Monday, March 25, 2013

A DAY OF FUN AND SPORTS



The children from Hadapsar community and from the Day Care Centers for Migrant Children participated in a sports day activity called “Khel Khel Main” organized by 
Asha-Kiran and Concern India Foundation

The children, aged 8-14, competed in the long jump, running competition, sack race and lemon spoon race. A total of fifty children participated, out of whom seventeen won prizes, including two girls in the running competition.


Monday, March 18, 2013

DENTAL CHECKUPS FOR MIGRANT CHILDREN



One of the services Asha-Kiran provides for the children of construction workers is Dental checkup and treatment Camps. For the second year in a row, we offered this service at the construction sites we are associated with, where our Day Care Centers also provide daytime shelter, informal schooling and nutrition for children who would otherwise have no access to medical care.

The objective of the camps is to improve the oral health of the children and adults who live in construction communities by providing quality dental care services.

Our one-day dental camps were set up in collaboration with D.Y. Patil Hospital Pimpri-Chinchwad, Pune, for children aged 3-18, as well as for the parents who work and live at the sites. We covered 186 children and adults at Marvel Bounty, Marvel Arco, Marvel Citrin, Cerise, and Cascada developments. All the patients were screened and treated in a well-equipped Mobile Dental Clinic. Depending on each case, treatment consisted of fillings, extractions, or a course of specific medication.



Monday, March 11, 2013

WHAT IS POVERTY?



What is poverty? In India, poverty is not having even three basic meals a day. It is living in the streets; it is being ill and not having medical care; it is sending your children to beg instead of sending them to school. Poverty is living one day at a time; it is watching your child die from malnutrition. It is powerlessness, lack of representation and lack of freedom.

In the game of figures and percentages, someone has been left out: the faceless person at the bottom of economy – the starving Adivasi, the suicidal weaver’s widow, the desperate ‘untouchable’.

Planners bypass the fact that almost three fourths of Indian population depends on farming. That multi national corporations employ fewer people than they displace is also disregarded. Displacement causes endless problems; it leaves rural populations unemployed and forces them to migrate to cities where the street side dwellings and slums they live in are considered a flaw on the urban landscape.

When they cannot migrate along with their husbands, village women stay behind to look after the children and old people, while their husbands often take to drinking and gambling, and sometimes end up abandoning their families. The case of families migrating together is not much better: their children grow up illiterate and devoid of basic services such as schooling and healthcare.

Despite the economic growth of the last decades, there has been no consistent drop in poverty. The reason is that efforts have gone into building up heavy industry and public enterprises rather than micro industry, which constitutes the main source of work for the poor. MNCs promised growth and work opportunities, but they make profits by downsizing labor force in a country where a large labor force needs employment.

There are enormous gaps between the theory and practice. For example, the Green Revolution did not benefit the poor because abundance did not imply equitable distribution of foodstuffs. Farmer suicides in many states have mounted to proportions than can no longer be ignored. India is a rural-based country, highly dependent on agriculture, yet successive governments neglect the rural sector while they regard foreign investment and the corporate sector as the only way forward.

India has pro-poor policies spelt out in the most moving rhetoric. Yet, implementation of these strategies has been circumvented over and over. There has to be the will to eradicate poverty. India needs to address the enormous exploitation of the poor that takes place aided by caste and class, as well as the problems of vast numbers of landless, exploited people without means of subsistence.


Source: infochangeindia.org

Monday, March 4, 2013

POOJA AND KISHOR



Pooja and Kishor are siblings who lived at Yashodhara Shelter Home for two years. At the time of their admission to the Shelter, their mother's health (HIV positive) was not good, but thanks to the medical care she has been getting, she thinks she is ready to perform her duties as a full-time mother again.

Now, the siblings are attending a school at some distance from their shack. Although their ​​grandmother contributes to the household economy, we consider it necessary to support the family externally and continue paying them monthly visits.

Just like Kishor and Pooja, some children who have live or live at Yashodhara return home when their parent/s have the means or availability to provide appropriate care for them. In these cases, we follow up on the re-united families to ensure that the reintegration of children to their household has been successful and that they will go on having opportunities for development.

We wish them a happy life together.