Philanthropy and Charity
"Philanthropy is commendable, but it
must not cause the philanthropist to overlook the
circumstances of economic injustice which make
philanthropy necessary." - Martin Luther King,
(1929 - 1968), civil rights leader and Nobel Peace Prize
laureate
"Charity is a matter of personal attributes,
justice a matter of public policy. Charity seeks to
alleviate the effects of injustice, justice seeks to
eliminate the causes of it. Charity in no way affects the
status quo, while justice leads inevitably to political
confrontation." — The Rev. William Sloan
Coffin
"Justice is not about how individuals treat each
other. Justice speaks to all the laws of a community and
how those structurally treat everyone, especially the
poorest, weakest and the most vulnerable citizens.
Justice is a different concept, a separate requirement
than beneficence and charity. An 'A+' in beneficence and
charity — soup kitchens, charitable giving,
volunteer work — important and noble as that is,
will not average an "F" in justice to a 'C.' Seeking
justice requires taking responsibility for how the laws,
customs and standards of our community treat the "least
of these" among us. — Susan Pace Hamill
As I listen to the names and taglines of the
foundations which underwrite some of my favorite NPR
programs, I think to myself "gee, they sound so
consistent with the ideals of Georgism. Why aren't
they supporting this movement?"
Henry George: How to Help the
Unemployed
AN EPIDEMIC of what passes for charity is sweeping
over the land. From New York, where the new and massive
United Charities Building, the million-dollar gift of one
philanthropist, gives stately evidence that the battle
against actual starvation has permanently transcended the
powers of a municipality that appropriates to it millions
annually and of the unorganized giving of greater
millions; and from Chicago, where the corridors of the
City Hall and the doors of churches have been thrown open
for the shelter of those so poor as to welcome such a
bed, to Seattle, on Puget Sound, or Tampa, on the Mexican
Gulf, -- all who have anything to give are being asked to
give. Municipalities, churches, boards of trade,
real-estate associations, labor unions and merchants'
organizations are giving and asking for charity funds.
Officials are surrendering a percentage on their
salaries, policemen, railroad operatives, the employees
of large business establishments, factory hands, and even
day laborers, are docking themselves of part of their
pay, and trades dinners being given up to swell charity
subscriptions. There are charity balls, charity parties,
charity entertainments, and charity funds of all sorts.
One great paper in New York is raising an old-clothes
fund, and another great paper a bread fund, and in
Ashland, Wis., they have made a charity mincepie
twenty-two feet in circumference and a quarter of a ton
in weight. The politicians are always large givers of
alms, politicians of the Tammany type especially; but
even Tammany has special relief committees at work. One
of the chiefs of New York's "400" calls on each pupil of
the public schools for a daily contribution of a cold
potato and a slice of bread for the organized feeding of
the hungry; and to complete the parallel with the "bread
and circuses" of the dying Roman republic, he also asks
that the churches be opened and their organs played every
afternoon, so that to free food may be added free
music!
Yet there has been no disaster of fire or flood, no
convulsion of nature, no destruction by public enemies.
The seasons have kept their order, we have had the former
and the latter rain, and the earth has not refused her
increase. Granaries are filled to overflowing, and
commodities, even these we have tried to make dear by
tariff, were never before so cheap.
The scarcity that is distressing and frightening the
whole country is a scarcity of employment. It is the
unemployed for whom charity is asked: not those who
cannot or will not work, but those able to work and
anxious to work, who, through no fault of their own,
cannot find work. So clear, indeed, is it that of the
great masses who are suffering in this country today, by
far the greater part are honest, sober, and industrious,
that the pharisees who preach that poverty is due to
laziness and thriftlessness, and the fanatics who
attribute it to drink, are for the moment silent.
read
the whole article
Henry George: The Condition of Labor
— An Open Letter to Pope Leo XIII in response to
Rerum Novarum (1891)
For even the philanthropy which, recognizing the evil
of trying to help labor by alms, seeks to help men to
help themselves by finding them work, becomes aggressive
in the blind and bitter struggle that private property in
land entails, and in helping one set of men injures
others. Thus, to minimize the bitter complaints of taking
work from others and lessening the wages of others in
providing their own beneficiaries with work and wages,
benevolent societies are forced to devices akin to the
digging of holes and filling them up again. Our American
societies feel this difficulty, General Booth encounters
it in England, and the Catholic societies which your
Holiness recommends must find it, when they are
formed.
Your Holiness knows of, and I am sure honors, the
princely generosity of Baron Hirsch toward his suffering
coreligionists. But, as I write, the New York newspapers
contain accounts of an immense meeting held in Cooper
Union, in this city, on the evening of Friday, September
4, in which a number of Hebrew trades-unions protested in
the strongest manner against the loss of work and
reduction of wages that are being effected by Baron
Hirsch’s generosity in bringing their own
countrymen here and teaching them to work. The resolution
unanimously adopted at this great meeting thus
concludes:
We now demand of Baron Hirsch himself that he
release us from his “charity” and take back
the millions, which, instead of a blessing, have proved
a curse and a source of misery.
Nor does this show that the members of these Hebrew
labor-unions — who are themselves immigrants of the
same class as those Baron Hirsch is striving to help, for
in the next generation they lose with us their
distinctiveness — are a whit less generous than
other men. ... read the whole
letter
Joseph Malins: The Ambulance Down in the
Valley
‘Twas a dangerous cliff, as they freely
confessed,
Though to walk near its crest was so
pleasant,
But over its terrible edge there had
slipped,
A duke and full many a peasant.
So the people said something would have to be
done,
But their projects did not at all
tally.
Some said, "Put a fence around the edge of the
cliff,"
Some, "An ambulance down in the valley."
...
"Oh he's a fanatic," the others
rejoined,
"Dispense with the ambulance? Never!
He'd dispense with all charities, too, if he could;
No! No! We'll support them forever.
Aren't we picking up folks just as fast as they fall?
And shall this man dictate to us? Shall he?
Why should people of sense stop to put up a fence,
While the ambulance works in the valley?"
But the sensible few, who are
practical too,
Will not bear with such nonsense much longer;
They believe that prevention is better than cure,
And their party will soon be the stronger.
Encourage them then, with your purse, voice, and pen,
And while other philanthropists dally,
They will scorn all pretense, and put up a stout
fence
On the cliff that hangs over the valley.
Better guide well the young than reclaim them when
old,
For the voice of true wisdom is
calling.
"To rescue the fallen is good, but 'tis
best
To prevent other people from
falling."
Better close up the source of temptation and
crime
Than deliver from dungeon or galley;
Better put a strong fence 'round the top of the
cliff
Than an ambulance down in the valley. ... Read the
whole poem and commentary
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