World Street Children News

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January 31, 2007

NOBLE CAUSE: PTJH PALS to support Romania’s street children

NOBLE CAUSE: PTJH PALS to support Romania’s street children

[Pictured: Pine Tree Junior High PALS group sponsors backpacks for Jacob Shelley (center front) who will take blankets, clothes, stuffed animals, etc., to
Romania street children.]

21-Year-old Gladewater resident Jacob Shelley plans to take 500 backpacks next June to children who live in the streets of Romania. The Pine Tree Junior High PALS group is helping to sponsor Shelley’s noble cause. Several girls even donated their collections of stuffed animals. PALS (Peer Assistance and Leadership) is a service organization with teacher Karen Darby as its sponsor.

Shelley is being sponsored by the Rock Hill Christian Fellowship in White Oak and needs more sponsors for his backpack project. He founded “Packs of Love Outreach” and will need about $8,000 to buy blankets, gloves, socks, hats, stuffed animals, toiletry items, etc., for the backpacks. He plans to work with the Mission to Serve ministry as he distributes the backpacks in several cities of Romania. Shelley will pay his own travel expenses but needs more backpack item donations. He currently attends Kilgore College and can be reached at 903-736-6446.

UNICEF helps Zambo abandoned and street children

UNICEF helps Zambo abandoned and street children

   

The United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) has donated at least P200,000 worth of goods for the abandoned and streetchildren housed at the Social Development Center in Barangay Sta. Barbara, this city.

The donation was coursed through the Human Development Empowerment Services (HDES), a local non-government organization group, involved in empowering through education to the less fortunate ones.

It included therapeutic materials like beddings, kitchen utensils, shoes, slippers, basketball rings, bags, raincoats, shirts, underwear and other items.

The donated items were turned over by HDES to the recipients in coordination with the City Social Welfare and Development Office (CSWDO) headed by Francisco Barredo.

"This is a welcome development for the children staying in our center. It will help boost their morale to study hard," Barredo said.

HDES Executive Director Lourdes Lim said the donation is part of the two-year assistance program of UNICEF to the Zamboanga Peninsula and Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM).

Zamboanga City was included in the two-year assistance program after HDES and the City Social Welfare and Development Office requested UNICEF to include this city among the program beneficiaries. (PNA)

January 30, 2007

Kenya and Ireland work together - Helping street kids of Nairobi

Derry’s Multicultural Diversity Group SEEDS joined with the Changaro Trust to develop an international project to help young street children in Nairobi, Kenya.
This historic venture will see the Trust building a purpose built social, residential and educational centre offering young children in Nairobi an opportunity to improve the quality of their lives.
The Changaro Trust was formally launched yesterday at the Guildhall by the Mayor, Helen Quigley, SEEDS Director Eddie Kerr and Changaro Trust Director Kennedy Keraro.
Speaking to the ‘Journal’, Eddie Kerr explained: "This project will see us creating a purpose-built social and educational centre for young people in Nairobi to give them the opportunity of a better life."
Mr. Kerr revealed that when the project is underway, SEEDS will eventually be looking for volunteers to go and work in Kenya and help make the dream a reality.
"We’ll be trying to recruit groups of young people from here and builders from here to actually go and build the centre. Firstly though, we will be fundraising for the building," he said.
The Kenyan land in question belongs to Changaro Trust Director Kennedy Keraro, who is making it available for the use of the Trust.
Mr. Keraro told the ‘Journal’: "I came here from Kenya and so I know the need that exists out there. This project is payback for me, I want to give something back to that community, really."
Mr. Keraro said that the project will also be formally launched in Kenya too, and added: "Now we are formalising everything and then we will begin with the fundraising.
With regard to a starting date for the project, Mr. Keraro added: "It’s my land and it would be my dream to start the project next week, but there are many practical things that need to be done first."
Official estimates put the number of street children in Nairobi between 50,000-60,000.
A study done by UNESCO revealed that nearly 60% of street children in Nairobi do not attend school, while 37% of the caretakers of the children are children themselves, mostly girls.
The Changaro Trust will help promote advocacy and will lobby for the rights of the street child at various levels, from grassroots to policy.
30 January 2007

Street children (Toaki) in Dhaka City: What do they eat?

Tuesday, January 30, 2007

(Blog Entry) 


Street children (Toaki) in Dhaka City: What do they eat?

Street children in Dhaka city lead a very measurable life. They eat various kinds of things. But from where they get it? Most of they have to face of kindness of people. Some time they have to face the rude behave from people.In these pictures one boy is eating food sitting by a loan place. He also shared it with his companion. He and his companion always share all things. If any one gives some money they also divide it equally.


Globalfootprint has written:

“Some of the children are on the street - they work, play and spend most of their day with other children on the street but have families to return to at night. These children often help the family earn money by working on the streets.
Other children are of the street - they survive without family, entirely on their own, except for the company of other street children or those willing to help and support them.”

Although they eat food by the kindness of others but they have a simple mind to help others. Dear viewers, in this picture you can see that one boy is giving food to the dog.

January 29, 2007

Parents renting children out to gangs: Report

Parents renting children out to gangs: Report
Web posted at: 1/30/2007 0:34:19
Source ::: Internews

KARACHI • Various reports compiled by different child rights organisations in Pakistan suggest that renting children by the parents to gangs is becoming a common practice in the country with Karachi having ample contribution to the menace.

These reports say these gangs use these children for begging by paying specific amount to their parents and taking their share from the child’s earnings.

“This menace is on the rise and the reason might be increasing poverty in the society,” Akhtar Hussain Baloch, regional manager of a private charity, Society for the Protection of the Rights of the Child (Sparc), says. He said that the gangs paid more money for a girl child than boys given the fact that girls attracted more attention of people for alms.

According to him, reports such as this should come as no surprise when everyone is aware of the existence of child beggar rackets.

“This nonetheless exasperates a situation where a child escapes the violent private domain to seek refuge in the sanctum of the public where all is visible, where indiscriminate violations are conducted less hastily for fear of reprise from the law,” he said.

Baloch said that such situations were increasing escapism among the children. They escape from a non-life of begging and abhorrent abuse at the hands of the adults of their society who are meant to protect them, he added.

Referring to such reports, he said as early as four, these children beg and scavenge around rubbish dumps or industrial waste sites and took on menial jobs as cart-pushers or dishwashers working 12-15 hours a day to earn around Rs75 — enough to buy a meal.

A report compiled by the Society for the Protection of the Rights of the Child (Sparc) said most children survive by prostituting themselves and stealing, making them vulnerable to contracting sexually transmitted diseases (STDs) such as HIV/Aids.

“They are also at high risk from health problems such as tuberculosis, jaundice and kidney disorders.”

The report suggests that 83 per cent of street children were sniffing glue between the ages of eight to nineteen. Some 54 per cent left home at age

10-12 while 45 per cent children living on the streets are involved in crimes and 49 per cent are at high risk of HIV/Aids.

Baloch referred to the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime assertion that 72 per cent of all street children had no contact with and 10 per cent had no knowledge of their families.

A large proportion of these children sniff cheap readily available glues to starve off hunger, loneliness and fear. He said some 35 laws pertaining to child rights existed in Pakistan but it seemed the authorities were doing a lot but to no avail.

According to him, since independence successive governments had passed and promulgated 27 laws pertaining to child rights while eight laws existed already including the Female Infanticide Prevention Act of 1870.

January 28, 2007

JUMP to Change the World

JUMP to Change the World
Did you know that there are over 300,000 child slaves in Haiti? I met one boy who wanted to tell me his story. JUMP (Juveniles Use Media Power) empowers global youth by giving them a voice and the skills to make media that makes a difference. Visit the J.U.M.P. website to find out more about how you can participate: http://www.jumptochangetheworld.org/ and see more JUMP videos on their YouTube channel http://www.youtube.com/profile?user=JUMPtoChangetheWorld

Street Children in Nairobi - Shangilia

Street Children in Nairobi - Shangilia
A few clips from a Christian Mission Aid video illustrating their work with Shangilia, a project for street children in Nairobi, Kenya. Visit the CMA website to find out more: http://www.cmaid.org/

Forgotten Angels - Street Children in Haiti

Forgotten Angels - Street Children in Haiti
This is the first part of the documentary, “Forgotten Angels,” about the street children of Haiti and the work of Michael Brewer, founder of Haitian Street Kids, Inc. Street kids everywhere in the world have hard lives but the situation of street children in Haiti beggars the imagination. This video is a little dated (2001) and the situation in Haiti has changed for the worse. Michael Brewer’s project is in desperate need of assistance. Please visit his website to find out more about modern slavery on the doorstep of America and its tragic outcomes. Make a donation. Make a difference. http://www.haitianstreetkids.com/

January 27, 2007

US helps street kids

US helps street kids

 Yemen Times Staff

The International Program for the Elimination Child Labor (IPEC), with funding from the US Department of Labor, opened a child rehabilitation center for working street children in 2003.
The center is currently training 150 children. Over 1,500 children have participated in the IPEC program.
The center provides back to school services, health programs, and remedial and vocational training for male students.
There is a plan to open such a center for girls in the future.
The center also assists students’ siblings by supplying school uniforms, healthcare, and back-to-school supplies.
It employs seven social workers and several teachers and focuses on reducing the number of hours worked by children and returning them to school. There are an estimated 4,000 street kids in Sana’a alone.
Most children in cities work selling products at intersections, and in hotels, restaurants, and vegetable stands.

January 26, 2007

Hope Unlimited Co-Founder on Family-Style Raising of Brazilian Street Kids

Hope Unlimited Co-Founder on Family-Style Raising of Brazilian Street Kids

By Michelle Vu
Christian Post Reporter
Fri, Jan. 26 2007 05:56 PM ET

The father-son team of the Rev. Jack Smith and son Philip Smith along with David Swoap, the former deputy secretary of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, founded Hope Unlimited in 1992. The ministry has reached more than a thousand Brazilian street children – many on drugs or engaged in prostitution prior to their participation in the ministry.

Co-founder/president Philip Smith spoke to The Christian Post on Thursday about the unique family-style raising of the children and the ministry’s future goals as it looks forward to its 15th anniversary.

CP: How is the ministry Hope Enterprises in Ethiopia connected to Hope Unlimited in Brazil?

Smith: Hope Enterprises is not so much connected to Hope Unlimited in Brazil except that it shares the same founder – Jack Smith. The founding vision for both was to start a local ministry to street kids that would be turned over to members of the local community so that it would be an indigenous ministry.

In Ethiopia, this little thing started in our backyard and it was turned over in 1977. It now provides services to 8,000 people and on Dec. 2 they just inaugurated the new Hope University.

In Brazil, the vision has been the same. I have been the only American there since the beginning and I even spend half my time in the states supporting the ministry. Brazilians are now developing it and they are raising half their support and all the administration is done through the local staff and board.

CP: Did you help establish Hope Enterprises with your father also?

Smith: I would like to take responsibility for Hope Enterprises, but I was only six or seven-years-old at the time.

My parents left as Presbyterian missionaries in 1959 and my mom was 7 months pregnant when they finally got their visas for Ethiopia, so my older sister was born only three weeks after they arrived. I was also born in Ethiopia and Hope Enterprises started in a little tool shed in our backyard in 1971.

My parents would see these little street kids as they went back and forth during their missionary assignment as teachers at a school.

Mother Teresa was a colleague of my father and would go to Ethiopia quite frequently and challenged him to take in the older kids from her orphanages and stories like that came together. We left with 300 kids in a huge facility founded by the Dutch government in 1977 and like I said that has grown to 8,000.

CP: Are there many Christian mission groups working in Brazil and doing the same activities as Hope Unlimited?

Smith: There are many folks that have an interest in working with these street kids and there are a lot of missionaries working with the kids in the streets. I do not know of any large scale programs that are providing residential care and vocational training for street kids.

I express that clearly as a challenge because we would love to find out those whom we could come alongside and learn from.

CP: Is it hard working with street children, especially from another culture?

Smith: It is enormously difficult. Probably the street children in Brazil would be more like children in the United State in terms of their hardness. The more developed cultures just make different characteristics come forward.

In Ethiopia, because it is very much a developing society where family is so highly valued, in times of starvation the family would die and give the children the last morsel of food and the children actually grew up with hope. Sometimes that hope was the only thing that kept them alive.

In Brazil, we sometimes see children dying simply because they don’t have hope. They lost hope because of abuse, the father abandoning the family, and the mother turning to prostitution and all those kind of factors.

So it is enormously difficult to work with these children. When we started our first year we brought in our first group of 35 kids and every one of them ran away. That has been the experience of many people who have tried to work with these kids. That is why frankly you don’t have more groups working with them.

CP: Do these children have a hard time accepting love?

Smith: The name of our training manual that we use is called When Love is Not Enough. It is not intuitive. We think about how do we tell these children about the concept of a Heavenly Father when they have no idea what the love of a father is all about. For them the father figure is that drunken guy who stumbles across the room towards their bed at 2 o’clock in the morning. They think if this is what my earthly father does then I don’t even want to know about this great, powerful Heavenly Father.

CP: How has this ministry helped spread the Gospel in Brazil?

Smith: I think the most powerful thing is through the testimonies. There has been a lot of competition in the past between the Catholics and Protestants. The Catholic notion has been that they are saved by work and the Protestants were showing that they were saved by grace and didn’t have to do anything.

To everybody, even the Protestant community, we have been trying to show the full expression of wearing the mantle of Jesus Christ is being compassionate and reaching out in social ministry.

There other thing is that Christianity has been relegated to members of the lower class and the upper class is very much an unreached group. One reason is when they go to church they have to share the pews with folks from the lower class and that is not an easy thing traditionally for people in Brazil because there is such segregation between the classes.

So I think having – especially when the Americans come down – educated, sophisticated people who are giving their time and making sacrifices for these children has made a powerful impact.

We received some awards in Brazil – the social project of the decade – and that is wonderful because they help bring recognition and help more people ask what is the key to your success and that gives us a chance to share.

CP: Do the children in the program receive Bible study? Are they ministered to when they are part of Hope Unlimited?

Smith: It is definitely a ministry because they come into our family and we raise them as I was raise in my family. We created a different culture for them. Many people have criticized us because of our Christian orientation, like certain rights group and even foundations that would support us.

I said, “Well any parent would raise their children in conformance with their own faith pattern.” If you were a Buddhist family I would not anticipate you not taking their children to the temple. I come from a Christian family and my children are going to come to church with me and worship with me just as I did with my parents and it works towards their stability.

And because they don’t have one parent but a group of parent everyone has to be on the same page. So we have to all work as one mom and dad and that is why we have to give them the same message.

People actually get it – it’s like the light goes on and it’s been amazing that we received support and major financing when we are able to present it in that way.

CP: What have you learned personally through working with these street children?

Smith: Many things. One thing I learned early on was the love of the Heavenly Father. I realized as we grew from having five kids to ten kids to 30 kids, that your ability to love was not diminished when it spreads out. It is like you have a pot of love and if you spread it out among more members it is going to grow smaller for each one. But it seemed like as we added more kids my love for each one increased even more. Well, if that’s the example then how much more must God love us. It taught me initially about love – the more people you love the greater is your capacity to love.

CP: What goal do you have for the future as Hope Unlimited celebrates its 15th anniversary this year?

Smith: Well, we received many requests from folks working with these street kids from all over the world, especially in Brazil. They ask, “How do you get success? Our kids are running away from the program and going back to drugs.”

We recently received some requests from some foundations to finance us so we can put our expertise and our experience on paper to develop training material. We will be able to come alongside other folks who are working with these kids around the country and help train them and certify them to get better results with these kids.

A lot of it is from our own experience working with these kids, but a lot of it is just us going out and finding the best methodologies that are out there and bringing them together.

The vision for the future is instead of us growing out and building more facilities, we would like to be coming alongside others. We have even received a request to come alongside the folks from the juvenile detention authorities to help them develop techniques that will reach the children more effectively.

CP: What would you say is the most effective tool in helping these children?

Smith: You have to get their respect. The kids - because of their insecurity growing up when no one cared for them when they cried out as babies – believe that they need to be control. So their characteristics are actually control techniques: from mumbling, to lying, to grabbing onto your hands and jumping up and hugging you pulling your neck down.

You think it is sweet so you don’t want to criticize these kids for tugging on your hands because, “oh they’re victims.” But that doesn’t help them because these are actually control techniques. The kids cannot trust and unless they can trust somebody they are not going to turn over control to them. You have to get their respect and establish yourself in a position of being stronger than them so they will begin to trust you and relax and then you are in the position to help them.

If you let these kids treat you like a doormat and they are underneath you, then our example says that makes them the dirt underneath the doormat. How will they have self-esteem that way? For them to have self-esteem, to be princesses and princes, you need to be the kings and queens.

The exciting thing is these psychological therapeutic techniques are no more than what we learn in the Bible about parenting. It is just biblical, Godly parenting.

CP: Is there anything you want to add?

Smith: In a country with a small population of extreme wealth and a huge population of extreme poverty, the children are the losers. There are 7 million of them on the Brazilian streets that are in gangs, forced prostitution, stealing, begging and on drugs.

When you think about those children, you think about the enormous task we have. We really want people to be remembering these children, to be praying for them, but instead of praying for 7 million, bring it down and put a face on it and think about one of them. Think of your own child in that situation.

We are currently helping 600 of these kids. We have graduated 300, place back with their families 500, and then we have a number of children that have come and run away. But we planted seeds in them and many of them have come back years later completely transformed, and that doesn’t get into our formal statistics. But well over a thousand Brazilian street children have really received some transformational help.

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