.

"People who leave jail and have no place to go have to get back on their feet. This guidebook has become precious for them and precious for us as public funds have been cut," she said.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20070110/wl_nm/italy_homeless_dc

----

Well it Would be great if the world had no need for such a book, but it's good to hear that something like this does exist, seeing that the world does need it.
Post edited by Unknown User on

Comments

  • CollinCollin Posts: 4,931
    This is a really good idea.
    THANK YOU, LOSTDAWG!


    naděje umírá poslední
  • redrockredrock Posts: 18,341
    I never heard of that. It is a great idea and, I would have thought, some help to these people. But it is sad to think that a book like that is necessary in our society - it is really unacceptable to have homeless people....
  • yiorgisyiorgis Posts: 34
    redrock wrote:
    I never heard of that. It is a great idea and, I would have thought, some help to these people. But it is sad to think that a book like that is necessary in our society - it is really unacceptable to have homeless people....


    I agree, the book it's a good idea but can't solve the problem.The government of a country - and not only the government - must provide help and opportunities to the homeless so they can be full members of a society
Sign In or Register to comment.