By Ryan Hutsell
For The Herald Bulletin
ANDERSON — Bob Blume’s method of fighting poverty and combating crime is to help felons get their lives together as soon as they’re released from prison — before they get into trouble again.
Blume, a co-founder and current executive director of Man4Man Ministries, says that immediate intervention is necessary.
“We catch the guys as they’re getting out and work with them to help them change their lives,” he said.
Man4Man helps the former prisoners find jobs, from which they can draw a sense of self-worth. Blume says the ministry tailors its assistance to individual needs, treating the men like people instead of parts on an assembly line.
“We are just one beggar helping another beggar find food,” he said.
There’s a correlation between poverty and incarceration, according to Blume, but not for the reasons that some might think.
“The difference is the poor get punished and caught more,” he said. “The people with money are doing the same crimes, but because they have established some kind of position or power, they may not go to prison as easily. The poor do get caught in the legal system, which can perpetuate the issues that keep them there.”
Some perceive the poor as lazy and therefore getting what they deserve. But Blume said they just get tired of fighting a system that inhibits their success.
“Those in the middle and upper class do look down on people in poverty as lazy,” said Blume, “but we also don’t do enough to provide adequate employment for them. Employment drives it.”
Tired of “running wild,” Paul Wilkins, 34, came to Man4Man on April 6 to seek help getting his life under control. Wilkins says he found a father figure in Blume to help him address a “poverty of the soul.”
“Man4Man helped me come out of my spiritual poverty so that I could deal with economic poverty,” Wilkins explained.
The Anderson man said Blume and others at Man4Man have helped him find peace by putting his life in the hands of Jesus Christ. Wilkins is working for Man4Man’s lawn service and hopes to find a permanent job soon.
Daniel Whalen, who worked with Blume in establishing Man4Man and just completed his doctorate at Anderson University’s School of Theology, has started an informal street ministry called Ziklag.
The organization takes its name from an Old Testament account of David being on the run from King Saul and ending up in a “marginal place outside the empire.” Ziklag’s mission is to build relationships with people who are on the fringes of society.
“Very few people in the middle class have ever experienced poverty themselves,” Whalen said, “even through personal association or involvement with someone who is in poverty.”
For his part, Whalen learned about poverty by becoming immersed in it himself — choosing, he said, to share the powerlessness, circumstances and alienation of the poor.
“There were times when I was on the street that I didn’t have enough money to buy a cup of coffee,” he said. “I know what it’s like to have to beg.
“What became abundantly clear to me is that while I always had a way out, there are a lot of people out there that, for whatever reason, are unable, in and of themselves, to reverse that process.”
Coping With Hard Times
Coping with Hard Times: Man4Man, Ziklag fight poverty on the street
Ministry seeks to help those who've strayed in past
- Coping With Hard Times
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Arrest log: Feb. 19
Arrests made by Madison County law enforcement on Wednesday, Thursday and Friday, based on Madison County Jail records.
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Churches offer support to beat a blue holiday
Tangible help for coping with grief during the holiday season is available this weekend from two local churches: First Presbyterian Church and Madison Park Church of God. The churches are offering events that are free and open to the public.
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Theft from ATM leads to man’s arrest
ANDERSON — Anderson police arrested a man Wednesday who charged $1,500 to his ex-girlfriend’s ATM card over the holiday season, according to a police report.
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Anderson man stabbed outside store
A 20-year-old Anderson man sustained a life-threatening stab wound Tuesday evening, and was being treated at Saint John’s Medical Center. Authorities expect he will be transferred to Methodist Hospital in Indianapolis.
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Arrest log: Sept. 2, 2009
These people were arrested Monday and Tuesday in Madison County:
- Madison County sheriff’s deputies arrested Julie A. Smitson, 43, Richmond. 10:15 a.m. Tuesday. Madison County Jail. Suspicion of probation violation. No bond. -
Coping with Hard Times: 'Culture of education' essential to economic future
ANDERSON — Delco and Guide used to offer good jobs in Madison County without a lot of education. Those days are gone.Tanya Tellis understands that all too well.
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Coping with Hard Times: Targeted programs help disadvantaged students
ANDERSON — For some students, school is an exciting and fun place to learn and make friends. For others, it’s a place to escape from the harsh realities of living in poverty.
Although Madison County is no stranger to economic hardship, the recession has had a major effect on many local residents who were financially stable — and the community’s students are no exception.
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Coping with Hard Times: Kid Connection helps children from troubled homes
ANDERSON — The room echoes with shouts of “We’re all one family!”
But the words don’t come from a mom and dad, brother and sister. Instead, they come from a group of unrelated children whose lives are filled with unknowns and plagued by “what ifs.”
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Coping with Hard Times: Poverty often puts education on hold
ANDERSON — Many Americans consider a good education the key to the future. But when a family has no idea where the next paycheck is coming from — or if it’s going to come at all — education can tumble down the list of priorities.
- Coping with Hard Times: Bad economy intensifies stress ANDERSON — While the government is trying to find ways to put money back into the pockets and bank accounts of Americans, mental-health specialists say that the poor economy is taking a toll on the nation’s emotional well-being.
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Arrest log: Feb. 19




