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Social activists discuss Boston's urban status
By Caroline Pepek
Kip Tiernan and Fran Froelich have been instrumental in creating resources for women.
Media Credit: Dave Givler
Kip Tiernan and Fran Froelich have been instrumental in creating resources for women.

When has anything that Kip Tiernan and Fran Froelich done been conventional? Last night in a program sponsored by the Women's Resource Center and campus volunteer programs, the pair referred to as "the conscience of Boston" spoke about their outsider political theology in their book, Urban Meditations.

This novel comes after nearly 40 years of continued social activism during which the pair worked to produce "an infrastructure of social change."

Tiernan and Froelich met and discovered their mutual passion for activism at St. Phillip's in Roxbury, Mass., which they described in their book as "a war-zone waiting to happen, and it happened frequently." From there, they went on to co-found The Poor People's United Fund, a nonprofit organization committed to ending suffering.

"[Programs like this] were a felt need," said Tiernan of Boston outreach programs during this time.

A statistic from the Boston Rescue Mission showed a 33 percent jump in the number of homeless people in Boston from 1995 to 2005, a number which is only increasing.

"Realities were created for them by someone else," Froelich said.

Throughout the lecture, Tiernan and Froelich covered issues as diverse as volunteering, Catholicism, and government inactivity.

Central to their shared social ideology is the concept of systematic change.

Systematic change, Froelich said, is not addressed in today's society. Instead, people and organizations create temporary and superficial solutions for serious issues.

"People try to fix a problem but not solve a problem," Froelich said.

Tiernan said that millions of Americans are falling through the cracks created by the economy and society and are regularly using aid organizations to survive. Reliance on these charities would create a culture of dependence, Froelich said.

"You can open up all the shelters and all soup kitchens, but it won't change a thing," Tiernan said.

Instead, the pair advocated mass social activism

"Change is being made in small incremental ways; however, it's up to us, not up to them, to do it," said Tiernan. "On our own, we can't change anything, but together we can change a lot."
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