Opinion: Begging in London is ‘a far more complicated picture than I could have ever imagined’

PAZS SEQUENCE FOR THE WEB.Still005Should you give money to beggars in London streets or not? Brixtonite Reya El-Salahi writes about begging in Lambeth and her experiences of presenting ‘Beggar Off‘, a documentary for London Live about begging in London 

Moving to Brixton at the beginning of this year reignited my interest in a topic I have wanted to make a film about since a life-changing experience completely transformed the way I feel about the issue of begging and homelessness.

When I left school I volunteered in a hostel for homeless young people. Before then the only conversation I had ever had with a beggar was to refuse requests for money. But working in the home I met countless teenagers with life stories that rival most horror films, and soon came to the conclusion that in the future, if and when I’m asked to help I always will – even if that means giving money to fund a drug or alcohol habit.

My studies and subsequent career in journalism led me to set up home in the Midlands for several years; in a city where I wasn’t often required to put my moral stance into practice. Yet within a short time of relocating to Brixton, my always-give mantra meant a penniless purse and a nagging feeling that the spare change I had given to the painfully thin, wide-eyed woman pleading for help to feed her ‘hungry children’ every day that week, clearly wasn’t helping.

An experience one evening at Brixton station reaffirmed my believe that this is an issue deserving of further exploration. While queueing at a hole in the wall, the same women I had given change to on my way to work that morning, latched on to my Brixton-born friend begging for help to feed her hungry children. When he offered to accompany her to a nearby restaurant she refused, asking for money instead. So he gave her an ultimatum; if she needed food to feed her children he would take her to a shop and pay, but under no circumstance would he give her money. Before he had finished the sentence, she was gone.

When I hear about ‘fake’ beggars spending the day on the streets to dupe compassionate Londoners into handing over their hard-earned cash, I’m sceptical. I can’t help thinking about the now-infamous spikes used to deter homeless people from loitering outside the homes of well-to-do Londoners. Surely we should be helping those less fortunate, not questioning their integrity? In making Beggar Off I wanted to investigate whether there’s any truth in the reports of fake beggars, and what I found painted a far more complicated picture than I could have ever imagined. When kind-hearted Londoners give their spare change to beggars, they could be doing more harm than good – in some cases, funding serious organised crime. And yet over the course of filming I met people desperately trying to turn their lives around – like Brigitte, a mother on deaths door after decades of begging to fund her alcohol addiction. Ultimately I wanted to make this film to try and find out who genuinely deserves my money. I hope that by watching my documentary, you will feel better informed to deal with this issue compassionately.

Beggar Off will air tonight at 8pm on London Live

2 COMMENTS

  1. Begging is an absolute disgrace and shit.

    I used to hate it thogh at a times I would give…But what to do when you have nowhere to go all day and night,. British jobcentres are useless and cut on the
    top
    of it yours little money so you are homeless and have literally nothing.You are left with tough choices suicide begging walk from here to nowhere. The idea that people are good or bad does
    n’t match the point these are the guys exposed to all social and health miseries’ without any voice, pushed or voluntary getting into crime drugs alcohol murder and violence I use to fear homeless people to the moment that I experienced it in the UK London you may also disagree with most of the charities that somehow try to help you may be to lonely and getting old reducing yours chances of going back to work. Is shit because even the most basic needs become difficult. Like personal hygiene and clothes when they cut yours benefit without any reason you can imagine homeless people should not even have to prove that they are after work when we all know that theirs chances of getting a job are less than zero no matter their qualifications I used to think that most didn’t want to do nothing yeah yours conclusion of it being a bit more complex may be tight other homeless people in most cases for different reasons have a small or big number of criminal charges or offences and shit people will abuse and lie about it in order to gain something
    Every case is different from the other and people want generalizations comparisons easy answers and solutions with lies and bullying……………

  2. What is a fake beggar? I’m sure it is true there are organised beggars working for crims of some type, like the women carrying suspiciously silent babies on the tube, or the blokes who put little notes on train seats with a pcak of wipes. But for them it is their living.
    I’m sure that hard luck stories told by junkies and drunks are often not true. But they are desperate.
    No beggars make much money. Enough to live if they’re lucky. No-one does it from choice. Would you?
    I wish they didn’t make up implausible stories because as you saw it was embarrassing — and counter-productive, but they do.I wish they just said, I’m desperate; that wouldn’t give perfectly decent and generous people an excuse not to give.
    You don’t have tp give to every beggar, but you should to some.

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