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November 3 | 1993 | Tech Talk | Search | MIT News | Comments | MIT

 

Extending a Hand to People in Despair

United Way Profile

(Editor's Note: As MIT's United Way fund-raising campaign progresses 
this month, profiles of MIT people who volunteer their time for United 
Way agencies will appear in Tech Talk. If you know  of someone who might 
be included, call Alice Waugh, x8-5401.)

When considering donations to the United Way or similar organizations, 
people often think of the phrase "good Samaritan." MIT's David Hogarth 
fits the phrase more aptly than most.

During the first two years of his employment at the Institute (he is now 
a senior staff assistant in Distributed Computing and Network Services) 
and for many years before that, Mr. Hogarth volunteered as the head of 
Lifeline, a suicide-prevention program at the Charles Street Jail which 
he created. As an Episcopal cleric, he also devoted time on Sunday as 
the jail's chaplain, from which his Lifeline work grew. Lifeline (now 
operating in the Suffolk County Prison) is one of the services offered 
by Samaritans, the international suicide-prevention organization.

The intervention program at the jail is staffed by fellow inmates who 
provide counseling. For many who have led a life of crime, "it's the 
first time in their lives that they're reaching out to help someone," 
Mr. Hogarth said. His work and that of the inmates paid off; during his 
tenure, the suicide rate at the jail dropped from four a month to less 
than one per year

Although he retired as a chaplain and discontinued his work with the 
Samaritans in 1991, two years after coming to MIT, Mr. Hogarth carries a 
fund of knowledge and experience that he continues to use. He still 
consults with organizations all over the world (including the government 
of New Zealand) on how to prevent prison suicides.

During much of his career, Mr. Hogarth has packed his volunteer work 
with Samaritans and other groups around a full-time job, leaving him 
with very little free time. "I tend to overextend," he admitted. But his 
beliefs about service don't give him much choice.

"I believe it's human nature to help," he said. "If we don't cooperate, 
our humanity doesn't exist." 

The Boston chapter of Samaritans, the first in the United States, was 
founded in 1974 by Monica Dickens, great-granddaughter of Charles 
Dickens. This fiscal year, United Way is giving Samaritans $54,370, 
which is about one-fifth of the agency's total annual budget, according 
to Kevin MacKenzie, development coordinator for Samaritans.

As well as the 24-hour hotline that Samaritans is best known for, the 
local agency also operates the SAMARITEENS hotline from 3-9pm daily, 
where depressed teenagers can talk to trained peers who volunteer at the 
phones. That service, which began in Boston in 1986, takes about 10,000 
calls a year; the 24-hour hotline (staffed by a total of about 110 
trained volunteers annually) gets about 80,000 callers, Mr. MacKenzie 
said.  

In addition, Samaritans runs a community outreach program to provide 
information to schools, civic organizations and other groups about what 
suicide is, how to spot warning signs and how to help a potentially 
suicidal person. There is also Safe Place, a support group for those who 
have lost a friend or relative to suicide.

There are 10 chapters of Samaritans on the East Coast, including four 
others in Massachusetts and chapters in Providence, Hartford, Albany, 
New York and Washington.

Mr. Hogarth is assisting with MIT's United Way campaign because the 
money raised is so important to those it ultimately helps. "I'm just 
delighted that I'm able to work with United Way because I don't think 
you can spend money any better," he said. "I'm not going to be giving my 
money to someone who's not earning it."

MIT's goal during the current United Way drive that lasts until November 
30 is to raise $320,000. The effort is part of the overall campaign by 
United Way of Massachusetts Bay, which hopes to garner donations of 
$45.36 million. That money is distributed among 210 non-profit human 
services agencies serving 1.7 million people in 81 cities and towns.

Alice C. Waugh



November 3 | 1993 | Tech Talk | Search | MIT News | Comments | MIT