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- AMERICAN IDEAS, Page 12Habitat for Humanity
-
-
- A Bootstrap Approach To Low-Cost Housing Millard Fuller
- believes in volunteer labor a little seed money and a lot of
- inspiration
-
- By Don Winbush
-
-
- Make no small plans," somebody once reasoned, "for they have
- no power to stir men's blood." Millard Fuller has always acted
- on that advice. He was worth a million dollars by his 29th
- birthday, but then decided to pursue a more ambitious goal:
- "the elimination of poverty housing in the world." If you want
- details, Fuller, a tireless and persuasive salesman, is more
- than excited to talk about his plans. They are large.
-
- There are 7.6 million people in the U.S. whose dwelling
- places are deemed "substandard," a euphemism that fails to evoke
- adequately the living conditions in scanty rural shotgun shacks
- or the inhabited shells of buildings in urban areas. These
- quarters are commonly without heat and plumbing, and in some
- cases are in such disrepair that the term shelter is misapplied.
- But worse than the deficient housing, Fuller laments, is the
- world's indifference to it. "People of goodwill, especially
- people of faith, should find it hard to rest in peace," he
- admonishes.
-
- Twelve years ago, Fuller founded an organization he said
- would "make shelter a matter of conscience," that would provide
- the poor with "simple, decent, affordable housing." He called
- his enterprise Habitat for Humanity. The idea of a
- house-building ministry was inspired by Koinonia Farm, an
- integrated Christian community in a poor, rural, south Georgia
- area strewn with crude shacks and tumbledown homes.
-
- Fuller and Koinonia leader Clarence Jordan started Fund for
- Humanity, a pool of capital that was used to buy building
- materials and serve as a mortgage source for people too poor to
- qualify for bank loans. Modest homes, built with volunteer
- labor and some donated materials, were sold at cost to
- low-income families. Their payments, plus donations and other
- money raised, replenished the fund, and the money was recycled
- to build even more homes. There were problems: raising seed
- money and bureaucratic snarls, but it worked. By 1976 he had
- visions of grandeur.
-
- "It's not your blue blood, your pedigree or your college
- degree. It's what you do with your life that counts," says
- Fuller. Like a peripatetic preacher, he makes his folksy
- "theology of the hammer" spiels to audiences all over the
- world, trying to tap into what he contends is "an incredible
- reservoir of goodwill out there."
-
- On the stump, the messenger is as entertaining as his
- message is fervid. Fuller, 53, is an Ichabod Crane look-alike
- who is incessantly joking, cajoling, commoving, pressing,
- pleading for Habitat. He leans and swaggers, hunches his
- shoulders, pokes his head and forms grandfather spiders with
- his lean hands, which are constantly aswirl. He still crows
- about the sales pitch he made to former President Jimmy Carter:
- "I said to him, `Sir, are you interested in Habitat for
- Humanity, or are you very interested?' " Since 1984 Carter has
- been one of Habitat's celebrity supporters, along with Bob Hope,
- Paul Newman and Amy Grant.
-
- Low-income housing is disappearing by the thousands of units
- every year. And increasingly, people are very interested in
- Habitat. In the U.S. a typical Habitat home is a no-frills,
- 1,000-sq.-ft., three-bedroom residence that sells for about
- $28,000. Habitat homeowners usually make $150 or so monthly
- mortgage payments -- which is sometimes less than the rent they
- paid for indecent housing. Fuller often reminds Habitat
- affiliates, "The houses we build should be a joy to the people,
- not a burden on their backs."
-
- The number of communities interested in trying Habitat's
- formula has grown most strikingly in recent years. There were
- just eleven Habitat affiliates in the U.S. in 1980; there were
- 171 by 1986. This year there are 324 affiliates, ranging in
- size from the one in New York City to one in Coahoma, Miss.
- (pop. 351), which plans to replace the town's entire housing
- stock. There are 38 college chapters and 68 Habitat affiliates
- overseas. All told, 4,000 homes have been built since 1976.
- Boasts Fuller: "It's clear to me that we are seeing the birth of
- a movement."
-
- Fuller's energy was not always so well directed. By the time
- he entered law school at the University of Alabama, Fuller and
- a college chum had a business partnership that was churning out
- moneymaking schemes. By the time he had made his million, he was
- a workaholic, and his health was suffering. His wife Linda left
- home one day, announcing that she was off to decide whether she
- wanted to continue being wed to a man who was married to his
- business.
-
- The crisis was dramatically resolved: they were reconciled;
- Fuller sold his share of the business and donated a small
- fortune to charity. He and Linda kept only several thousand
- dollars to start life over, this time with a renewed commitment
- to the Christian principles each had grown up with. Fuller's
- life today is modest but, he says, far more meaningful. His
- salary is $14,300; Linda, who works as his assistant, makes
- $7,200.
-
- As Habitat's executive director, Millard is "a lot more fun
- to live with," Linda says. But he is only slightly less intense
- than when he was obsessed by wealth. Habitat staffers say a
- strange but not uncommon sight is the gangling Fuller bounding
- up to the headquarters, clutching a fistful of trash he swooped
- up on his walk to work. He functions as the spiritual leader of
- the ecumenical, nonprofit outfit. Much of his time is spent
- visiting local Habitat affiliates and proselytizing. Once or
- twice a year he takes hammer in hand and helps finish off a
- Habitat home with the volunteers. Full-time helpers in
- Americus, Ga., are paid only their lodging and a weekly "pig
- check" -- a $25 certificate redeemable at the Piggly Wiggly
- supermarket.
-
- Habitat, which will raise more than $30 million this year,
- is not a charity organization. Homeowners must qualify for
- their loans and make mortgage payments over a fixed period,
- typically 20 years. Also, they abide by a "sweat equity"
- agreement to participate in the construction of their own homes
- and donate so many hours of labor to building other homes.
- Insists Fuller: "We're not caseworkers, we're co-workers."
-
- House-dedication ceremonies are invariably emotional,
- spirit-lifting occasions for homeowners. "It's like you've given
- 'em the moon," Fuller says. Affiliates agree that a by-product
- of Habitat projects is enhanced community spirit. Says Fuller:
- "Habitat for Humanity has a way of bringing folks together who
- normally don't work with each other."
-
- Probably the question most often asked of Fuller is how
- Habitat, its success notwithstanding, plans to reach its goal of
- wiping out the world's poverty housing. He answers, volubly,
- "The Bible says that with God all things are possible. We'll
- build 2,000 houses this year. We hope to build 4,000 more next
- year. We're adding local projects at the rate of one every two
- days. Man, we're just whittling away."
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