Monday, June 8, 2015

The Tin Man: A Parable on Poverty


The Tin Man: A Parable on Poverty
Robert P. Russo
     When the essence of a man is stripped away the fighter will remain, and the world may scorn him for what he was.  However, we are not made to be marionettes, bouncing to the rhythm of somebody else’s fingers.  Neither are we meant to be martinets, marching in time to the drumbeats of a senseless war, the cause of which has long been forgotten.  We are born out of love, and love we must be.  Nothing else will ever matter.

     Society may never understand that the true “lost souls” of this earth are bent and broken, dirty and disheveled, poor and lonely for a particular reason.  The evils of this world do not exist in the next, lest we all rich and poor alike be torn asunder in an abyss too dark to mention.  True justice exists on a plane of vision that cannot be readily seen.  In the parable of the Tin Man, desire for notoriety leads a woman to a poverty of a spiritual nature.

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     My mother was quite a character, God rest her soul.  She would be what we would today call the obsessive-compulsive type, especially when it came to her rock garden, Christmas decorations, and housecleaning.  I could swear that she was responsible for the spread of the Japanese art of Feng Shui, in this country.  In fact, not a month went by in my youth, when my mother didn’t totally rearrange the furniture in my room.  Do you know what it is like to go to the bathroom in the middle of the night, and bang into a desk that wasn’t there the day before?

     Our family had moved from the rough streets of the Wakefield section of the Bronx, in the fall of 1968.  We had purchased a home in the suburbs of Manhattan, in a little rural town called North Pelham, New York.  During the spring of the following year, my mother began to develop a rock garden in the side yard, which was adjacent to the house.  I remember each member of the family digging in the dirt for several weeks, carving out a level surface in the hillside.  My father had gathered many large stones, and he built a lower retaining wall to further support the foundation.

     My mother had large pieces of slate put down in her garden, to serve as stepping stones.  She planted a large variety of colorful flowers, and also placed several homemade, ceramic statues in the rock garden.  There were figures of frogs, mushrooms, squirrels, and dwarves.

     People came from all over town to admire my mother’s rock garden, and she made many new friends that year.  My mother’s head swelled with pride, and she diligently maintained the garden in military fashion for the next five years.  Her dreams would be dashed to pieces, however, with the arrival of the Tin Man.

     Every Easter, television stations in the metropolitan New York area would air the classic film, “The Wizard of Oz.”  On one such holiday, my mother made her admiration known for the Tin Man.  Soon, the discussion around the dinner table turned to the possibility of constructing a metal giant, similar to the classic movie figure.

     “It will be easy,” my uncle chimed.  “We’ll use some of the spare parts that I have lying around in my tool shed.”  My mother’s eyes lit up, and the legend of the Tin Man was soon to be born.

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     The Tin Man was an awesome spectacle to behold.  He stood about six-feet tall, and had long metal pipes for arms and legs.  His limbs had been welded to his torso, an old metal milk container which had once belonged to a dairy farm in Monticello, New York.  He had a frying pan for a face, on which were welded two large wing nuts for eyes.  The Tin Man also had a hat, an aluminum funnel, which was welded to the top of his head in magnificent splendor.

     Once completed, the Tin Man became the centerpiece of my mother’s rock garden, and that’s when the trouble began.  Our neighbors, who didn’t understand that the statue was meant to be a depiction of my mother’s favorite movie character, began to complain bitterly about the monstrosity in our backyard.

     “How DARE you put something so evil-looking in your backyard,” went the typical complaint from the neighbors.  We also heard such taunts as, “Don’t you know that you are frightening the children?”

     My mother couldn’t understand why the neighbors were so upset.  She just assumed that they were jealous of her artistic endeavors, and so she ignored their caustic advice to take the statue down.

     About a week later, my mother’s world came crashing down.  She had received a registered letter from “Ezra Jones,” the Town Constable, who also happened to be one of our next door neighbors.

     Constable “Jones” advised my mother that she would have to appear at a town hall meeting, to discuss the numerous complaints that had recently been lodged regarding the statue.  My mother thought that her simple explanation behind the Tin Man’s existence would be a sufficient response, and that cooler heads would prevail.

     At the town hall meeting, several public officials grilled my mother.  They asked her why she would permit such trash to accumulate in her backyard.  One man even cried out, “Are you running a junkyard?”

     My mother did her best to defend the Tin Man, but it was to no avail.  Despite her angry protests, it was determined that she had violated a town ordinance, which specified that any construction over five-feet tall required a permit.  My mother was forced to either remove the statue, or face a fine and possible legal action.

     When I returned home from school the next day, the Tin Man was gone.  I asked my mother where the statue went, and she began to cry.  I asked her several times over the next few years, and she would either quickly change the subject or turn her back to me and cry softly.

     My mother lost all interest in the rock garden after the demise of the Tin Man.  It seemed as if her spirit had been crushed.  Within a year of his departure, the flowers had all died, and were replaced by a tangle of weeds.  The lower  retaining wall had collapsed under the weight of heavy rains, creating a mudslide in our once idyllic backyard.  My mother never did seem to care about anything as much ever again.

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     On a blustery cold Friday in October of 2007, my Wife Patty and I had the glorious occasion to volunteer our services at a soup kitchen in Toledo, Ohio.  We had partnered with the Altar Sodality ministry of our home parish, and we eagerly waited to begin serving others.

     For five hours, six women and I cooked and served hotdogs, baked beans, corn, and dessert to the homeless, and those individuals living in abject poverty.  I was transformed by the experience of serving the less fortunate members of society.  I can only describe the feeling I received as sheer joy, not joy in the fact that people were in such great need, but joy in the sense that I was in a place where I belonged, and performing a corporal work of mercy.

     I was struck by the solemnity of the large crowd, and that many of the homeless people thanked me for my service.  This had a profound effect upon me.  “Why would anyone thank me,” I thought to myself, “for the simple act of putting a hotdog in a roll?”

     It then occurred to me that we are all alike in our human nature.  We have the same need to be touched, loved, served, and thanked.  This desire transcends poverty, applying to rich and poor alike.  I also came to the sudden realization that there was very little separating myself from being on the receiving end of the food line.  I became deeply grateful for the blessings that I had received in this life, wishing to do more than I had done in the folly of my youth.

     A woman in our volunteer group suddenly began making snide comments about certain members of the homeless group, several of whom came up for a second or third helping.  “Look at THOSE people,” she crowed with derision.  “Why don’t they get JOBS?”  This woman would nudge me whenever she spotted someone coming up for more food.  “That’s his third time up here.  We’re only supposed to serve them ONCE!”

     Her rank hypocrisy stung my senses as she made many more negative remarks.  It was all that I could do to keep from saying something to the ignorant woman, but I managed to hold my tongue.  I went home echoing the words of St. Paul, exclaiming to my wife that “corporal works of mercy, performed without love or compassion, is sheer nothingness!”

     Dorothy Day once stated that “the mystery of the poor is this: that they are Jesus, and what you do for them you do for Him.  It is the only way we have of knowing and believing in our love.  The mystery of poverty is that by sharing in it, making ourselves poor in giving to others, we increase our knowledge of and belief in love.”  Day would have appreciated my mother’s care for her rock garden.  She would also have equated my mother’s love for the Tin Man with service to the poor and marginalized.

     However, we must not serve others because it is the fashionable thing to do, or because we have a lot of free time on our hands.  We must also be careful about the messages that we are sending to those less fortunate, for there is truth in the statement that “There but for the grace of God go I.”  One never knows when one will be on the other side of the serving counter.

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     As I drove home from the soup kitchen, I began to think about the Tin Man, and his sudden “disappearance” from my life.  I sadly recalled the last time that I ever saw him.

     In October of 1997, my Brother Michael passed away at the young age of thirty-six.  My parents, heartbroken over his tragic loss, began making preparations to sell our home.  They also held an estate sale the following spring, to rid themselves of thirty years of clutter.

     On one of my last visits to my boyhood home, I discovered the Tin Man propped up against a wall in our basement.  He had been locked away in a storage closet, which was located beneath a basement stairwell, for twenty years.

     The Tin Man had been dented beyond repair.  He was rusty, and covered with motor oil.  My Brother Peter had used the closet as a place to store his old Opel GT engine parts, never daring to grant the Tin Man safe passage.  If my mother had sold the Tin Man during her estate sale, or simply thrown him away like yesterday’s garbage, I never knew.

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     In pausing to reflect on the plight of the Tin Man, it dawns upon me that the people who are homeless and impoverished really have a lot in common with him.  Although the poor may sometimes seem dirty, wearing clothing that is tattered and old, there is a precious metal inside of all of them, an utter desire to be loved completely, which is why the Lord calls us to serve others with kindness and compassion.

     Like the Tin Man, society also tries to lock the poor and homeless away in a “closet,” because impoverished people are wrongfully perceived as ugly, or worthless.  However, we must not forget Dorothy Day’s views on the “mystery of poverty,” and why we are all called to love our neighbors as Jesus commanded.

     It has also been said that God does not make junk and, unlike the Tin Man, there are no dents, rust, or dirt upon what He has made.  The Tin Man may be gone forever, but his memory haunts me still.