After job-swap show, Irish street cleaner pledges help to Filipinos
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IMAGE: CNS photo/courtesy RTEBy Nick BramhillDUBLIN (CNS) -- An IrishCatholic street cleaner, who was filmed by a TV documentary crew as hetemporarily swapped his job in the Irish capital for the poverty-strickenPhilippines, has pledged to spend the rest of his life helping the strugglingfamily he lived with.Mark Crosbie, a street cleanerwith Dublin City Council, told how his perspective on life has changed foreversince he spent a few days cleaning the streets of the Philippines' densely populatedcapital, Manila, for an Irish TV documentary, "Toughest Place To Be."As part of the program, whichwas watched by 330,000 viewers when it was screened in mid-April ago on RTE, Ireland'sstate broadcaster, the 47-year-old father-of-two stayed with the family of alocal street cleaner, Mel Macaereg, who earns $15 a week to support himself,his wife, Merney, and their six children.But since filming ended inJanuary, Crosbie has maintained weekly contact with his host family andhas set up a charity...
IMAGE: CNS photo/courtesy RTE
By Nick Bramhill
DUBLIN (CNS) -- An Irish
Catholic street cleaner, who was filmed by a TV documentary crew as he
temporarily swapped his job in the Irish capital for the poverty-stricken
Philippines, has pledged to spend the rest of his life helping the struggling
family he lived with.
Mark Crosbie, a street cleaner
with Dublin City Council, told how his perspective on life has changed forever
since he spent a few days cleaning the streets of the Philippines' densely populated
capital, Manila, for an Irish TV documentary, "Toughest Place To Be."
As part of the program, which
was watched by 330,000 viewers when it was screened in mid-April ago on RTE, Ireland's
state broadcaster, the 47-year-old father-of-two stayed with the family of a
local street cleaner, Mel Macaereg, who earns $15 a week to support himself,
his wife, Merney, and their six children.
But since filming ended in
January, Crosbie has maintained weekly contact with his host family and
has set up a charity drive to raise funds for the wider community that
took him in.
Crosbie, who sweeps the cobbled
streets of Dublin's Temple Bar district for a living, said: "The poverty I
saw over there was on a level I'd never seen before, and I struggled to adjust
to life back in Dublin when I came back. I was scarred by it, but it was a
positive scar.
"The people I met had
literally nothing, yet they embraced me and looked after me like I was one of
their own. They were probably the warmest and most generous people I've ever
come across.
"I felt very emotional when
I said my goodbyes to the family and I left them everything I had brought over
with me, because I felt it was the least I could do. That wasn't shown in the
documentary, but I left my possessions on the bed I'd been sleeping in --
clothes, toys for the kids, biscuits, coffee and about $450 in cash. I'm not
looking for any credit for that, it was just the right thing to do.
"If I'd have had $10,000
with me, I'd have left them that too," he added.
Crosbie said he would love to
help everyone he met in the Philippines, "but obviously I can't make
things better." He added he planned to do a sponsored climb of the holy
mountain Croagh Patrick in August to raise money for the community.
Manila is home to 25 million
people, 4 million of whom live in slums.
In the documentary, Crosbie
witnessed firsthand the daily hardship facing thousands of people. He visited a
city dump, where hundreds of impoverished people spend their days searching
through rubbish for items they could sell.
"Going over there was
probably the best thing I've ever done. It opened my eyes in a way I could
never have imagined," Crosbie said.
"I found it very hard for
the first couple of weeks when I returned to work in Dublin. The things people
were moaning about really didn't seem to matter in comparison."
- - -
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