Poverty

UK Poverty: helping parents, helping children with FAST

Friday 18 November 2011 by Sophie Pite

It is my third week delivering Families and Schools Together (FAST) in a London Primary School and the group has already become really established. I am finding it really moving to see that the parents and children are just as eager for FAST to succeed as the team is. Each week children take part in different activities and every week parents have time to chat as a group while their children are playing and make the most of the support they can give to each other.

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Tanzania: Standing up to the challenge of child mortality

Wednesday 22 June 2011 by Madhuri Dass

“Everyone, please stand up”, I said a number of times to the group I was training. It’s a strategy I use to make things memorable, and it was symbolic, in a way, of standing up to take on the big challenge of convincing Tanzanians to stop accepting child deaths as ‘normal’.

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Getting a taste of what it’s like to live on £1 a day

Thursday 28 April 2011 by Louise Holly

Anyone who lives on an average income of £1 a day (or US$1.25) is said to be living in extreme poverty. Unbelievably, an estimated 1.4 billion people around the world – more than 20 times the population of the UK – have to get by on this tiny amount.

But what’s it really like to live on £1 a day? Like thousands of other people in the UK, Australia and USA, I thought I’ld find out.

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Can social protection be transformative?

Tuesday 19 April 2011 by Rica Garde

I recently attended the conference Social Protection for Social Justice at the Institute of Development Studies. The conference explored the potential of social protection to go beyond its usual goals of providing safety nets, and move to address broader concerns.

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Blwyddyn Newydd Dda / Happy New Year

Tuesday 11 January 2011 by Jessica Evans

‘Tis the season for New Year’s resolutions my friends’ and colleagues’ intentions for 2011 made me realise that I hadn’t even considered mine. Lots of us know we should eat less and do more, but instead we dream of ‘miracle diets’ and ‘celebrity fitness regimes’ when we know they won’t work, and aren’t good for us. Ignoring the problem and hoping for a quick-fix is what we do – and this ostrich-with-head-in-sand approach is favoured the world over, not just by individuals, but governments too…

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India: Poverty is never far away

Monday 1 November 2010 by Sue James

As it’s Sunday and the Save the Children offices are closed, we felt we had earned a little retail therapy and I must confess I got a little carried away.

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India: A beautiful oasis of green

Monday 25 October 2010 by Anne Strang

Well what a day. Finally here in India and everything is such an experience. Trying to get some of the thoughts out of my head and into this blog after a comfortable night.

We arrived safely at Delhi airport after a good flight, although none of us got much sleep, because of crying babies. Anyway, they fed us supper at 11pm our time, (I don’t think I’ve ever eaten that late in all my life), and woke us by putting all the lights on at 3am our time to have breakfast.

The airport terminal was plush and could have been anywhere, apparently built specially for the commonwealth games, but the entire airport was surrounded by building work.

Jo, from the India office met us and and has been wonderful. Driving in India is not for the feint hearted. There seem to be no rules of right of way, other than who can honk their horn the loudest and who out-chickens who.

There was a vast assortment of vehicles on the road, which is full of enormous pot holes, honestly we moan at home but that is nothing!

There was a motorcycle with a woman, holding a baby riding side saddle on the back, bicycles piled high with goods, rickshaws and buses that look so battered you wouldn’t expect them to work, let alone be allowed on the road. But as yet no cows!!

The hotel is great and we have nice clean rooms with all the amenities. We wanted to explore Delhi a little this afternoon, sleep deprivation forgotten, to get a flavour of it, as we had not got anything on the itinerary, and were advised to visit the Lotus temple, just 10 minutes down the road.

After an exhilarating taxi ride (not brave enough to try the tuk-tuks yet) found ourselves at a beautiful oasis of green. The temple is shaped like a lotus flower in white marble, and there were lots of families there visiting, as tourists, like us.

It was beautiful and very peaceful. We had to take our shoes off and observe silence inside. It was a Baha’i house of worship, which as far as I could understand, wants to unite all the faiths of the world, bringing them to work and worship in harmony.

Many of their ideals, for equality of men and women, elimination of prejeudice and discrimination, universal and compulsory education, the elimination of poverty could all be those of Eglantyne Jebb herself.

The people were very welcoming, although we stood out, and were asked to have our photos taken by Indians who wanted their photo taken with a westerner. We were accosted by a large group of school children who all wanted to practise their excellent English on us, and they then laughed at us trying to say “Namaste” (hello) to them in return.

The families were dressed in their Sunday best and the children were beautiful in their colourful clothes. We noticed the black colouring around the children’s eyes, like eyeshadow, which looked very dramatic.

Later our photographer told us that the painting of children’s eyes is a cultural tradition and is supposed to ward off the “evil eye”. And actually, Save the Children, through the education of midwives, are trying to help people understand that the Kohl they use to give children the dark eyes is detrimental to their sight and can lead to loss of sight as it gradually blocks the tear ducts.

Other such traditions, such as removing a new born baby from the mother just after birth so she does not give the baby her yellow breast milk, which is thought to be tainted, is deeply ingrained in the culture and needs careful education to re-educate on the benefits of chlostrum milk.

We have had a fascinating and wonderful first day, but today we will see a different side to life as we visit a street children project and the slums of Delhi to see a mobile health clinic.

Tomorrow we have a very early start when we catch the 6.00am train to Jaipur, which if I can stay awake should be great.

Niger: the end of the rains

Friday 1 October 2010 by Amy Reed

It’s hard to overstate the importance of the rains here – when 86% of people live off 11% of the land, where animals are the main source of wealth, and where water is precious — the rains can make or break people’s lives. Malaria erupted with the onset of this years’ rains and there was heavy flooding in certain areas. Now they’ve ended and the harvest has begun there’s much to be positive about.

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MDGs: Why we are in New York

Tuesday 21 September 2010 by Adrian Lovett

From Bangladesh to New York City. We met women and children who told us their stories. We heard about children dying from things like diarrhea. Now we’re here in NYC to hold world leaders to account. They must keep their promises when they discuss world poverty at the UN Millennium Goals Summit. Adrian Lovett and Sian To discuss why Save the Children are in New York pressing world leaders for change.

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Niger: rain and recovery

Thursday 26 August 2010 by Amy Reed

In the UK, it rains heavily and it’s annoying. In Niger it rains heavily and – if you’re poor, and you probably are – it’s economic breakdown.

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