Joseph Mitchell, Up in the Old Hotel
“Mazie became interested in Catholicism in the winter of 1920. A drug
addict on Mulberry Street, a prostitute with two small daughters, came
to her cage one night and asked for help. The woman said her children
were starving. "I knew this babe was a junky," Mazie says, "and I
followed her home just to see was she lying about her kids. She had two
kids all right, and they were starving in this crummy little room. I
tried to get everybody to do something--the cops, the Welfare, the
so-called missions on the Bowery that the Methodists run or whatever to
hell they are. But all these people said the girl was a junky. That
excused them from lifting a hand. So I seen two nuns on the street, and
they went up there with me. between us, we got the woman straightened
out. I liked the nuns. They seemed real human. Ever since then I been
interested in the Cat'lic Church.”
―
Joseph Mitchell,
Up in the Old Hotel
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