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295:. The building had long been known as a haven for drug dealers and prostitutes. Kirk's operation provided long-term housing to more than 70 people, and its community kitchen served 500 lunches a day. It also offered a variety of programs, from teaching job skills like woodworking to providing social services for drug addicts and persons with
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by upbringing. Aged 12, he befriended a black man named Clint who worked for his father, family members said. After Clint was accused of murdering his wife, David, believing in his friend’s innocence, brought food every day to the woods where Clint was hiding. Clint eventually escaped over the state
163:, David Kirk won permission to attend a local black high school for a month. He told the authorities he was researching an article about the education of black youth. What he really wanted to do, his family said, was to try to experience how the other half lived in the
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in the Church which dares to follow Jesus Christ. If it suggests nothing more to you, let it say that money and property are meant to be common to everybody, and that he who shares power, property, and money with the poor, only returns what
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238:(via Templegate Publishers), which became a bestseller after its release. The book aims to show, by compiling a wide variety of Biblical and early Christian quotations, that
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After a brief period of uncertainty with regard to the future of Emmaus House immediately following Kirk’s decline and death, it began a period of renaissance.
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After a period of declining health, kidney trouble and other ailments, Kirk died in his sleep, aged 72. At his request, he was buried near his longtime mentor,
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Not long after it began, Emmaus House moved to 160 West 120th Street. In the mid-1980s, it moved again, into the former
Charles Hotel on
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South. (He had asked to transfer to the school full-time, coming up with the cover story only after his request was denied.)
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on at least one occasion.) Later returning to New York, he planned to start a communal house for the homeless on the
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After 2001, Emmaus House moved back at its former location on West 120th Street, which can house up to 15 people.
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https://www.nytimes.com/2007/06/04/obituaries/04kirk.html?_r=1&ref=obituaries&oref=slogin
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After ordination, Kirk went back to
Alabama amid the civil rights movement. (He was jailed with
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https://www.npr.org/2007/06/10/10924965/rev-kirk-a-leader-of-aid-for-the-poor
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He established Emmaus House in the mid-1960s, on East 116th Street in
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David (his given name was Davey, which he despised) Kirk was born in
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on the Bowery. He earned a master's degree in social thought from
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In 2004, near the end of his life, Kirk converted to
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225:. Day, who died in 1980, told him to go instead to
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114:(March 12, 1935 – May 23, 2007) was an American
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382:"In Memoriam: The Rev. David Kirk"
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495:American anti-poverty advocates
460:American civil rights activists
414:http://www.fatherdavidkirk.org/
392:from the original on 2012-02-12
185:. That year, Kirk converted to
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291:at 124th Street in
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138:Biography
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