OneStat Web Analytics
 
Best of New Orleans
Best of New Orleans Gambit Weekly News & Views

Music

Cuisine

Classifieds

Movies

Classifieds

Shopping

Gambit Weekly


Compare Hotel Rates for New Orleans
and Save!
Date of Arrival
Nights
Rooms
Adults


Other Cities
Gambit Weekly
Cover Story Features News Arts & Entertainment Gambit Weekly TOC

PENNY POST 01 13 04
Respond to
this Story
Respond to this Story


The Disappearance of Beggars

By Andrei Codrescu

I used to have a panhandler fund earmarked for different cities. A week in New York, $30. A week in Mexico City, $20. Standard of living differences. In New Orleans, I just handed out one-dollar bills to gutter punks and to two regulars in the French Quarter. Lately, however, I've noticed that there aren't many panhandlers left. Last time I was in New York, I still had $20 after more than a week. I gave $2 to a clean-cut woman who walked through the subway car reciting a very concise story of woe that didn't have a word out of place. It could have been written by Madison Avenue. She'd lost her job, she had no place to sleep, she wasn't on drugs, she didn't drink wine, and she was studying to be a medical technician. Everybody gave her $2. In our subway car alone, that amounted to about $100 for a three-minute pitch. She was really a trained professional, not a panhandler of the old school. The gutter punks have disappeared from New Orleans. I just gave a dollar to a really scary guy with bloodshot eyes who looked like he just escaped from Central Lockup, but that wasn't charity. I just thought that he might knife me if I didn't. The gutter punks are migratory and seasonal, so I'm surprised at their absence because winter is their season. Maybe they all have jobs now. I haven't been to Mexico City in a while, but I sure hope that begging hasn't gone out of style over there, too. I've surveyed other places and they, too, are starting to lose beggars: Prague has only a few subway performers, not very well trained, who lament in a classical style that gets them nothing but unremitting hostility. In London, a bearded bum I mistook for a beggar shook with indignation when I handed him some coins, and said, "I need more than that to rebuild my library!" You bet. If Europe is running out of panhandlers, it could be the end. In the United States, people with buckets at airports and in shopping malls are pretty much all that's left of an old and noble profession. Most American cities aren't even friendly to pedestrians, and begging at traffic intersections is hazardous. Still, I have a nagging feeling that the disappearance of panhandlers is not in any way connected to an improving economy. Or even to better law enforcement. Begging is an art, and it's the art that's disappearing. Either that or the destitute are running out of nerve. Even the scrungiest bum has to have a line and is required to look the mark in the face. The good ones did something, anything, and some of them were very good. I say with Francois Villon, Mais ou sont les clochard d'antan?, or, in English, Where are the bums of yesteryear?


Other Stories This Week in News & Views:

Commentary
A Mixed Legacy

News Feature
No Sweet Deal

Bouquets & Brickbats
The Best and the Worst of the Week

Politics
Jefferson's New Faces

Scuttlebutt



Other Stories by Andrei Codrescu:

Penny Post 12 16 03

Penny Post 12 09 03

Penny Post 12 02 03

Andrei Codrescu Archives




News Feature

Bouquets & Brickbats

Scuttlebutt

Politics Commentary


About Us

Subscribe

Distribution

Advertise

Related Stories


Questions? Comments? E-mail Best of New Orleans!
© 2004, Gambit Communications, Inc.