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Homeless project widens its support net

Gatehouse volunteer Bethany Draycott giving out food Gatehouse volunteer Bethany Draycott giving out food

IN NOVEMBER 1988, the churches of central Oxford started a winter shelter for people who had nowhere to go once the sun went down.

But what started out as a soup kitchen would soon became so much more.

News of the friendly, non-judgmental Gatehouse project, run from St Giles Church, spread quickly, and it soon became known as a place of safety, offering food, drink and soup in winter to those who needed it most, whatever their condition.

As time passed, the charity moved to new premises at Northgate House off Cornmarket Street in Oxford, opened six days a week and continued to flourish.

But times have changed.

Aimed at the over-25s, the Gatehouse still welcomes those who are predominantly homeless or are sleeping rough, but also a growing number who are in unsuitable housing or are just struggling to keep their heads above water in difficult times.

It also offers activities including a regular art group, quiz nights and a computer club.

And in 2003 it was named one of the Queen’s Golden Jubilee Award winners and appeared in the background to the Queen’s Christmas Broadcast to the nation.

But what has remained constant – and according to project director Andrew Smith is key to the charity’s success – is the unfaltering commitment of its volunteers.

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Today as many as 200 people of all ages and walks of life regularly volunteer at its base in St Michael’s Street, serving food and chatting with guests, supported by a small team of permanent staff.

They know that without their time and the generous donations of food from local shops and businesses, about 80 people each day might lose out on a meal and company.

Mr Smith, 62, said: “The Gatehouse gives dignity and self-esteem back to those for whom every day is a bruising reminder that they are considered outsiders in their own city.

“And while people like me are paid to provide professional support, the volunteers are always put at the top. I can’t speak highly enough of the way they give time, skills and other resources to create a place of interaction and long-term change.”

He continued: “A third of the people we see will be going off to sleep rough or in a tent, but just as many have a place of their own and are trying to hold it all together. We are able to give them the practical and emotional support to do that.”

Dr Karima Brooke, a dyslexia support tutor from Botley, started volunteering three years ago.

The 59-year-old mother-of-five said: “I have experience of being badly housed – back in the 1970s, as a single parent, myself and two of my children spent time being moved from one furnished room to another and we even spent time squatting.

“It was very hard and the experience stayed with me, so I always knew that I would want to volunteer for a charity that helps homeless people.

“I went along to the Gatehouse and received a very warm welcome and coming out of my first session there I knew this was the place for me.

“The mix of people who use the Gatehouse is so diverse; there are ex-forces people, people who have been in prison, those who just seem to have slipped through the net and many who are simply lonely.

“As a volunteer sometimes they talk to you and their stories can be real eye-openers, but very touching.”

The Gatehouse is open Tuesdays to Saturdays from 5pm-7pm and Sundays from 3pm-5pm. For more information go to www.oxfordgatehouse.org

'It feels like we're going back home'

In March last year, the Gatehouse looked like it may find itself homeless, when it was given notice to quit its premises at Northgate Hall.

But, once again, St Giles’ Church in Woodstock Road – where the project started – stepped forward to offer a home. The Gatehouse Project is due to open there on February 14.

Project director Andrew Smith said: “We are going to be well set up in the new place – once we have sorted out how to fit a gallon into a pint pot. If anyone out there can offer some storage for our reserves of clothes and food, I’d love to hear from them.”

The Gatehouse launched its The Moving Home Appeal to raise £175,000 to meet some of the costs of the move, which has also been supported by St Giles.

Mr Smith said: “Raising £175,000 allows us to re-equip the project to do our job properly and provides us with a secure future for the next 15 years. It’s a bit of a challenge, but I’m pleased to say that in nine months we are 95 per cent of the way there.

“For the first time we will have disabled access, a decent office and a modern kitchen. We thought we were going to be homeless but it feels like we’re coming home.”

MEET THE VOLUNTEERS

Tim Howles, 31, a trainee vicar from Oxford, joined the Gatehouse 18 months ago and now works as a co-ordinator for the charity.

He said: “I used to walk past homeless people in the street and feel quite scared and I certainly didn’t know what to say to them. But volunteering at the charity means I now recognise many of the people I see. I know their names and bits about their backgrounds and I feel I have a bridge between us.

“One homeless guy told me that one of the kindest things people can do is to kneel down to his level when they stop to talk to him.

“Like many volunteers I have found that three-hour sessions at the Gatehouse have opened up a world of new understanding and relationships to me.”

Jayson Marc-Frater, 41, has experienced the Gatehouse both as a guest and now as a volunteer.

He explained: “I ran away from home at 12 when my mum died and lived rough for 28 years. Travelling the country I had problems with drink and drugs and would stop at Oxford and visit the Gatehouse and I loved the warmth and understanding it offered me.

“Eventually I spent time in a hostel in Oxford, my life came together, I got my own place and then I asked if I could volunteer at the Gatehouse.

“Guests talk to me and know that I really understand what they are going through.

“The Gatehouse is vital to Oxford and I am very happy that I can now return the help it gave me.”

Victoria Mort, 66, from Oxford, helped set up the Gatehouse in 1988. She said: “The Gatehouse has always been very relevant here in Oxford.

“There are a lot of agencies helping homeless people, but the Gatehouse is unique in offering no questions or conditions of its guests; as long as they do not take or deal drugs here or use violence, they are welcomed.”

She added: “The feedback I have received over the years is that the Gatehouse has been a ‘mind-saver’ to many people. It is a place where people are protected from the ‘street world’ where they are often exploited.”

Comments(10)

Darkforbid says...
10:12pm Sat 28 Jan 12

Whatever they say its still money/aid raised by rattling the homeless tin, given to anybody who shows up...

I tend to avoid places where i'm forced to mix with known pedo's...

Bogdan The MeerKat says...
11:36pm Sat 28 Jan 12

Darkforbid wrote:
Whatever they say its still money/aid raised by rattling the homeless tin, given to anybody who shows up...

I tend to avoid places where i'm forced to mix with known pedo's...
What a bizarre comment.

Darkforbid says...
1:25am Sun 29 Jan 12

┄What a bizarre comment┄

Not really if you raised money for starving kids in Africa but spent the money playstations for prisons it would be fraud...

The Gatehouse raises money using 'help the homeless' but has a open door policy so money given for the homeless may go to lonely home owners

In jail certain offenders are kept away from the main population for very good reasons, at the Gatehouse you have to mix with some very sick offenders, tell one to p-i-s-s off = banned

As it goes I use the place once a week to charge my phones... And they are aware of my views.

simplicissimus says...
6:51pm Sun 29 Jan 12

Shows us how accepting, super tolerant, decent and very often Christian the excellent staff and vollies are. Even luxuries like smartphones can be recharged, free of charge.

Something that working with socially disadvantaged people fascinatingly brings home is the very widespread need of fleas to have their own fleas, of pariahs to have their own lepers. Hierarchy and a sense of entitlement are rarely more present than among those sometimes considered to have been brought down in the world. Many of them, as comment suggests, pride themselves on a sense of innate superiority. (Metaphor, BTW, no reflection on cleanliness, or even godliness.)

Pity DF, then, for his having - in his estimation and based upon grounds unverified - to tolerate undesirables on his home territory, yet apparently surprised that verbal abuse and public hostility meet with censure.

Darkforbid says...
8:11pm Sun 29 Jan 12

┄Shows us how accepting,
super tolerant, decent and
very often Christian the
excellent staff and vollies are. Even luxuries like
smartphones can be
recharged, free of charge.┄

Being sheep like and turning a blind eye to real evil in the world is not christian, but maybe the reason for so much sex abuse in the church... And i've never paid more than 20 quid for any phone, but I could also charge them at some where not giving free food to anyone, raised using poverty and the homeless as the cause... Its fraud plain and simple...

┄Something that working with
socially disadvantaged
people fascinatingly brings
home is the very widespread
need of fleas to have their
own fleas, of pariahs to have
their own lepers. Hierarchy
and a sense of entitlement
are rarely more present than
among those sometimes
considered to have been
brought down in the world.
Many of them, as comment
suggests, pride themselves
on a sense of innate
superiority. (Metaphor, BTW,
no reflection on cleanliness,
or even godliness.)┄

Please explain why you think funds for the homeless should be used for a open to anyone cafe... Btw its not right that people, faced with living outside, and really need this help... Having to put up with well looked after, well housed greedy food grabbers, or a room full of local flashers, rapists and pedo's...

Pity DF, then, for his having -
in his estimation and based
upon grounds unverified - to
tolerate undesirables on his
home territory, yet apparently
surprised that verbal abuse
and public hostility meet with
censure.

It not my home territory, my view is the same as the charity commission funds raised for a cause should be used for that cause...

The Gatehouse is a church cafe open to all run on money given to help poverty...

simplicissimus says...
2:48pm Tue 31 Jan 12

DF, you assert that of your own free will and by personal choice you frequent "a room full of local flashers, rapists and pedo's", unevidenced beyond your intriguing and pretty dramatic claim. Daft question, maybe: why do you persist in attending what you seemingly belittle as "a church cafe", if it's not to be among these very associates? Knowing your selfless magnanimity, I'm guessing it must be out of brotherly love.

It's good that you enjoy your line of work, although it fails to keep an independent roof over your head.

You might find that you could now make a stronger case for means (albeit other people's) to more permanent digs, although of course our Labour-led OCityC is newly making it harder than any other council in the land to find cheap rooms hereabouts via its idiosyncratic new HMO rules. Oxford was ever a home of lost causes, and few more glaring than our ruling party at the town hall, answerable directly for most local woes.

According to recent media sources around 30% of your current self-employed co-franchisees are Roumanians. Many are Roma, and of these some will be Roumanian Roma, although by no means all.
http://www.dailymail
.co.uk/news/article-
2090012/One-Big-Issu
e-sellers-Romanian-h
omes-AND-claim-benef
its.html

With an increasing trend of securely homed and housed Big Issue vendors, fewer donors might be so forthcoming or supportive. My fear being that the brand and some of its sellers could suffer.

Many vendors can now have cake via the taxpayer in the shape of full state benefits, including for housing; earn some homeless Big Issue cake on top for themselves, and still have more homeless cake to eat at drop ins like the open-door policy Gatehouse, of which I trust you'd approve?

If Super-Mac were alive, he might say that BI sellers had never had it so good.
http://www.telegraph
.co.uk/news/uknews/l
aw-and-order/9020377
/Romanian-Big-Issue-
seller-wins-right-to
-housing-benefit.htm
l

But beware: Paul Kelly, a BI seller less fortunate than others who toil within this Labour-legacy growth industry, has had his license to sell the brand, his franchise as it were, revoked, allegedly without fair investigation, having been accused of racism by a Roma colleague. Roumanian commentators on UK media stories write that in such ways a minority of their compatriots may bring wide disrepute upon Roumanians here in general, most of whom are keen to make a fuller social contribution.

Some self-employed licensees/ franchisees selling mags in the UK have made pretty solid property investments.
http://www.dailymail
.co.uk/news/article-
1389282/Benefits-bou
levard-Built-Romania
--YOUR-money.html

If you're pally with any Roma BI sellers with links back East, besides the others you associate with at your church cafe, had you ever considered the allure of relative exoticism and comfort, if any were to offer you a low rent spare room at their pad back in the motherland? Travel broadens the mind, and can lift the mood, Darky ;o)

Darkforbid says...
11:19pm Tue 31 Jan 12

Sim? Does the word longwinded have any meaning to you?

There are these things i'm sure you've heard of called Newspapers that amazingly print articles sometimes even with pictures, you know wonders of the modern age. Ones called the Oxford Mail maybe you've heard of it?

My views on the Big Issue and how its run now have been printed as far away as New York...

Do you want the links?

But your not really interested are you, just an excuse to have a dig at the social groups you say you've worked with or should I say hindered

simplicissimus says...
7:18am Wed 1 Feb 12

Sure, I could be interested in related links, DF.

You know about "projection" as a psychological concept, DF?

Darkforbid says...
7:44am Wed 1 Feb 12

┄You know about "projection" as a psychological concept,
DF?┄

Oh I thought you knew who I am Sim...

simplicissimus says...
2:12pm Wed 1 Feb 12

But not enough to assume your familiarity with projection.

(Kismet, as Hardy said to Nelson.)

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