Monday, December 28, 2015

HRITIK: HEALTH TO PURSUE HIS DREAMS


Dear Asha-Kiran Family,

We have great news to share today: after months of chemotherapy and two more taking a rest from the treatment, our dear Hritik underwent a PET Scan and the results were excellent. An excerpt from the medical report reads as follows:

“PET shows complete regression of previously seen (…) lymphadenopathy, suggesting good response to treatment. Currently asymptomatic.”


Thank you for walking the way with Hritik during these difficult months. With the treatment, your support and his desire to live, he is now closer to seeing his dreams come true.

Monday, December 21, 2015

NEW DAY CARE CENTER FOR MIGRANT CHILDREN


Marvel Izara residential complex, as many more construction sites in Pune, employs migrant workers from across the country. While both parents are at work, their children are left unattended in a hazardous environment. Although the families stay in shacks provided by the constructors, parents cannot provide their children with an education, proper health care, a balanced diet or a minimum standard of living.

When we asked the parents of this site what they thought of having a Day Centre, they all responded with positivity. Not only were they happy that their children can now spend the day in a safe space away from the buildings, but that they will receive educational and recreational inputs as well as health care.

We are pleased to welcome 25 more children to our project for Migrant Children, which already caters to families in 15 construction sites.


Thursday, December 10, 2015

WORKING AMIDST HUMAN FECES


Anokhi cannot forget the first time she cleaned human feces. ‘The first thing I did was throw up.’ Then came diarrhea, lack of appetite and headaches. She spent 17 years cleaning latrines, twenty of them a day for 400 rupees a month (€5.60). ‘My sister in law made me start and my family threatened me, so I couldn’t quit’, she recalls.

A law passed in 1993 and another one in 2013 banned this degrading work in India. Former Prime Minister Manmohan Singh said this practice was ‘one of the greatest blemishes in the country’s development’ and promised to eradicate it. In 2014, the Supreme Court acknowledged that manual cleaning of feces was still common and that it was a violation of human rights.

However, the laws have not prevented hundreds of thousands of people, mostly women, from continuing to clean latrines. The International Dalit Solidarity Network (IDSN) estimates that 1.3 million people do it. With a basket, a brush, a spatula and their bare hands, they remove feces from homes, train stations, drains, septic tanks, sewers or railways.

The collectors were born Dalits, ‘untouchables’, in the lowest rung of the Hindu social pyramid. If they didn’t ‘inherit’ the job from their parents, they started when they got married. This was Priyanka’s case, who began following her mother-in-law’s orders. ‘The worst part was the monsoon. With the rain, the load ran down the basket and trickled on my head and clothes. The smell never went away. It was always with me’. Her mother in law says ‘I had no other option, I had to do it. I did it for 36 years’.

Due to this “family legacy”, manual scavengers are ostracized. The social humiliation they are subjected to is almost worse than the job they do, beginning in the houses they clean. ‘I always had to keep a distance (from my employers), not even our shadows could touch, and they threw food at me from above’, says Savatri. Despite the shame, the workers do not leave the upper-caste families that feed them and give them old clothes.

Civil organizations like Sulabh International are supporting these workers to join mainstream society. ‘The first challenge is to free them from that task; then, we give them access to education and help them develop other skills’, says founder Bindeshwar Pathak, a sociologist who stresses the need for ‘higher castes to respect (Dalits’) rights and allow them to come into temples, bathe in sacred rivers or eat with others’.

Usha did manual scavenging with her mother for more than 30 years. One day, her path crossed with Pathak’s. ‘I was suspicious at first, but in 2003 I saw the Center he built for us and I knew he was different. At the Center, more than 100 ex-scavengers learn to read and write and receive vocational training. Usha, now president of Sulabh International, encourages other women to escape a life amidst human waste. She is no longer an outcast.

Why are all the women dressed in blue? Sulabh answers that ‘It’s the color of the sky, of freedom. Before, they were imprisoned by society, now they are free’.

Source: elmundo.es