Monday, February 3, 2020

If The Pope Can Do It - All Churches, Mosques, Temples Should Open Its Property Doors To The Homeless Starting In Detroit

All churches, cathedrals, mosques, temples should immediately open their doors, cash out their foreign child welfare trust funds, and serve the people they made needy by stealin' the children, land and vote.

As a matter of fact, we should start with the Archdiocese of Detroit, where they can turn over all that property they are running through the Detroit Land Bank Authority, instead of having to drop even more money on the construction of more human plantations for the youth aging out of their state, privatized foster care and adoption contracts.

Child Welfare Propaganda - Even A Kid From Ghana Can Spot Trafficking Tiny Humans In The Name Of The Tax Exempt God


Give them permanent homes, not a human asset management center.

Ruth Ellis Center building 43 units of supportive housing for LGBTQ young adults

The Archdiocese of Detroit has beautiful buildings that have been magically trying to be leveraged and flipped, so they do not have to pay settlements for the horrors these young adults suffered while under its aegis, who why not use these shuttered schools instead of letting them rot, for the purposes of getting more federal bailout money, because everyone already stole all the TARP money.

How Is The Catholic Church Hiding More Than $2 Billion In Assets?


I am pretty darn sure lots of these homeless youth came out the Denby Salvation Army historic institution.


What better and immediate way to provide relief for the life of hell these children survived under the Catholic Church.

Always remember, before they were young adults, they were children.

FUN FACT! THE MEL TROTTER HOUSE IN GRAND RAPIDS BARS GAY YOUTH FROM ITS HOMELESS SHELTER

19th Century Vatican palace turned into homeless shelter at Pope Francis' behest

After the building was renovated last November, it opened its doors to the homeless.

Image: A Vatican palace that has been turned into a homeless shelter.
"The Detroit Land Bank Authority is not going to like this."
ROME, Italy — Sitting off St, Peter's Square next to the Vatican, the beautiful 19th century palace would have commanded top dollars if it were a hotel, but Pope Francis had other ideas, so it has been converted into a homeless shelter.

The Palazzo Migliori, named after the family who donated it to the Roman Catholic Church, had served as the headquarters for an order of religious women, who vacated it last year.

But the Calasanziane order that occupied the building for 70 years and used it to help and care for young single mothers has since relocated to another location.

One option considered was turning the building into a hotel as it's located just off St. Peter’s Square, where pontiffs deliver sermons to thousands of worshippers. The location is also very popular with tourists, who pay hundreds of dollars to stay close to it.

But Francis had a very different idea of the kind of guests he wanted for this prime location — the poor and the homeless.

After the building was renovated in November, it opened its doors to the homeless.

“Beauty heals,” Francis said when he inaugurated the building at the time.

“This place feels more like home. I have my own bed, room and bathroom,” Mario Brezza, 53, told NBC News. “It’s so different from the dormitories I have tried until now, where sometimes you feel like an animal in a crowded stable."

Brezza, who had his leg amputated because of a "serious circulatory disease" lives on a $300 monthly disability allowance. He is among 50 or so homeless men and women who now sleep in the palace’s 16 bedrooms.

Volunteers also provide them with hot meals.

Among them is Sharon Christner, 23 who traveled from Pennsylvania as part of a research project on homelessness and social issues.

“Even if they wanted to use it for charity, a lot of people would have rented this place out, make a lot of money and give it to the poor,” Christner said. “But what is special about this place is that it’s not about maximizing dollar signs, but giving people a really beautiful place to be, with the idea that beauty heals.”

Carlo Santoro, a member of the Sant’Egidio Community, a lay catholic association in charge of many charitable projects linked to the Vatican, including Palazzo Migliori, said the place was a “real paradox.”

“It is a beautiful palace next to St. Peter’s Square and Basilica, and yet it’s home to those who until recently did not have a house to go to," he added.

Voting is beautiful, be beautiful ~ vote.©

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