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| © Mark Bialek |
posted 5/31/2009
Community activist Rose Martin is leading a grassroots effort to help ex-prisoners that in many ways parallels Mary King’s. But while King is a paid contractor of a statewide program and must follow certain guidelines, Martin is an unpaid, one-woman army who follows no rules but her own.
The charismatic retired founder of Peace Neighborhood Center now heads an organization called “Rose’s Good Company.” It has no address and no listed phone number. But through word-of-mouth, ex-cons find her and line up for help.
A couple of years ago, Martin worked briefly for King at MPRI. She says she quit in disgust after four months because the organization balked at providing her clients with three things she viewed as essentials: bus passes, phone cards, and cigarettes.
The program now provides bus passes and sometimes gives out phone cards as gifts. But cigarettes? “Ex-cons don’t want to talk to you if they don’t have cigarettes,” Martin snaps. “You have to give them what they want, not what you want.”
Martin calls King “very smart” and says, “I know she has the welfare of people” at heart. But she believes she can accomplish more outside of bureaucracy—in part by enlisting the help of established ex-cons who relate better to newly released prisoners than “officials.”
Martin once had an office but says, “I had to choose whether to pay rent or to feed people. I choose to feed people.” She meets her clients wherever is convenient for them—at the Peace Center, the library, or the bus station.
She may pile a few homeless guys in a truck and drive them around to stores and factories to fill out applications. She calls restaurant or store owners she knows and asks if they’re hiring. She hits up well-off admirers for donations; one recently gave her $500, which she used to take a gang of unem-ployed ex-cons out to Holiday’s restaurant. Some had been “eating out of garbage cans,” she says. “They ordered pancakes . .
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