{"id":32937,"date":"2017-09-12T14:10:18","date_gmt":"2017-09-12T21:10:18","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/spijue.wpengine.com\/news\/homeless-man-gives-cross-to-ccfr-as-token-of-gratitude-goodwill\/"},"modified":"2017-09-12T14:10:18","modified_gmt":"2017-09-12T21:10:18","slug":"homeless-man-gives-cross-to-ccfr-as-token-of-gratitude-goodwill","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/homeless-man-gives-cross-to-ccfr-as-token-of-gratitude-goodwill\/","title":{"rendered":"Homeless man gives cross to CCFR as token of gratitude, goodwill"},"content":{"rendered":"
His work hangs in homes of family and friends throughout Southeast Alaska, but Thomas Bell doesn’t have a home of his own.<\/p>\n
The elderly Tlingit homeless man weaves figures — usually crosses — out of rope and either gives them away or sells them for a small amount of money. As he delivered his most recent piece Monday, he brought a message with him as well.<\/p>\n
Bell leaned on his walker as he stood in the lobby of the downtown fire station and handed his newest cross, made of salvaged rope from a crab pot, to Capital City Fire\/Rescue Chief Richard Etheridge. The gift is one of goodwill, Bell said, as many of his homeless brethren appreciate the work that emergency workers do.<\/p>\n
As CCFR plays a role in the survival of the homeless, Bell wanted his gift to bring some comfort to those emergency workers when they’re on the job. Bell had one instruction for Etheridge.<\/p>\n
“Have everybody touch it when they go on emergency runs,” Bell said.<\/p>\n
The gift was a surprise to Etheridge, who said he can’t remember the department ever getting a gift like this. The delivery, Bell explained, has actually been a long time coming.<\/p>\n
Bell gave another one of his crosses to the Juneau Police Department this summer, and wanted to give one to CCFR as well. He was just waiting for the right time.<\/p>\n
“I thought about presenting at the fire station a long time ago,” Bell said, “but I didn’t know when. I was thinking, ‘9\/11.’ Seems like an appropriate time to do it.”<\/p>\n
The two men had a brief exchange about remembering the sacrifice of emergency workers on Sept. 11, 2001, and spoke a bit about the struggle that homeless people face in Juneau. Kerry Leaf, an advocate for the homeless who spends his nights on the street, was also there and spoke at length about how difficult it is to find places to sleep in town.<\/p>\n