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About Street roots. (Portland, OR) 1998-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 11, 2011)
Street roots Nov. 11, 2011 CfrjhKÍTO 13 Thirty years of hospitality: a personal reflection on Operation Nightwatch BY COLE MERKEL nights a weekend without fear of judgment STAFF WRITER given the opportunity to play guitar for the or harassment It’s a space where all are elebrating a 30th birthday can be crowd. From experience, I know that Tony welcome. difficult While the third decade is plays music for everyone in the hospitality Looking around the Sanctuary in S t center each evening Nightwatch is open. certainly a milestone, it is also the Stephen s Episcopal Church — Nightwatch’s beginning of an era where the first signs of That he was able to showcase his talents for home for the past 12 months — I was struck aging set in. Many want their 30th birthday a larger crowd reflects the Nightwatch by the diversity o f the community present to mission as a whole: it is not a space where to pass quietly and uneventfully with very support and celebrate the organization’s little pomp and circumstance. In the case of individuals are asked to change or ascribe to core mission of hospitality. Those present Operation Nightwatch, the 30th anniversary a particular philosophy. Rather, the filled a spectrum reflective of the of the organization’s incorporation as a non community reinvents itself organically based organization o n any given Thursday, F rid a y profit was celebrated on October 29 in a on the individuals who cultivate it — guests, or Saturday evening. It included homeless low-key environment surrounded by volunteers and staff alike - and from that or formerly homeless indviduals, people chamber music, food and plenty of friends. individual investment, safe-space is created who are employed and unemployed, Rather than show its age, Operation where change can take place. members of the Nightwatch board of Nightwatch used the evening to a n n o u n c e A cup of coffee, a sandwich, a board directors, donors to the organization, signs of new vitality and the promise of a game, a pair of socks and a genuine vibrant future with the wisdom that only 30 congregants of S t Stephen’s, volunteers and conversation three nights a week; it may not years of life can provide. guests of Operation Nightwatch. All were seem like much, but strong community can there to commemorate the agency’s past In the year I had the opportunity to serve save lives. Weekends can be a tough time to as Operation Nightwatch’s Jesuit Volunteer while looking ahead to its future. be alone, especially when a person is and Program Coordinator, I was privileged Even on stage, the performers and fighting to stay sober. Loneliness can to become part of one of the most diverse performances were diverse. Coordinated by overcome a person living in a single-room communities in Portland. Primarily, Joshua Kingsley, director of Portland occupancy apartment, especially when all Nightwatch is a drop-in center for people Chamber Music, an organization based out that person’s old friends are still living on who are low-income and/or experiencing of S t Stephen’s which brings the power the streets. What Nightwatch’s mission of homelessness. More than anything, music to those who do not have access to it hospitality creates, then, is a safe, clean Nightwatch’s weekend hospitality center is a otherwise, the arrangement was an environment for individuals to simply be: space of friendship and camaraderie for amalgamation of classical and contemporary: present with one another, and treated with those who are lonely and have no place else Mozart to the Black Eyed Peas with a few the respect and equality they deserve. to go. People of all colors, genders, Ukranian folk songs in between. At times, the concertwas a walk down identities, orientations, ages and socio One of the more moving performances of memory-lane with a slideshow deta ilin g economic backgrounds frequent the S t the evening occurred when Operation Operation Nightwatch history r e m in d in g Stephen’s Episcopal fellowship hall three Nightwatch’s regular guest Tony Clure was attendees of how far the organization has B come since it began in 1981 as a clerical mission serving Portland’s “night population” (loosely interpreted, that often meant visiting people at bars on late weekend nights). It was a ceremony to acknowledge three volunteers of the year, and three churches that have been integral in the organization’s growth in the past year. The concert was also a time to reflect on the many community events Nightwatch facilitates outside its regular weekend hours: monthly comedy movie nights, monthly outings to parks and attractions outside the downtown core, weekly worship services and bible studies, biweekly foot care and the Mobile Hospitality Center, an RV that brings basic services and routine medical care to individuals living in East County twice a week. And finally, the Operation Nightwatch 30th anniversary concert gave'a space to look forward. Earlier that week, the organization received a grant from the Spirit Mountain Community Fund to partially endow the Nightwatch Healthcare Initiative, a plan to bring more health services like acupuncture, massage and basic medical care to those who are most vulnerable. After 30 years, it seems Operation Nightwatch is evolving toward a strong future. Cole Merkel is the Jesuit Volunteer and Program Assistant for Street Roots Seasons of your life By Darla Brown In the winter You will grow In the spring . You will bloom In the summer You will not burn In the fall You will not fall Winter, spring, summer, fall All you have to do is call You have friends We are all the same By Jacob "Fluffy" Anderson We are all the same Just different names We are all the same Whether shame or fame We are all the same Just different colors We are all the same And should love one another By Nathan Roper