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2006-10-24 15:01:04 · 2 answers · asked by Anonymous in Social Science Economics

I've searched the web and found only indefinite information. He was born in either 1943 or 1944, NOT 1946. He was 46 y.o. when he was found dead on 5 July 1990. He may have died a day or two ahead of being found. The generally accepted date of death is 5 July 1990, when he was found. What I would really like is an accurate date of birth, or at least the correct year.

2006-10-25 03:01:04 · update #1

2 answers

Mitch Snyder (1946 – July 3 or 4, 1990) was an American advocate for the homeless. He was the subject of a 1986 biopic Samaritan: The Mitch Snyder Story.

Snyder worked in advertising on Madison Avenue in New York City in the early 1960s. At some point he left his wife and children and started hitchhiking west. Police found him in a stolen vehicle, and he was arrested and convicted of grand theft auto.

He went to Federal Prison and ended up in Danbury Federal Correctional Institute in Danbury, Connecticut with Philip and Daniel Berrigan. Through meetings with them and prolific reading, especially of the Bible started participating in hunger strikes and work stoppages over prison rights issues.

Upon being released in 1973 he joined the Community for Creative Non Violence (CCNV) in Washington, D.C. CCNV was at that time operating a medical clinic, a pretrial house, a soup kitchen, a thrift store and a halfway house. CCNV came out of a discussion group about the Vietnam War at George Washington University. CCNV was also very active in non violent direct action in opposition to the Vietnam War.

Mitch passionately opposed the war, hunger, and homelessness. He once walked out of an arraignment hearing for being arrested at the White House and went directly to the White House and climbed over the fence and was rearrested. He once claimed to have the longest arrest record in D.C.

He became the driving force of CCNV but worked with many deeply committed people including his life and professional partner, Carol Fennelly, and Mary Ellen Hombs with whom he co authored Homelessness in America: A forced March to Nowhere.

He and CCNV pushed and prodded the District of Columbia, the local churches and temples and mosques as well as the federal government to open space at night for homeless people and staffed what space was made available.

Through a series of demonstrations, public funerals for people who had frozen to death in the streets of D.C., breaking into public buildings, and fasting, CCNV forced the creation of shelters in Washington and made homelessness a national and international issue.

In the 1980s Snyder, Fennelly, and other CCNV activists entered and occupied an abandoned federal building at 225 2nd Street, N.W. (now Mitch Snyder Place) and housed hundreds overnight while demanding that the government renovate the building.

Mitch fasted twice to force the Reagan Administration to renovate the building. The first fast ended on the eve of Ronald Reagan's second election with a promise from him to do the necessary repairs.

An Oscar nominated documentary, Promises to Keep narrated by Martin Sheen follows that story and tells why a second fast was conducted.

After setbacks in his personal and public life in July of 1990 he hanged himself in his room at the shelter.

He is survived by his son Dean, who marched with Jesse Jackson and Cher in tribute to Mitch in the days following his death.

2006-10-24 15:04:40 · answer #1 · answered by Daimler Y 1 · 1 0

Mitch Snyder (1946 – July 3 or 4, 1990) was an American advocate for the homeless. He was the subject of a 1986 biopic Samaritan: The Mitch Snyder Story.

Snyder worked in advertising on Madison Avenue in New York City in the early 1960s. At some point he left his wife and children and started hitchhiking west. Police found him in a stolen vehicle, and he was arrested and convicted of grand theft auto.

He went to Federal Prison and ended up in Danbury Federal Correctional Institute in Danbury, Connecticut with Philip and Daniel Berrigan. Through meetings with them and prolific reading, especially of the Bible started participating in hunger strikes and work stoppages over prison rights issues.

Upon being released in 1973 he joined the Community for Creative Non Violence (CCNV) in Washington, D.C. CCNV was at that time operating a medical clinic, a pretrial house, a soup kitchen, a thrift store and a halfway house. CCNV came out of a discussion group about the Vietnam War at George Washington University. CCNV was also very active in non violent direct action in opposition to the Vietnam War.

Mitch passionately opposed the war, hunger, and homelessness. He once walked out of an arraignment hearing for being arrested at the White House and went directly to the White House and climbed over the fence and was rearrested. He once claimed to have the longest arrest record in D.C.

He became the driving force of CCNV but worked with many deeply committed people including his life and professional partner, Carol Fennelly, and Mary Ellen Hombs with whom he co authored Homelessness in America: A forced March to Nowhere.

He and CCNV pushed and prodded the District of Columbia, the local churches and temples and mosques as well as the federal government to open space at night for homeless people and staffed what space was made available.

Through a series of demonstrations, public funerals for people who had frozen to death in the streets of D.C., breaking into public buildings, and fasting, CCNV forced the creation of shelters in Washington and made homelessness a national and international issue.

In the 1980s Snyder, Fennelly, and other CCNV activists entered and occupied an abandoned federal building at 225 2nd Street, N.W. (now Mitch Snyder Place) and housed hundreds overnight while demanding that the government renovate the building.

Mitch fasted twice to force the Reagan Administration to renovate the building. The first fast ended on the eve of Ronald Reagan's second election with a promise from him to do the necessary repairs.

An Oscar nominated documentary, Promises to Keep narrated by Martin Sheen follows that story and tells why a second fast was conducted.

After setbacks in his personal and public life in July of 1990 he hanged himself in his room at the shelter.

He is survived by his son Dean, who marched with Jesse Jackson and Cher in tribute to Mitch in the days following his death.

2006-10-24 15:11:13 · answer #2 · answered by juanita2_2000 7 · 0 1

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