Saturday, October 19, 2013

"Homeless on Earth"



'Jesus The Homeless' Sculpture Rejected By Catholic Churches In Toronto, New York

The Huffington Post  |  By  
The statue is haunting and uncomfortable, depicting a darkly shrouded figure lying huddled on a long park bench. From a distance, the figure could be anyone, and only on close examination are the tell-tale "stigmata," or crucifixion wounds, visible on its exposed feet.

Timothy Schmalz's "Homeless Jesus" isn't your typical depiction of Christ, and it's arresting imagery might have hit too close to home for some Catholic leaders. In fact, the life-size bronze sculpture was rejected by two high-profile cathedrals, St. Michael’s Cathedral in Toronto and St. Patrick’s Cathedral in New York, despite initial enthusiasm by rectors.

“Homeless Jesus had no home,” Schmalz told the Toronto Star. “It was very upsetting because the rectors liked it, but when it got to the administration, people thought it might be too controversial or vague,” he said, adding he was told the piece “was not an appropriate image.”
Schmalz told the Catholic Register that his sculpture was inspired, in part, by a homeless man he saw lying on a sidewalk just before Christmas two years ago.

Homelessness is a problem in Toronto, where Advocates marked the city's 700th homeless death -- Stewart Poirier -- in February at a small memorial service. Approximately 5,000 homeless live in the metropolitan area, according to most recent estimates.

In a phone interview with The Huffington Post, the sculptor explained that returning to the city and seeing so many homeless on its corners and benches can be a jarring experience. The December night when he spotted the homeless man who inspired him was a particularly poignant moment, he said. "My instinctive thought was, that is Jesus Christ. I just saw Jesus."

The Ontario-based artist, a Christian himself, said that statue is meant as a permanent reminder of the Bible's Gospel of Matthew, Chapter 25:31-46, when Jesus tells his disciples that when they help the sick, the tired, the homeless, they also help him.
"This is one of the most powerful messages from the Christian religion," he told HuffPost. The sculpture is a "visual translation" of that Gospel.

 Feeling "chagrined" by his statue's initial rejections, Schmalz said he thinks some "higher-ups" in the Church were put off by the "radical" depiction of the man Christians believe is the son of God.

The statue has finally found a home, however, near the entrance to Regis College at the University of Toronto. Regis is a Jesuit school of theology that recognizes that "the intrinsic link between faith and 'doing justice' is central to an Ignatian way of living." The school is also hosting an April 17 panel discussion, centered around the topic of homelessness, to recognize the installation of the piece.

"The mission of our college is to promote critical theology, with advocacy for justice and an appreciation of beauty," Father Gordon Rixon, the dean of Regis College, told HuffPost in a phone interview.
Placed on a prominent corner across from city government buildings, the statue has high visibility, Rixon said, and is a beautiful way to "help interpret our college to the city."

Already, the reaction to the stature has been overwhelmingly positive, with people leaving flowers at its feet and emailing letters of support to the college.

Schmalz said that, in the future, he would like to replicate the statue and place copies around the world. "I think its a sign everyone should read," he said.

3 comments:

  1. As you know I'm not keen on Christianity. But I like where this sculpture is coming from. It's a comment on what our society has sunk to.

    Zaek

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  2. I am keen on Christianity - as it should be - though not so much on the caricature we too often see. The sculpture has drawn a poem from me . . .

    Homeless

    The foxes have dens and birds have nests;
    a home is a place where a creature rests:
    not I:
    no home, no settled place,
    no welcome given to my face,
    and I
    was moving here and there,
    never with a settled lair,
    broken, despised, rejected of men,
    wandering, teaching, arrested and then…
    crucified;
    there I died,
    took on myself the sins of men,
    and now that I’m alive again…
    ‘tis I,
    and on this bench you see me lie,
    homeless and never housed,
    ailing and never healed,
    unwarmed, unfed,
    for all you know, I’ll soon be dead.
    Do you walk by and show disgust,
    failing to do the things you must?
    Can’t you hear the homeless cries?
    Don’t you know who you despise?
    It is I;
    there I lie,
    for those you see as worthless others –
    the least of these: they are my brothers.
    It is I:
    if you cannot hear my cry,
    though you always call my name,
    I don’t know you, nor your shame:
    just walk away; accept your blame.

    ----------ed pacht

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  3. Good poem Ed. It's got a rhythm.

    As you know I'm a heathen pagan reprobate, but - alas! - not as much of a reprobate as I'd like to be.

    What especially apalls me about the phenom of homelessness in the USA is the way we've come to accept it as a "normal" condition for a segment of the population. This is NOT the America I grew up in. We've become a nation of people who don't give a crap about each other. Where the hell is Charles Dickens when we need him?

    Zaek

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