It's belated and it isn't techno related, but it sure
as heck is Detroit related.

---diana---------


http://www.latimes.com/news/obituaries/la-000057706jul14.story?coll=la%2Dnews%2Dobituaries




Charleszetta "Mother" Waddles, a self-educated mother
of 10 who rose from poverty to found one of Detroit's
most respected charities, died at home Thursday. She
was 88.

She was the founder of Mother Waddles Perpetual
Mission, an independent church that has provided food,
clothing, furniture and other basic services to
Detroit's indigent for five decades.

During the 1967 Detroit riot, she distributed food to
residents who had not eaten in days. Her trucks
bearing donated clothing and other necessities were
among the few permitted safe passage through the
riot-torn inner-city streets. The eldest of seven
children, Waddles was profoundly influenced by the
experiences of her father, a successful St. Louis
barber. His fortunes changed overnight when he
unknowingly gave a haircut to a customer with
impetigo, a contagious skin disease, and spread the
condition to other clients who were members of his
church congregation. He became an outcast, shunned by
the congregation that had been central to his life,
and was ruined financially. He died nearly penniless
when Waddles was 12. She never forgot the
heartlessness that ground him down.

When he died, she went to work full time as a
housemaid. At 14, she married for the first time, but
was widowed five years later.

In 1936, when she was 24, Waddles remarried and moved
to Detroit, but eventually left her second husband
because of his lack of ambition. She got by on welfare
and street smarts, supplementing the meager government
support payments by selling barbecued meat from tubs
in front of her house.

When a girlfriend was threatened with the loss of her
home, Waddles and her family moved into her unfinished
basement as tenants. That saving act gave Waddles a
wider vision.

She began holding prayer meetings at her house in the
late 1940s, spreading the message that everyone, no
matter how poor, could help someone less fortunate,
even if it meant donating a single can of food. She
became an ordained minister in the First Pentecostal
Church and later the International Assn. of Universal
Truth.

With the help of her third husband, Payton Waddles,
she opened the Helping Hand Restaurant on the edge of
Detroit's skid row in 1950. Scrounging for food scraps
from markets and free rent, she began to offer simple
but nourishing meals for 35 cents, or free to those
who had no money. She was a one-woman charity band,
cooking the meals and washing the dishes by herself.

Eventually, she was joined by scores of volunteers.
Several years after opening the restaurant, she opened
her church, Mother Waddles Perpetual Mission, to
provide food, emergency financial aid and furniture.
Over the years, it sprouted a health clinic and a
variety of self-help programs, from job placement and
tutoring services to classes in typing, dressmaking
and machine operating.

In recent years, Waddles expanded into the used car
business, obtaining donated cars for poor families.

The charity has suffered a series of setbacks,
including two fires and financial problems that
resulted in eviction for nonpayment of rent and
utility shut-offs for unpaid bills. The car donation
program led to a lawsuit and a boat donation program
lost thousands of dollars, but no allegations of
wrongdoing were lodged.

Waddles remained unfazed by the difficulties. "We
are," she once told a Reader's Digest interviewer,
"the most unorganized, successful operation in the
world."

She was the author of several books, including two
soul food cookbooks that have sold more than 85,000
copies since 1959. She turned all the proceeds from
the books over to her church.

A half century after she started her soup kitchen, the
"miracle meals" are still only 35 cents.

"There, but for the grace of God, goes me," Waddles
once said, explaining her devotion to Detroit's
downtrodden. "You can't give up on people." 



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