College of Charleston Magazine Summer 2014

Page 15

Making the Grade

case, there are also many homeless people who are victims of circumstance, whether they lost a job, suffered from an expensive illness or caught a series of bad breaks and lacked the support of friends and family. Regardless of who or what is to blame,

Roberts believes that those without shelter need help. And help, he explains, is different than pity. “Pity feels so good and so right, but pity means you give the dollar and just move on,” he says. For Roberts, true compassion occurs when relationships are made with the homeless. Homeless people often need continual help to find and keep work, find and keep a home and create and follow budgets for their personal finances. No one, he argues, is a lost cause. “You never give up on somebody as long as they’re breathing,” says Roberts. Though he devotes much time to helping the homeless, he is also aware of other groups in society that could also benefit from more attention. As part of his urban studies practicum at the College, Roberts wrote about the relatively high mortality rate experienced by black

children in South Carolina. His supervising professor for this study, Kevin Keenan, was impressed that Roberts chose to focus on a matter of social justice for the practicum, as opposed to, say, a research topic focusing on urban planning.

“Pity feels so good and so right, but pity means you give the dollar and just move on.” “I thought that was pretty insightful. We live in a society where we value careers, we value prestige, power, consumption of products,” says Keenan, assistant

professor of political science and director of the Urban Studies Program. “You don’t really have a lot of students talking about social justice. Social justice questions tend to be the ones to require more work and require more thoughtful answers. You

have to seek those out. They tend to not be as visible.” Such is the case with homelessness, a problem to which there seems to be no quick and effective panacea. The solutions that do work, says Keenan, oftentimes require a sustained interest and commitment from those providing aid. Fortunately, people like Roberts have demonstrated such a commitment. And Keenan is struck by Roberts’ humility and openness: “He believes in serving other people, helping people help themselves. He does it because he truly cares about it.” Freshly graduated from the College, Roberts has accepted a job coaching high school basketball in Charleston. He plans to continue his work with the homeless, too, knowing there are many people whose lives he can help improve. Many people whom he can give hope.

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