Effective Compassion: Seven Principles from a Century Ago
by Marvin Olasky
The crisis of the modern welfare state is a crisis of government, and it is
more than that. Too many private charities and foundations dispense aid on the
basis of what feels good rather than what works. As a result, they end up providing,
instead of points of light, alternative shades of darkness. Too many act like
the arrogant individuals criticized by F. Scott Fitzgerald in The Great Gatsby:
"They smashed up things and creatures and then retreated back into their
money or their vast carelessness
and let other people clean up the mess
they made."
Private charities and foundations can do a better job than government but
only if they follow seven principles that effective poverty fighters of the
past understood. Here are the principles, with historical meaning and contemporary
applications, in alphabetical order.
1. Affiliation
A century ago, when individuals applied for material assistance, charity volunteers
tried first to "restore family ties that have been sundered" and "reabsorb
in social life those who for some reason have snapped the threads that bound
them to other members of the community." Instead of immediately offering
help, charities asked, "Who is bound to help in this case?" Mary Richmond
of the Baltimore Charity Organizing Society summed up in 1897 the wisdom of
a century: "Relief given without reference to friends and neighbors is
accompanied by moral loss. Poor neighborhoods are doomed to grow poorer whenever
the natural ties of neighborliness are weakened by well-meant but unintelligent
interference."
Today, before developing a foundation project or contributing to a private
charity, we should ask: "Does it work through families, neighbors, and
religious or community organizations, or does it supersede them?" For example,
studies show that many homeless alcoholics have families, but they do not want
to be with them. When homeless shelters provide food, clothing, and housing
without asking hard questions, aren't they subsidizing disaffiliation and enabling
addiction? Instead of giving aid directly to homeless men, why not work on reuniting
them with brothers, sisters, parents, wives, or children?
We should ask, as well, whether other programs help or hurt. It's good to
help an unmarried teenager mother, but much such aid now offers a mirage of
independence. A better plan is to reunite her whenever possible with those on
whom she actually depends, whether she admits it or not: her parents and the
child's father. It's good to give Christmas presents to poor children, but when
the sweet-minded "helper" shows up with a shiny new fire truck that
outshines the second-hand items a poor single mom put together, the damage is
done. A better plan is to bulwark the beleaguered mom by enabling her to provide
a better present.
2. Bonding
When applicants for help a century ago were truly alone, volunteers worked
one-on-one to become, in essence, new family members. Charity volunteers a century
ago usually were not assigned to massive food-dispensing tasks but were given
the narrow but deep responsibility of making a difference in one life over several
years. Kindness and firmness were both essential: The magazine American Hebrew
in 1898 told of how one man was sunk into dependency, but a volunteer "with
great patience convinced him that he must earn his living"; soon he did
and regained the respect of his family and community. Similarly, a woman had
become demoralized, but "for months she was worked with, now through kindness,
again through discipline, until finally she began to show a desire to help herself."
Today, when an unmarried pregnant teenager is dumped by her boyfriend and
abandoned by angry parents who refuse to be reconciled, she needs a haven, a
room in a home with a volunteer family. When a single mom at the end of her
rope cannot take care of a toddler, he should be placed quickly for adoption
where a new and permanent bonding can take place, rather than rotated through
a succession of foster homes. Some failed programs spend a lot of money but
are too stingy in what is truly important: treating people as human beings made
in God's image, not as animals.
3. Categorization
Charities a century ago realized that two persons in exactly the same material
circumstances, but with different values, need different treatment: One might
benefit most from some material help and a pat on the back, the other might
need spiritual challenge and a push. Those who were orphaned, elderly, or disabled
received aid; jobless adults who were "able and willing to work" received
help in job-finding; "those who prefer to live on alms" and those
of "confirmed intemperance" were not entitled to material assistance.
"Work tests" helped both in sorting and in providing relief with
dignity. When an able-bodied man came to a homeless shelter, he often was asked
to chop wood for two hours or to whitewash a building; in that way he could
provide part of his own support and also help those unable to chop. A needy
woman generally was given a seat in the "sewing room" (often near
a child care room) and asked to work on garments that would be donated to the
helpless poor or sent through the Red Cross to families suffering from the effects
of hurricanes or tornadoes. The work test, along with teaching good habits and
keeping away those who did not really need help, also enabled charities to teach
the lesson that those who were being helped could help others.
Today, don't we need to stop talking about "the poor" in abstraction
and start distinguishing once again between those who truly yearn for help and
those who just want an enabler? Programs have the chance to succeed only when
categories are established and firmly maintained. Work tests can help: Why shouldn't
some homeless men clean up streets and parks and remove graffiti? Now, as thousands
of crack babies born addicted to cocaine and often deserted by mothers who care
only for the next high, languish in hospitals under bright lights and with almost
no human contact, why shouldn't homeless women (some are psychotic or sick,
but others are healthy and gentle) be assigned to hold a baby for an hour in
exchange for food and shelter?
4. Discernment
"Intelligent giving and intelligent withholding are alike true charity,"
the New Orleans Charity Organization Society declared in 1899. "If drink
has made a man poor, money will feed not him, but his drunkenness." Poverty
fighters a century ago trained volunteers to leave behind a conventional attitude
toward the poor, seeing them through the comfortable haze of their own intentions.
Barriers against fraud were important not only to prevent waste but to preserve
morale among those who were working hard to remain independent: "Nothing
is more demoralizing to the struggling poor than successes of the indolent."
Bad charity also created uncertainty among givers as to how their contributions
would be used, and led to less giving over the long term: It was important to
"reform those mild, well-meaning, tender-hearted, sweet-voiced criminals
who insist upon indulging in indiscriminate charity." Compassion was greatest
when givers could "work with safety, confidence, and liberty." Today,
lack of discernment in helping poor individuals is rapidly producing an anticompassion
backlash, as the better-offunable to distinguish between the truly needy
and the grubby-grabbygive to neither.
5. Employment
New York charity leader Josephine Lowell wrote that "the problem before
those who would be charitable, is not how to deal with a given number of the
poor; it is how to help those who are poor, without adding to their numbers
and constantly increasing the evils they seek to cure." If people were
paid for not working, the number of nonworkers would increase, and children
would grow up without seeing work as a natural and essential part of life. Individuals
had to accept responsibility: Governmental programs operating without the discipline
of the marketplace were inherently flawed, because their payout comes "from
what is regarded as a practically inexhaustible source, and people who once
receive it are likely to regard it as a right, as a permanent pension, implying
no obligation on their part."
Today, programs that stress employment, sometimes in creative ways, need new
emphasis. For example, more of the able-bodied might receive not housing but
the opportunity to work for a home through "sweat equity" arrangements
in which labor constitutes most of the down payment. Some who start in vigorous
programs of this sort drop out with complaints that too much sweat is required.
They find champions who would prefer to see a Department of Housing and Animal
Development passing out free cages, but one person who stayed in a program said
at the end, "We are poor, but we have something that is ours. When you
use your own blood, sweat, and tears, it's part of your soul. You stand and
say, 'I did it.'"
6. Freedom
Charity workers a century ago did not press for governmental programs but
instead showed poor people how to move up while resisting enslavement to governmental
masters. Job freedom was the opportunity to drive a wagon without paying bribes,
to cut hair without having to go to barbers' college, and to get a foot on the
lowest rung of the ladder, even if the wages there were low. Freedom was the
opportunity for a family to escape dire poverty by having a father work long
hours and a mother sew garments at home. Life was hard, but static, multigenerational
poverty of the kind we now have was rare; those who persevered could star in
a motion picture of upward mobility.
Today, in our desire to make the bottom rung of the ladder higher, we have
cut off the lowest rungs and left many on the ground. Those who are pounding
the pavements looking for work, and those who have fallen between the cracks,
are hindered by what is supposed to help them. Mother Teresa's plan to open
a homeless shelter in New York was stopped by a building code that required
an elevator; nuns in her order said that their code forbade such mechanical
helps and that they would carry upstairs anyone who could not walk, but the
city stuck to its guns and the shelter never opened. In Texas and New Mexico,
a Bible-based antidrug program run by Victory Fellowship has a 60 percent success
rate in beating addiction, yet the Texas Drug and Alcohol Commission instructed
the program to stop calling itself one of "drug rehabilitation" because
it did not conform to the usual standards. Unfortunately, such examples of the
lack of freedom are all too commonplace.
7. God
"True philanthropy must take into account spiritual as well as physical
needs," poverty fighters a century ago noted, and both Christians and Jews
did. Christians worshipped a God who came to earth and showed in life and death
the literal meaning of compassionsuffering with. Jewish teaching stressed
the pursuit of righteousness through the doing of good deeds. Groups such as
the Industrial Christian Alliance noted that they used "religious methods"reminding
the poor that God made them and had high expectations for themto "restore
the fallen and helpless to self-respect and self-support."
Challenge that goes beyond the material is still essential to poverty fighting.
In Washington, D.C., multimillion dollar programs have failed, but a mile from
the U.S. Capitol success stories are developing: Spiritually-based programs
such as Clean and Sober Streets, where ex-alcoholics and ex-addicts help those
still in captivity; the Gospel Mission, which fights homelessness by offering
true hope; and the Capitol Hill Crisis Pregnancy Center, where teenage moms
and their children, born and unborn, are cared for, are all saving lives. In
Dallas, Texas, a half-mile from the Dallas Housing Authority's failed projects,
a neighborhood group called Voice of Hope invites teenagers to learn about God
through Bible studies and to work at renovating deteriorated homes in their
neighborhood. During the past decade, crime rates among the boys involved with
Voice of Hope and pregnancy rates among the girls have been much lower than
those in the surrounding community.
Giving by itself, we need to remember, is morally neutral. We need to give
rightly so as not to impede the development of values that enable people to
get out of poverty and stay out. When the preceding seven principles of effective
compassion are widely understood and practiced, antipoverty work can be effective.
In 1995, as in 1895, the best programs offer challenge, not just enabling, and
deal with spiritual questions as well as material needs. In 1995, as in 1895,
there is no effective substitute for the hard process of one person helping
another. A century-old questionDoes any given "scheme of help
make great demands on men to give themselves to their brethren?"is
still the right one to ask.
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