Flashback Friday.
Adam Smith observed in his Lectures on Jurisprudence (1762) — a series of talks that he gave at the University of Glasgow — that national character plays a significant role in economic transactions: the Dutch, he said, are “more faithful to their word” and better at “performing agreements” than the English, and the English more faithful than the Scots.
In the past few months, I’ve observed a similar kind of cultural variation in a much more prosaic setting: the panhandling interaction.
If you’re from North America, as I am, you’ve probably seen people on the street requesting money from strangers using appeals such as “Homeless—Please Help” or “Homeless Veteran.” There are a number of variations, but homelessness is the common theme in many cases.
Elsewhere in the world, panhandlers use quite different rationales—or what the great mid-century sociologist C. Wright Mills would call “vocabularies of motive.” Mills wasn’t interested in what actually motivated people—such as what psychologists would term “needs” or “drives”—but rather in the ideologically-charged terms they used to justify their actions to themselves and others. As he observed, some motives are more acceptable than others, and we can learn something about local cultures based on what passes for a “good reason.”
So it’s sociologically interesting that within the North American context, the concept of “home” has such resonance that the claim of “homelessness” is considered a compelling and sufficient motive for giving money to strangers. But while the need for shelter would seem universal, it’s rare to see a panhandler outside North America requesting a donation on the basis of homelessness.
In Germany, for example, one often finds people begging for trinkgeld—”drinking money.” And they’re not playing for laughs, as one sometimes finds in the US, when panhandlers give a wink and a nod to the stereotype that money given to beggars is only ever used to buy alcohol (or drugs). When a panhandler asks for “drinking money” in the US, it’s sort of an in-joke, or an attempt to appear disarmingly honest; based on the limited examples I’ve seen, this seems to jolly people up and get good results (i.e., quantities of cash).
But in Germany, drinking money is serious business. In the four years I lived in the Rhine Valley, I saw dozens of men (always men) on public transport and on the street, asking for “trinkgeld, bitte” in monotonous, dirge-like tones that seemed to express just how grim a fate it was to lack beer money. Equally surprising to me was the willingness of Germans to open their purses for this reason, as if it was a truth universally acknowledged that a man with empty pockets must be in want of a beer. In the interactions I witnessed, no one on either end of the transaction ever smiled.
Yet another vocabulary of motive can be found on the streets of Istanbul, where panhandlers often approach passers-by with a request for ekmek parası—Turkish for “bread money.” In perhaps 10 visits to Turkey in the last 3 years, I’ve never seen anyone on the street claiming to be homeless. Nor have I seen a cardboard sign of the kind so common in North America.
In all three settings, the vocabularies of motive among panhandlers have a common theme of need: for shelter, drink or food. What’s interesting is how each cultural setting changes the calculus about what kind of motive is most likely to bring in the cash. Perhaps it comes down to what each society views as among the basic human rights: in the US, shelter has a plausible claim to that status, but beer does not; whereas in Germany, it an appeal for trinkgeld succeeds as an appeal to common humanity and decency; in Turkey, hunger seems to trump all other claims.
Originally posted in 2010.
Brooke Harrington is Associate Professor of Economic Sociology at the Copenhagen Business School. She is the author of two books: Pop Finance: Investment Clubs and the New Investor Populism and Deception: From Ancient Empires to Internet Dating. She is currently doing research on offshore banking and blogs at our fellow Society Pages blog, Economic Sociology.
Comments 134
Ricardo Greene — September 8, 2010
In Chile it is quite common to find people asking for money to buy medication, or to pay for a surgery. They carry prescriptions signed by a doctor, or empty boxes of the named medication, which are usually not for themselves, but for a sick child or wife.
dana — September 8, 2010
trinkgeld in german is not only "money for drinking" it is used nearly exclusivly as a term for what you call in english "tip" - the extra money you give voluntarily to the waiter/waitress when you pay for your meal. i am from germany and i havent seen any homeless asking for "trinkgeld" but i would assume that its used in a way of "double-meaning" like "could you give me voluntary some extra money" and maybe it is a little hint that it's used for alcohol. but i'm sure it's not as plane honest as it is assumed in the text.
Christian — September 8, 2010
I live in Germany and neverhas a begger asked for "Trinkgeld". They normaly ask for "Kleingeld" (coins). But maybe they do that in the rhine valley.
"Trinkgeld" is just the german word for a tip, as in "a tip for a waiter in a restaurant". It is not associated with drinking anymore. It would be the same as asking for some change (they do not want to change money, they want a gift).
JenniferRuth — September 8, 2010
it’s rare to see a panhandler outside North America requesting a donation on the basis of homelessness.
I don't think this is true. It is certainly common in the UK and much of Europe to ask for money because you are homeless.
Panhandler is not a term I have heard much in the UK (at least it is not in people's common vocabulary). The term used is usually either "beggar" or "homeless" - homeless is also use to refer to a group.
One common thing in the UK that I haven't seen anywhere else (I'm happy to be corrected!) is for people to request a donation for the bus. It usually comes along with a story about how they have lost their bus fare or debit card and need to ask strangers for cash in order to get home. Often, these people are homeless but I guess they have a greater success getting money by asking for bus fare?
Niki — September 8, 2010
I don't know if this says anything about trends, but there's a guy in my hometown (Ottawa, ON) who's becoming quite well-known in the downtown core. He holds a sign that says "Stop Hobophobia," and several of my friends have all seen this guy lately - all of us who work downtown.
What I find interesting about him is that he is addressing the reluctance of people to give up their money, but he's not placing the blame for this reluctance on the homeless - he's placing the blame on the general society. For instance, the majority of the time when I see panhandlers with signs, they say either just "homeless, please help" like in the examples above or they address the bad behaviours that the panhandler doesn't engage in; like, "I don't drink/smoke/do drugs, I just need money for food, please give what you can." So these people are addressing the reluctance of most people to give money, but they're positing that the reluctance has a just cause; this person does not fit the stereotype. This person is different, they don't do these bad things. So they deserve your money more than that wino across the street.
The "stop hobophobia" guy, however, is suggesting that society has a distrust of the homeless that is unmerited and deserves turning around. That's a really different way of asking for money - it's painting an image that the person being begged to is flawed, rather than the homeless population.
Ronnie — September 8, 2010
Fascinating article. I had honestly never really given it a thought. Thank you for sharing this.
Jen — September 8, 2010
When I visited Prague I noticed that beggars would crouch on the ground, head down, arms outstretched in a plea for money. The position looked incredibly uncomfortable and I guess they would stay that way for hours - I assumed that this posture made it more likely they would be given money - maybe the obvious discomfort made people pity them, and also demonstrated that they truly did need the money?
Dr. Kate — September 8, 2010
It is all about Karma Laundering - we know and they know that they probably wont be using the money for the stated causes - that part is all a bit of expected street theater. What we are buying with our alms is feel good, and when people give money to panhandlers they shouldn't pretend otherwise.
I have helped people find jobs before.
Em — September 8, 2010
I've been living in the rhine valley in Germany almost nonstop since my birth 1982, and never ONCE has a beggar asked for anything but "KLEINgeld", aka small change.
Comparatively few of the beggars here are actually homeless. Mainly punks, alcohol or drug addicts (or a combination of the above) spend their days on the streets earning their money by "schnorren", but they usually have a place to stay. In my city, they usually approach people personally and ask for money in a very polite or humorous way. I'd almost call them street artists.
In Berlin, for example, I regularly find myself in lengthy conversations with people who approach me and "have a question", before I even identify them as beggars. :)
Molly W — September 8, 2010
The people I find most interesting are those who fall somewhere between panhandlers* and con artists -- they use a sob story to ask for small amounts ("My daughter's in the hospital and I need cab fare" or "I live in the next city over and I just need $5 for enough gas to get home").
I've encountered any number of these folks over time, and I've noticed many have a real emotional stake in selling you on their story -- to the point they're ticked off if I give them money without accepting their story. I've wondered if perhaps they feel they've *earned* the money if their story is successful?
* Many of the people asking for money on the street actually have places to live, and most people who are homeless are not asking for money on the street. Calling street people "homeless" conflates two distinct populations -- mentally ill substance abusers and impoverished families -- and I don't think it serves either very well.
Jay Eff — September 8, 2010
Of course, I don't quite know where you went, but "Trinkgeld" is a tip for a waitress or waiter in a restaurant; neither in the South nor in the West, all places I've lived or frequented for years, has any beggar or homeless person ever asked for it - they ask for "Kleingeld," small change.
The origin of the word itself is the subject of debate in Germany, but yeah, it does seem drinking was a perfectly proper thing to do with money kindly given. ;)
lgreenberg — September 8, 2010
What about the prevalence of "homeless vet" in these signs? I see lots of signs claiming that the holders are veterans, just back from iraq, injured in afghanistan, etc. True, or just playing on our feelings of guilt and responsibility to soldiers?
I've also seen black guys panhandling with a spiel about how they might panhandle, but they definitely don't do any crimes, and isn't that great? Makes me both sad and amused by the blatant appeal to our low expectations and fear of the black man.
Albert — September 8, 2010
In the area of Holland where I live, people on the streets usually used to ask for money for food. In the beginning, it worked: a lot of people would give their money to the person asking for it, even though the money would probably be spent on beer and drugs. But in time, the people got smarter and started reacting differently to the question: instead of giving money, they would give an item of food to the beggar.
These days hardly anybody asks for food-money anymore, because it will mostly get you squashed breads and bananas. Instead, they ask for money for shelter, as most people are not as easily willing to shelter homeless people as they are giving their food away.
In my own experience, I had somebody coming up to me to ask for money for a pay-phone. When I offered him to call with my cell phone, he said: 'no, I, erhmmm, no' and then he went away.
apocalyptopia — September 8, 2010
I've been homeless. Twice. Luckily both times I had my car to sleep in and a part-time job to keep gas in the tank. Food came from food pantries and dumpsters. I had no problem living off the excesses of a wasteful society and will often still dumpster dive to this day.
I didn't start panhandling until I started hanging out with a group of punk/hippie street kids. We would go "spange" (pair + change = spange). That's what we called it. We'd usually spange for beer money or rent money for the warehouse office they rented out as a living space. They'd usually play music while spanging, but since I didn't know how to play any instruments I'd just hold up funny signs like "Parents kidnapped by flying monkeys, need $$$ for plane ticket to Oz." I've even used the ninja one before.
Like the previous times I was homeless, I had a job during that time with the street kids as well and, in fact, a lot of them also had jobs. We would all share the money we made from jobs and spanging, so that everyone had enough. Hell, we'd even give money to other people we saw on the streets! Sometimes we'd even go raid the grocery store dumpsters and hand out food to all the bums downtown or raid the thrift store dumpsters and hand out sweaters in the winter.
I've also definitely noticed that men especially tend to be more rude and hostile toward women panhandlers. I've had numerous people tell me to go sell my ass if I can't find I job or purposefully knock my jar of change out of my hand and then laugh at me. I even had one guy yell at me, "You have tits! Feminism has made sure you bitches get way more help than guys do! Why the hell do you need to be out here anyway?!"
Either way, most of the "street people" as I call them, whether homeless or not, are definitely mentally ill in some way. There's a reason they don't just "get a job" and stop begging. Maybe if we focused more on mental health (and health in general) in this country we'd see these people in a lot better circumstances.
Kate — September 8, 2010
I'm an Aussie. The most common way I get asked for money is by someone coming up to me, looking me in the eye and asking me 'hey, can you spare a couple buck for....' Pretty casual usually. The most common one is bus money, second would be 'to grab a bite to eat' and sometimes 'for somewhere to stay'. They usually say specifically what they are going to do with that dollar tha tyou give them. As in, they don't usually say 'I'm homeless', they say 'can you spare some change? I'm trying to get $20 so I can stay in a hostel tonight'. I've had a few people from rural areas tell me they were stranded and needed to find bus fare back home.
When I was living near a pub with pokies in, I kept about a dozen bus tickets in my wallet with only one trip left on them. That way, if someone came and asked for $2 to catch the bus to see their sick mother (I've only EVER heard this one next to a pub with pokies) I could do something about it without handing out money to the pokies.
I remember a line form a song, can anyone tell me what song it is? 'He asked me for money and I thought, no, you'll just spend it on booze and drugs. And then I thought, that's what I'm going to spend it on too! So I gave him some change'.
Kate — September 8, 2010
Also, here's a cultural difference. I saw those signs and thought 'why would the fact that the person is a vetinary surgeon be relevant?'
Doh.
J-dizzle — September 8, 2010
I saw a person begging in indonesia with a huge open wound on their leg. my dad (a white guy who lives there) said that many beggars deliberately cultivate shallow but hideous-looking injuries in order to garner sympathy and increase donations. not sure what I think.
In Australia, in Adelaide at least which has a fairly small population, I haven't seen signs. Just the occassional dirty smelly person sitting against a wall. However many people beg for 'money for a bus ticket', and of course it's inevitably bullshit and you do see the same people. Sometimes it's younger teens, maybe trying to see what they can pull off. There is a stereotype about drunk people of a certain race being problematic in approaching people for money but I've only seen that once in my entire life.
Julio — September 8, 2010
Do have to agree with the other Germans that I never heard anyone ask for Trinkgeld which means tip but for Kleingeld = change. Sure you didn't mishear it?
I generally have the impression that begging is more common in the US than in Germany. In many German towns, a system has been established that writes and publishes a "homeless newspaper / magazine" which is then sold by licensed homeless street peddlers for about $1.50 to $ 2.00 - half or more of which then is given to the homeless person. I guess the idea is that you actually purchase something instead of just giving money so it is less humiliating.
I remember growing up in Portugal in the 1980s when it was still a quite poor country (in comparison with other European nations). Back then, it was usual for Roma but also other poor people to go to houses and ask for clean water, milk for kids or something to eat - I don't know if it is still done. My mother told me that it was also quite common in 1950s Germany to ask for food at people's houses or to offer to do some (menial) task in exchange for food or money. Another thing I remember from my childhood is that beggars on the street would always bless you if you gave something and tell you that "God will make you a rich man" in return.
Steven Dondlinger — September 8, 2010
I also lived in Germany for nearly four years and never observed any panhandler asking for 'Trinkgeld'. The most common thing for a panhandler to say is: 'eine kleine Spende, vielleicht?.' This translates literally to: 'a small donation, perhaps?'.
I don't know where this author is getting his information, but it seems to be completely inaccurate to me. This should be corrected.
'Trinkgeld' also would never, ever translate to 'drinking money'. Historically, perhaps, but it means 'tip'. This author needs to check their facts.
MsLaurie — September 8, 2010
"Pokie" means "slot machine".
I'm in Melbourne, Australia, and most people I see have fairly specific requests and/or signs. One guy is a regular near my train station will often list the specific items he is saving up for "please give, I need money for aerogard (mosquito repellant), weetbix and milk". Often these specific requests will result in people walking down to the local shop and buying the items for him, so I guess it works!
Pomme — September 8, 2010
I'm writing from Canada (various cities in Ontario and Québec). In my experience, the vast majority of people don't actually have a sign or a specific story; instead stand or sit in a busy place with a recipient placed in front of them, or (more rarely) knock on the windows of cars parked at red lights. It is assumed that passer-buys will understand the situation. When people do say something it's usually very non-descript "spare change?", or backed up by a simple explanation (that the money is needed to buy food/bus tickets to travel home to another city).
More surprisingly, I often get asked for money by people who claim not to be homeless/impoverished. They approach bypasers directly, and explain that they lost their wallet/locked themselves out of the care/etc. and need money for the cab-faire home. I'm curious about the logic behind this narrative - do the people giving money have an easier time empathizing with these stories than with the stories of homeless people?
Sally — September 9, 2010
Humor is used a lot in my neighborhood. Things like "Alien waiting for the mothership." There is a woman with one leg who carries a sign that says "On my last leg." There was another guy without a right foot who said he'd give his right foot for a cheeseburger. Cheeseburgers and/or tacos come up a lot, and dreams of getting them. At least one guy has several signs with puns that he rotates. I know at least a couple of people that will give a dollar for a good laugh.
I've also seen requests for oddly specific amounts. (Like "32 cents away from a cheeseburger.") I think they're hoping asking for these weird amounts will make them look honest.
Sally — September 9, 2010
I should add that I'm in Austin, Texas, USA.
Jesse — September 9, 2010
"it’s rare to see a panhandler outside North America requesting a donation on the basis of homelessness."
That's rubbish. Do your research properly!
Europe, UK, these are all places where homelessness is a very common, or even the MOST common theme for panhandlers.
Combined with this oversight and the number of people on here contradicting your 'trinkgeld' claim, and I'm disinclined to trust this article entirely.
Getting kind of bored with how often this blog is ignorant about countries outside the US.
T. — September 9, 2010
In San Francisco there was a woman who used to sit outside the Disney Store in a wheelchair with a little cat that was so docile (and kind of vacant-looking) that I wondered if it had been drugged; she had a sign that said "Dinky and I need a room for the night". Once I was walking past when she said to a guy standing near her that she had to pee. She got up out of the chair, handed him the sign and the cat's leash, and went off while he settled himself in the chair with a blanket over his legs, and held up the sign.
There was another guy in a wheelchair who had the same sign for years. It just said SMILE.
San Francisco has a really good public transit system, the BART trains. Almost every time I rode the train at night there was someone walking up and down the cars, asking for money to get home with. Usually these people weren't dirty and ragged like the street panhandlers. Unlike on the street, passengers on the train would completely ignore this approach, maybe because the pandhandler had to address a whole car at a time rather than an individual. People would carry on talking or reading and act like it wasn't happening while the pandhandler told their story (I lost my wallet, I just need $1.37 to get to [insert particular station]) to the car at large.
The "Why lie, I need a beer" sign started being seen after I'd been there for a few years, so probably 1996-ish?? Before that the signs were always "please help" or "every little bit helps" or "homeless vet god bless", and a lot of signs that were variations on "Will work for food". I saw one once that said "Will work for minimum wage".
One time I was walking with a friend who was carrying a bag of bagels, and we passed a guy with a sign that said "I need a hot meal". My friend offered him the bag of bagels; the guy asked instead for money; my friend said he didn't have any, at which point the guy grabbed the bagels, ripped open the bag and started throwing them and yelling that he needed money, not f*cking bagels.
One time a very nice older man, probably 60, asked me for change for food near a BART station, and we started talking, and I was about to get a burrito so I got him one too, and we ate them sitting outside and kept talking. This guy lived in a very different San Francisco from the one I was living in. He ordered a prawn burrito because he'd never had prawns before, and he kept saying how he was going to tell all his friends he'd had them, like I might tell my friends I'd had caviar. He told me his life story; he'd been in the army and then in and out of jail, and his entire family (2 sons and an ex-wife) seemed to be in prison; he wanted to visit them, but didn't have a way to get there. From the way he talked about it prison was nothing remarkable, just a way of life; it was a fact of existence and a social sphere rather than something to avoid.
He asked me for $12 so he could get a room for the night. I gave him $12 and then he asked for $20 more, and I said no, mostly because I didn't have it. Then he said "I don't want to lie to you; I want you to know what I'm really spending the money on. Come with me," and he took me to a corner convenience store and disappeared into the back for a minute with another guy. When he came out he led me to a bench near the train station and took out a crack pipe and smoked it. We kept chatting for a little while but I was kind of freaked out and left soon.
The year before I left the city I started seeing homeless people holding up signs advertising local businesses in a few areas that were visible to traffic. Apparently some business person had the idea that since these people were going to be standing there holding signs anyway, they'd be good advertising. I heard that this person paid the sign-holders $5/hour, and a local news station did a feature on how grumpy commuters who were expecting to see sob story signs and feel guilty were getting a smile from these new ones.
Nia — September 9, 2010
In Spain it's frequent to see signs that mention chronic illness or disability. There are mentions of homelessness too.
Daniela — September 9, 2010
I am from Germany too, living in the Rhine area, and I concur with all the others who say - never ever have I heard anyone ask for trinkgeld. However, we do see people asking for money with cardboard signs saying things like "obdachlos, bitte helfen sie" (homeless, please help). So in conclusion, what I read here simply does not reflect the truth as I see it every day.
Galatea — September 9, 2010
In New Delhi and many cities in Rajasthan, India, there were children begging, everywhere. My hosts told me not to give; they would take it back to an adult 'keeper', and not be allowed any themselves.
Once I was in the back passenger seat of a car stopped in traffic, and a woman carrying a baby with a hideously infected-looking open wound on the left arm came up and tapped the window. She knocked the window with the baby's other elbow. My host immediately, scornfully remarked on how quietly the baby was sleeping in the midst of all this, and concluded the wound was fake. I tried not to look too obviously, partly to be an obedient guest and discourage the advance, and partly because I really am a bit of a coward about blood and oozing pus.
Here in New York City there's been a new style of panhandling in the subway, something I observed starting in February that certainly wasn't nearly so prevalent two years ago. A man or woman in perhaps their 30s will stand up and begin with 'Good evening, ladies and gentlemen, can I have your attention please,' and proceed to recite their one-act tragedy to the captive subway car. I'm unemployed, my husband is sick, I've lost my job and I'm living in a shelter but they can't feed me dinner. After the monologue they will circulate for change.
Another change from 2008: the NYC Dept of Homeless Services started putting up those posters offering physical and mental health aid to the panhandler on the street, if you only call 311 and tell them where he or she is. I see so many fewer 'regulars' aboveground these days.
Robin — September 9, 2010
This has been a really interesting post to read. Living in NYC, I see panhandling every day, on the street & subway. I never know how to react, or what you're "supposed" to do. Do you ignore it, give them some spare change, or focus on donating time/money to a charitable organization that helps them? Once at my local deli, a man came up to me while I was paying and asked me to "get him a juice." I was confused as to what he meant (I thought he meant, could I get him a juice that was too high for him to reach off a shelf?), so I said, "Sure...?" and then I realized he wanted me to *buy* him the juice. I got so weirded out & kind of scared I just ran out of the deli before he could come back w/his juice. What would you have done in the situation?
Jayn — September 9, 2010
When I was living in Halifax, a common theme was needing money for travel. Signs usually had claims of trying to get home, or to visit ill family.
Heina — September 9, 2010
Anyone else notice how American signs reference the Christian god quite a lot?
I always feel strange when I give money to someone on the street and he or she invoked his or her god to bless me. It almost feels like a curse; I want to ask them to stop in case I receive the same "blessings" as them. I know that that would be cruel, so instead, I've started telling them, with a smile, that I'm an atheist, so that they'll know that nonreligious people are capable of charity.
Alll — September 9, 2010
I was wondering about some "evil, socialist" countries where homelessness might be less of a problem because the government helps out a lot more.
Mala — September 9, 2010
Google Korea's "Seal Men" for a very extreme example of begging. They present an exaggerated prostrate and crippled appearance in their begging.
jess — September 9, 2010
i love that picture of C.W. Mills.
Kat — September 10, 2010
Could you please update the original post? Given the bloggers cultural misinterpretations, this is meaningless or downright wrong in the current form.
Vien — September 10, 2010
I've never seen someone with a sign here (Dundee, Scotland) or anywhere else in the UK. Mostly beggars on the street will sit on the side of a busy pedestrian zone and mumble 'Spare change miss' - if you say no or ignore them they say 'oh thank you anyway miss'. It feels like the point is to sound as miserable as possible.
I've seen a fair few homeless people with dogs begging for money too - as a dog owner I've also had a few appraoch me while I'm out walking my dog. Is it playing on our British sensibilities of dog/pet loving?
Last point - I see very few women begging on the streets. Mostly they are youngish men - say up to early 30s.
Darius — September 10, 2010
In Serbia, people who use cardboards usually beg for medicines (health is highly regarded in serbian society). Many of them also emphasize their family status ("Otac bolesnog deteta" - "father of an ill child"). Roma people often beg with children on their hands or just playing around them (or asking for money themselves). Still, many beggars don't "justify" their actions whatsoever: they simply ask passers-by, usually starting with "please" ("molim vas"). Cardboards aren't quite common here.
khw — September 13, 2010
In Colombia a common statement is that people are displaced. Which, if they are from an ethnic group (idigenous or afro-colombian) or have hands that show a life of hard farm work is probably true. there are still plenty who 'work' by going begging as there aren't that many casual jobs and they pay probably less that what they can make begging.
Many will often get on the buses and tell a sob story - or perform a song.
There are several beggers in the area where i live that I give money to. But I have to be honest, they generally have dogs.
JJ — September 14, 2010
I have to renew the request for updating this post.
Like Kat mentioned "this (post) is meaningless or downright wrong in the current form".
So, please, please update it!
Ady — February 19, 2011
I was once approached in a NYC subway station (1999 or 2000) by a man with a photocopied piece of bright paper, which he shoved at me. It had some basic sign language instructions on one side and the other there was a short narrative about some deaf homeless association trying to raise awareness and would you please pay $1 for this handout. At the time I was young enough to simply be uncomfortable and shake my head while walking away, but I think today I would certainly give him his $1. Even if he's not deaf, he is achieving his goal of raising awareness.
Bri — March 6, 2011
I know this is an anecdote, so it doesn't work for every case, but for all the people who think the, "I need money for bus fare" is fake:
I was once visiting a friend who lived a few miles into the more urban part of my town. I was lacking a car at the time and needed to take a bus (actually two busses and a train)in order to get there. I had used the train many occasions before, but never the bus and I assumed it worked the same way. Wrong. Long story short, I only brought enough money with me to get me to the friends place in the city, because a different friend that I was going there with, promised to pay for the trip back and I didn't like to carry excessive money. Well, my friend, who was in charge of directions, accidentally had us get off at the wrong stop, since they weren't announced and her only money was on her card, which she had planned to get money out of once she got to our mutual friend's place, which was near an ATM. We were 8 miles from the friends house, not an ATM in sight and no bus fare. We were forced to hang out at the bus stop, begging, or 'panhandling' for bus fare to get us to the friends house. It took us a good hour to get $4.00.
Dead Man Brooding — January 21, 2013
You are totally misinterpreting the term "Trinkgeld" - it's the German word for "tip"; yeah, like the one given at restaurants. So, those beggars were asking for a bit of change like all others. Though, I'm a bit surprised at this use of the word. Must be a regional thing. Never heard (or read) that here in Berlin.
antjeGlück — May 6, 2017
The author has unfortunately completely misunderstood the German idea of Trinkgeld in the context of begging on streets. It js not asking people for money in order to buy alcohol. It is rather asking people for a few coins for living. Trinkgeld doesnt refer to consumption habits of beggars but denounces the tip usually given to waitresses in restaurants of cafes or to people in a bar. These coins is what beggars ask for. For living. Not for alcohol consumption. Please correct this article, and i request the author to ask reliable sources before posting these kind of inconclusive ideas.
ViktoriaMorris — March 29, 2021
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