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		<title>Good works by 5 men feed the hungry and their own soul</title>
		<link>https://blogs.lotterypost.com/truesee/2009/12/good-works-by-5-men-feed-the-hungry-and-their.htm</link>
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			<title>Original Blog Entry: Good works by 5 men feed the hungry and their own soul</title>
			<link>https://blogs.lotterypost.com/truesee/2009/12/good-works-by-5-men-feed-the-hungry-and-their.htm</link>
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			<pubDate>Mon, 21 Dec 2009 02:20:12 GMT</pubDate>
			<dc:creator>truesee</dc:creator>
			<description><![CDATA[<p>Miami-Dade<br /><br />Sunday, 12.20.09<br /><br />POVERTY<br /><br />Good works by 5 men feed Miami&#x27;s hungry, and their own soul<br /><br />Amid the scores of organizations feeding the hungry in urban Miami, one of the most popular isn&#x27;t really an organization at all.<br /><br />ROBERT SAMUELS<br /><br />The pickup truck pulled onto a sidewalk under downtown Miami&#x27;s web of highways. It was 7 p.m., and already the jolt of the workday had flat-lined into a desolate world of silence and silhouettes.<br /><br />Then, a voice whistled. Within seconds, 18 homeless men and two women were at the back of the truck, forming a single-file line, their hands outstretched. The four men riding in the back handed each two sandwiches and a soda.<br /><br />They performed their act of charity without the support of any formal organization. The five -- including driver Orlando Mendez -- pay for the food out of their own pockets, about $200 a week.<br /><br />Sometimes, Mendez will ask the homeless to pray with him before they eat:<br /><br />``Give us this day our daily bread and forgive us our trespasses as we forgive those who trespass against us.&#x27;&#x27;Three years ago, Mendez heard a speech by Bono describing how God&#x27;s presence can be found in pockets of poverty. It followed a moving sermon by his church&#x27;s youth pastor, who urged the congregation to go out and do good.<br /><br />CHANGING LIVES<br /><br />So he packed a duffel bag with bacon double-cheeseburgers and told his wife he was going to start heading to Overtown once a week to befriend the afflicted. Soon, he was joined by four friends.<br /><br />Their food came from Wendy&#x27;s. Their street name came from elsewhere. ``There goes the Whopper Men!&#x27;&#x27; came the yell from a group sitting in folding chairs on a lot at Northwest First Avenue and 15th Street.<br /><br />CHANGING TIMES<br /><br />Times being what they are, there aren&#x27;t any Whoppers right now. Only recession sandwiches.<br /><br />Mendez makes his living renting out construction equipment -- not the best business when little is getting built. Manny Diaz, 42, installs car sound systems -- not a boom business in the age of the iPod. Tom s Chadwick, 39, got laid off at Bear Stearns. Javier Castellon, 44, works in real estate. Billy Hernandez, 51, does window tinting.<br /><br />They meet around 4 p.m. Tuesday afternoon at Mendez&#x27;s sprawling home in West Miami-Dade. On his dining and end tables, they set out slices of oat and white Winn-Dixie bread. Then, a glob of mayo, some bologna and ham, and a swirl of mustard on each. This is what they can afford.<br /><br />They wouldn&#x27;t want to consider what would happen if they ever stopped altogether. Not for the people they serve -- and not for themselves.<br /><br />``Sometimes, I think we get more out of it than they do,&#x27;&#x27; said Chadwick, who runs a company that operates airports in Latin America. He buys the sodas the group distributes.<br /><br />They&#x27;ve learned the most appreciated item is Pepsi. Least? Apples. They tried them once, and it was the only time they came back home with food left.<br /><br />``I guess the homeless don&#x27;t always have the best teeth, so no one would take them,&#x27;&#x27; Chadwick said.<br /><br />CHANGING MOODS<br /><br />Each block has a different mood. Even corners on the same block are different.<br /><br />The first stop, as always, was a group of 10 at an empty lot behind the Adrienne Arsht Center.<br /><br />A whistle went out, and a line formed. A man named Micky Barnes approached Castellon, dug into his pocket and pulled out a small orange Bible, its edges dark around the book of Psalms.<br /><br />``I&#x27;ve been reading the Bible you gave me,&#x27;&#x27; Barnes said. ``I don&#x27;t wanna sound clich , but I&#x27;ve had five job interviews this week. Stuff is starting to happen for me.&#x27;&#x27;<br /><br />At Northwest 15th Street and Third Avenue, a woman named Bobbie Jean proudly reported she had stayed out of mischief for another week. As she talked to them, a mother and child pull up in a green sedan.<br /><br />``Can my son have a sandwich?&#x27;&#x27; she asked. They got one and drove away.<br /><br />The Whopper Men moved onto a corner underneath an Overtown overpass, where the only brightness comes from crack users lighting their pipes. There were 15 of them here, hunched on a curb, many of them shaking.<br /><br />The Whopper Men jumped out. They said the Lord&#x27;s Prayer, but only half of this group joined them. One woman muttered that she didn&#x27;t want bologna.<br /><br />Here, at Northwest 14th Avenue and Second Court, was the coldest reception The Whopper Men got all night. Mendez walked a few steps away; his eyes began to glisten.<br /><br />``This is the place I started,&#x27;&#x27; he said.<br /><br />He wonders whether an ephemeral moment once a week can make any sort of lasting change.<br /><br />``Sometimes, people will say to me, `I listened to your advice last week and called my family -- and at the end of the month, I&#x27;m moving back home,&#x27; &#x27;&#x27; Mendez assured himself. ``There are people who get out of here. Will they be back? I don&#x27;t know. But there are people who get out of here.&#x27;&#x27;<br /><br />One subtle sign they&#x27;re making a difference: The people at this corner no longer try to sell the Whopper Men drugs.<br /><br />And when the truck went out before Thanksgiving, a homeless man gave Mendez a token of appreciation: a bag full of fruit.<br /><br />The sandwiches were running low. The van snaked into Bicentennial Park, where two separate homeless colonies subsist under a big sky with a bayfront view.<br /><br />Castellon began to pray with a group of men, their foreheads touching. A woman approached Mendez. Holding the two bologna sandwiches in her hand, she told him how she&#x27;d love to be a waitress in South Beach.<br /><br />``But look at me!&#x27;&#x27; Edith Bowen told them. ``I&#x27;m 52 years old; no one&#x27;s going to hire me.&#x27;&#x27;<br /><br />``You&#x27;re very personable,&#x27;&#x27; Mendez said. ``I&#x27;m sure a place would hire you in a minute. Do you have any family you can call? Maybe they&#x27;ll help you out. You&#x27;ll be surprised.&#x27;&#x27;<br /><br />``Maybe you&#x27;re right,&#x27;&#x27; Bowen replied. ``All I need is a little help. . . . Just come check up on me, OK? Make sure I&#x27;m still here.&#x27;&#x27;<br /><br />Mendez smiled: ``We&#x27;ll be back Tuesday.&#x27;&#x27;<br /><br />LINK TO VIDEO<br /><br />http://www.miamiherald.com/news/miami-dade/story/1390989.html<br /><br />... &#x5b;&#xa0;<a href="https://blogs.lotterypost.com/truesee/2009/12/good-works-by-5-men-feed-the-hungry-and-their.htm">More</a>&#xa0;&#x5d;</p>]]></description>
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