2006年VOA标准英语-Father Vadim Still Helping New York's Homeless(在线收听) |
By Michael Gutkin, Alona Cherkassky ----------- It has become a habit for Father Vadim Arefyev. Once a week, in the early evening, he and his churchwarden, Georgiy Hololeenko, go through some of the most dangerous places in Russian Brooklyn. They search for the homeless, many of whom are alcoholics and drug addicts, who have come here to spend the night. "As a rule, our prayers begin right at the car. We pray to stay alive, to be able to leave these slums alive," Father Vadim said. Father Vadim Arefyev was upset when he became aware of the homeless problem in the Russian community. "When I first learned there were people dying on the streets, it turned me upside down," he said. "I thought to myself, it's impossible that in America today, our guys, Orthodox brothers, die on the streets. That can't be true. But when I realized that it's true, it turned me inside out." As he makes his rounds, Father Vadim invites the men he encounters to his shelter, the St. John Foundation for the Homeless. Evgeny Deryagin, a former lieutenant colonel in the Russian Army, helps out at the shelter. He credits Father Vadim with helping him to quit drinking. He said, "I am very grateful to fate and those people who can respond to kindness with kindness."
Father Vadim says he has encountered hundreds of people during his trips and that people from all walks of life have ended up at his shelter. The St. John Foundation barely makes ends meet. It does get some help from parishioners' donations and Father Vadim himself, who works as a computer programmer at a large American firm during the day. It also receives some corporate assistance. Even without adequate room, Father Vadim will continue looking for people he can help |
原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/voastandard/2006/6/33765.html |