Tag Archives: Homeless

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Last night.

Members and supporters of Hope 4 Homeless joined some of the family of the late  Jonathan Corrie and cast members of Love/Hate for a sleep-over at the doorway on Molesworth Street, Dublin where Jonathan died.

From top: family members of the late Jonathan Corrie, daughter Natasha McNeill, Catherine McNeill [Jonathan’s partner] and son Nathan McNeill; volunteer Laura Willoughby; from left: Dotty Langan, John Connors, Barry Keoghan, Alan Lennox, Steven Clinch and James Ward.

(Sam Boal/Photocall Ireland)

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From Lagan Grove, [Michelle O’Riordan] would have turned 28 on December 23. She is survived by her parents, three brothers, and two sisters. Ms O’Riordan was reported missing to Gardaí on Thursday after her family had been unable to contact her. She had been using the Cork Simon Community’s services at the time. [The body of a west Cork man in his 50s, whose name has yet been released, was also found].

Mum’s Loving Tribute As Michelle’s Body Is Recovered (CorkEveningEcho)

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Screenshots from RTÉ’s Nine News last night showing emergency accommodation for 20 homeless people being set up in the Civil Defence headquarters at the Esplanade, Wolfe Tone Quay, Dublin 7.

Cathal Morgan, the director of the Dublin Region Homeless Executive, told RTÉ:

“Tomorrow [Friday, December 12], our colleagues in the Civil Defence will be opening up 20 beds. That means 70 beds out of the 260 promised will be in place. By the 23rd of December, we will have those 260 beds in place.”

According to a report on the Civil Defence website, the beds will “be made available only by reference from the [Dublin] City Council’s freephone helpline service” and they’ll be in operation until March 2015.

Last week – after the Government announced it would provide extra beds – homeless campaigner Fr Peter McVerry told RTÉ News:

“I would have a question about the quality of the beds. Currently much of the emergency accommodation is dormitory style and if the new 200 beds are going to continue to be dormitory style then you’re going to have a lot of homeless people who will just refuse to go into them because they feel they are too dangerous and they will continue to sleep on the streets.”

Fr McVerry also said he hoped rough sleepers would be given a bed for a week or a month at a time, instead of the present situation whereby homeless people have to ring a freephone number every evening to see if there is a bed available.

There you go now.

Watch last night’s RTÉ report in full here.

Taoiseach and mayor meet homeless people in Dublin (December 5, 2014, RTÉ)

Previously: Help Is On Its Way

The Bed Summit

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Zebra-patterned ear muffs?

Again?

Malahide, Co Dublin yesterday.

The launch of Beloved, Focus Ireland’s first retail store trading in pre-loved clothes, gifts and whatnot in time for Yule.

From top: Models Sophia Polz (left) and Naoise McDonnell and from left: Sophia, actress Susan Loughnane (centre) and Naoise all sporting clothes from the Beloved ‘collection’.

Collection.

Suit yourselves.

Focus Ireland

(Sasko Lazarov/Photocall Ireland)

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This morning.

Sam writes:

Homeless people sleeping behind the railings of the Custom House in Dublin being moved on this morning. Today Homeless charities and groups will come together to try to come up with a solution to solve the Homeless crises in Dublin and around Ireland following the death of a homeless man meters from Leinster House.

(Sam Boal/Photocall Ireland)

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jcorrie-228x300Jonathan Corrie (above) and the doorstep on Molesworth Street (top) where he was found.

 

Via The Kilkenny People:

The only harm Jonathan Corrie  ever did was to himself.

Many of us who knew him through the Kilkenny District Court know what his family went through and how they did all in their power to help him.

They were always there in the body of the court, willing to go bail for him, whenever he needed them to do so. However, from an early age he was gripped by alcohol and then drugs. It was his way of coping and his way of masking his shyness.

Jonathan Corrie was a fine cut of a man when he was young always in a T-shirt, he never felt the cold.

He was extremely quiet, a bit of loner. He didn’t seem to understand what was going on in court when he was being prosecuted for being drunk and disorderly or petty theft or rather had he decided at an early age, that he himself was a lost cause. Looking back, it is simple to see now, that Jonathan Corrie didn’t fit in.

…From 16 years old onwards, he was a regular in Kilkenny district court and whatever petty crime he was responsible for, he owned up to it. There was absolutely no guile in him and I always felt that he was a tortured soul and really didn’t understand the world around him. The supports were not there for him.

Jonathan Corrie’s shyness masked by drink and drugs (KilkennyPeople)

(Leah Farrell/Photocall Ireland)

Meanwhile…

90363727B33GF1ICcAAP-k6jcorrieA tribute (top) to Jonathan Corrie (centre) at the doorstep on Molesworth Street, Dublin where he was found dead yesterday. The dedication was read out by Sinn Féin President Gerry Adams in the Dáil this afternoon.

78732379e8ef8844e58d8c6ea829e0c2Sophie Pigot,

 

Sophie Pigot, the woman who discovered John Corrie’s dead body yesterday spoke to Sean O’Rourke on Today with Sean O’Rourke on RTÉ Radio One this morning.

Sean O’Rourke: “Yesterday morning a man was found on a Dublin city centre street. His name was Jonathan Corrie. He was only 43. The person who found him joins me now. Sophie Pigot, good morning to you. You were on your way to work yesterday, you were making your way through Molesworth Street in Dublin city centre, what made you stop?

Sophie Pigot: “Good morning. Hi Sean. I stopped, just because I saw a man lying in a very uncomfortable looking position and I was stopping to see if he was okay to see if everything was alright, there was no, no particular reason I just, he just looked like he was very uncomfortable, he was lying on his face and it looked like it was quite uncomfortable, there was a lot of weight on his fingers they were kind of bent backwards…”

O’Rourke: “So what did you do, Sophie?”


Pigot:
“I went over and I tried to speak to him, I said ‘Sir’ a few times, ‘Can you hear me, are you okay Sir, are you all right?’ and he didn’t answer so I placed my hands on his back and he just…when I felt his back, it just didn’t, it didn’t feel right, now I didn’t stay for very long, I didn’t have my phone charged so I ran across the road to the Dail because it was the location of… the building was right opposite, it was, you know, the nearest group of people that I knew I could ask to borrow their phone or something so I went in, the receptionist greeted me and addressed me to a guard whom I informed ‘I think there’s a man very injured or sick, there’s something wrong he’s lying on the ground, please can you call an ambulance?’and then the guard was unable to leave his post where he was, I said ‘I don’t know if he’s dead or not’, so I ran back over while they were calling the ambulance… just to check and see how he is so I went back over and did the same thing and then I put my hand on his back again and I felt for his pulse, there was no pulse he was cold, I was quite sure he was dead at that point then.”

O’Rourke: “So what did you do at that stage, Sophie?”

Pigot: “Well, I was just standing there, I didn’t know what to do, all I knew was there was a man, I suppose, open to the world here, a really sad moment, so a couple of people had arrived, then three others, and I ended up then just going across to Buswells, they kindly gave me a tablecloth, like a tablecloth, just to put over him in dignity and I just waited then for the guards to arrive and in the meantime the group of people who I was standing with, they had recognized him and that he had a friend he was often seen with, another homeless man, they went and got him, he arrived and at that stage the guards were there, they took a couple of our details. I just left I didn’t know what else to do I suppose.”

O’Rourke:
“Sophie, I understand you are in your mid twenties. I’m wondering what training you have had what gave you the confidence to check Johnny Corrie’s pulse?”

Pigot: “Well, I’m a part-time… I’m a avid surfer and when I was younger I used to teach surfing so I’m a trained lifeguard, so I have kept that up you know throughout the years or however, just do retraining every year so I’ve been trained in it, so it was just an immediate reaction my main worry was, you know, I didn’t know if he was alive or not and I didn’t want to be standing there like a useless person waiting for an ambulance if the man wasn’t alive, you know, in the cold it was quite a cold morning yesterday, you know and he was an very uncomfortable position but…”

O’Rourke:
“It wouldn’t be unusual not by any manner or means Sophie to see a man slumped on steps on that general area but something, there seems to be something about what happened yesterday that made you stop?”

Pigot:
“I don’t know what it was, like people keep asking me why I stopped, but it’s kind of reflective the last few days, why don’t I stop, I pass people crying on the street as in actually crying, and I really don’t know how to answer that question, he just looked like he was very uncomfortable, if he had woken up the least I could do buy him a coffee or something, you know, I would have, that would have been more what I was expecting would happen, be on my way not think twice about it.”

O’Rourke:
“How long did you remain there at the steps was it until the ambulance came or not?”

Pigot:
“When the guards arrived, it was quite obvious he was covered by the sheet at this stage but they confirmed that he was, it was obvious he had passed away so… I found him at just around ten to eight, I left the scene by half eight.”

O’Rourke:
“And how were you affected by this afterwards? How did you get on during the rest of the day and say last night?”

Pigot: “During the day I suppose I was just in shock, it’s not really something you bring up in meetings or at work, I’ve class till… I’m in King’s Inns ,over the other side of town until late anyway. I didn’t really process it till last night when I was back in my house, really you just realize how unbelievably lucky you are and I mean, also I got so many…what a response… people are saying to me really kind words but I don’t deserve them I just kind of was there, and it just makes you realise that people do care… I suppose we… it’s become acceptable to act like homeless people are invisible and I think when people look at themselves in the mirror we realise that and that’s what I feel right now.”

O’Rourke:
“What would you like to come out of this experience and this event?”

Pigot: “I’m like literally a kind of … my own personal view now, I think that we’re a tiny country, this man could be my second cousin, you know, it’s absurd that we as a society have become immune to this situation, so whether that’s, whatever you’re working, whether you’re a politician or whether you work in the civil service, whether you’re working or not working, so, you know that we start to address this situation, like I mean there are fantastic organisations out there like Focus Ireland or the Simon Community and many others and I think the issue needs to get the attention long-term, I think I caught the end of the news there, I think, I don’t know what it was, but I think I heard someone saying, this has to be a long-term approach, we can’t all stand in glass houses and blame other people, I mean it’s a shopping period now for about 23 days, we’re going to spend an enormous amount of money on family, friends probably maybe even a colleague or two and there’ll be these people perfectly visible round us and we seem to feel like they’re invisible, myself included.”

Listen back here

Meanwhile….

Sophie Pigot is rightly praised for not stepping over Johnny’s corpse and instead getting a policeman at Leinster House to call for an ambulance – but is this what we have come to?
Have we fallen so far as a society that we must make a heroine of someone who does exactly what one is supposed to do when they see another human being in need?
Johnny Corrie died in a Dublin doorway on December 1 2014, but he didn’t die alone.
Every one of us played a part in creating the country in which he could die so publicly, so helplessly, so needlessly. We all stood over him as he passed on.
And none of us did anything, and now it’s too late.

We All Killed Jonathan Corrie (Philip O’Connor, Our Man In Stockholm)

Earlier: Do Look In Anger

Top pic via Gavin Sheridan