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Baltimore's
Viva House *
By Fr. George M. Anderson, S.J.
'SOWEBO',
Viva House's SW Balto. Neighborhood

Walking from the bus station to Viva House, the home of the Baltimore
Catholic Worker, I passed block after block of boarded-up homes. I was
coming to celebrate Viva House’s 35th anniversary and to visit its
co-founders, Willa Bickham and her husband, Brendan Walsh, whom I knew
even before I joined the Jesuits. Since that time in the late 1960’s,
the city has declined dramatically. Its population once numbered close
to a million, but now hovers around 630,000. The abandoned homes stem
from a decades-long loss of employment opportunities, according to Willa
and Brendan. Since the 1950’s, over 100,000 manufacturing jobs have
disappeared. Those who once held them moved elsewhere in search of work.
“I remember standing at our front door and seeing women pass by on their
way to work at the Misty Harbor raincoat factory farther down the
street,” Willa said.
The loss of jobs contributed to an ever-growing drug trade—an
underground economy that has also filled to overflowing the city jail
and the Maryland prison located in downtown Baltimore. Ironically, the
jail-prison complex, with its 24-hour-a-day shifts seven days a week,
has become a major employer. A few years ago, crack cocaine was the
favored drug, but now it is heroin, which has affected the drug users
who come to the Viva House soup kitchen. Heroin, at least, Willa noted,
leaves the user in a relatively calm state, whereas those on crack can
become violent. She remembers men who arrived for the meal behaving
erratically, ready to explode. "And yet the next day, they'd come
back with no memory of their previous behavior."
PHOTO:L.Strausbaugh,2006
, Many who visit the soup kitchen are homeless. The housing situation
has worsened because the federal government has, according to Willa and
Brendan, abandoned its public housing program. The destruction of
high-rise apartment buildings led the couple to demonstrate with others
at several sites, like that of the now-vanished Murphy Homes.
Demonstrations and other efforts on behalf of poor people have always
been part of Viva House’s work. Earlier on, while habitable housing
stock still existed, they conducted sit-ins in the office of the City
Housing Commissioner and attained some success in securing homes for
low-income families. But now, as Brendan put it, nothing is left in the
way of decent housing, “and the city has no viable plan for the poor who
need it.” Even with families doubled and tripled up, he said, evictions
for nonpayment of rent remain regular occurrences. A family just a block
away had been evicted the week before my visit.
Those fortunate enough to afford the rents face utility bills. If
unpaid, the consequence is homes in darkness and without heat. “When you
walk past a house at night that you know is lived in, and you don’t see
any lights in the windows, you realize their electricity’s been shut
off,” Brendan explained. He cited the example of an elderly woman
subject to seizures who came to Viva House with an unpaid gas and
electric bill of $2,800. “She was living on $469 a month and used
candles to get around at night,” he said. Four hours on the phone with
several Baltimore Gas & Electric Company officials were needed before
they agreed to reduce the debt to a sum Viva House could pay through
donations. Advocacy work of this kind consumes much of Willa and
Brendan’s time, and after 35 years working on behalf of Baltimore’s
poorest residents they have become known to city officials. As Brendan
put it, “we have a reputation.”
Although advocacy work and direct services through its soup kitchen
account for much of Viva House’s work, Willa and Brendan emphasized that
another part involves resistance—resistance to today’s consumer culture,
but especially to the machinery of war. They feel they must both serve
poor people and oppose the military-industrial complex. Most Catholic
Worker communities on the east coast share in this dual thrust, they
added, oriented as they are toward the Plowshares movement that began in
the early 1980’s with a series of nonviolent disarmament actions by
peace activists. Although both Willa and Brendan have been arrested for
participating in various demonstrations at the White House and
elsewhere, neither has any felony convictions that have resulted in
significant jail time. As Willa put it, “we do the works of hospitality
better than resistance.” But they have long been co-workers with
resisters by providing them with hospitality and other forms of
assistance. Supporters of the Catonsville Nine, for example, were among
the first to stay at Viva House.
How did Willa and Brendan originally come to think of founding a
Catholic Worker house? Both had at one time made a commitment to church
ministry—Willa as a sister of St. Joseph and Brendan as a seminarian for
the Archdiocese of New York. But in addition to being strongly opposed
to the Vietnam War, they felt drawn to working with poor people. Even
before they met, they had found their way to Baltimore, to St. Peter
Claver parish—where Phil Berrigan was ministering to African Americans
and where he had begun the Baltimore Interfaith Peace Mission. After
their marriage, they found a house for rent at $75 a month near the
city’s unstated dividing line between poor whites and African Americans.
There they began what has become their life’s work among both groups—a
distinctively Christian vocation based on Matthew 25 and the Beatitudes.
In those early days, when they were also raising Kate, their
daughter, Willa and Brendan took turns holding paid jobs. One went out
to work while the other stayed home to provide hospitality and run the
soup kitchen. Brendan taught at local Catholic high schools, and Willa
worked as a pediatric nurse practitioner at a clinic. Once retired from
that job, she was able to help care for Phil Berrigan during the last
stages of his life at Jonah House, a resistance community about a mile
north of Viva House.
The soup kitchen remains the primary focus of Viva House—an
undertaking that involves far more than food. “How you serve the meal is
as important as what you serve,” Brendan explained. “People come here
for the sense of dignity it provides them.” On days when the hot meal is
not served, sandwiches are distributed. Despite a 20 percent reduction
in population for that part of the city, there has been no corresponding
drop in the number seeking help—a sign of the deepening poverty of the
city’s low-income residents. A number of those who come to Viva House
are mentally ill or physically handicapped, and many bear the marks of
addiction. As a nurse practitioner, Willa has seen addicts arrive “with
terrible abscesses on their arms and legs” at points where they had
injected drugs into their veins.
Willa and Brendan stay in touch with Catholic Worker houses in other
parts of the country. They acknowledge, though, that the newer ones tend
to be more resistance oriented, with correspondingly less emphasis on
starting large soup kitchens like theirs. At these newer undertakings,
hospitality might take the form of sharing the house with one or more
poor families on a short-term basis. Viva House itself, they said, may
eventually assume another kind of existence, but it will continue to
embody the life concept implied in its name, Viva. And for both Willa
and Brendan, faith continues to underlie all they do. “We are spiritual
people,” Willa said, and their spirituality is reflected in their
ongoing commitment to those whom the world regards as least.
George m.
Anderson, S.J.,
is an associate editor of America.
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