Tuesday, February 16, 2010

Book 3: Zander is Dirty

Kids Encountering Social Injustice

BOOK 3:



Zander

Is Dirty



Zander enjoyed learning how things were made, even so much so that he considered himself a scientist.


And today Zander was feeling especially curious, for today was his birthday.

And Zander had an idea.



Zander wanted to meet someone new, and he knew just the way to do it.



He rushed to the Machine,

opened it,

and leaped inside.




Suddenly he found himself on a crowded city sidewalk in a hot, humid, extremely fragrant and extremely crowded place. Pungent odors wafted through the air over and over, and the traffic noise was deafening.



Since Zander was especially good at exploring and investigating, as is every scientist, he quickly spotted a group of kids headed toward a particularly smelly place outside of town.



After following the kids for some time, he arrived at what looked like the biggest trash heap in the world.

Soon Zander realized this was where his new friends lived.



Certainly he had met more than just someone new.



So Zander asked his new friends, “Where do you sleep and eat and bathe and play?” And the kids told him that they slept and ate and bathed and played on the rubbish, amid the stench.



And Zander thought,

“No one should have to live in trash! All kids should at least have a house!”




Instantly, Zander found himself back at home,

the Machine lifeless beside him.

But the thought had not left him.




“No one should have to live without a house!”




So Zander decided, “Someone should build a house for all kids.”



And then he realized,

“I can be that someone!”






Fact Sheet about slum life in India:

Two million slum children die every year as India booms

Save the Children says state-run health system is failing to give skilled care to poor

Child mortality rates have doubled in India's slums. In Rajasthan, Surma lost her son Parmesh to easily preventable diarrhoea at only four years old. Source: Save the Children Link to this video

India's growing status as an economic superpower is masking a failure to stem a shocking rate of infant deaths among its poorest people.

Nearly two million children under five die every year in India – one every 15 seconds – the highest number anywhere in the world. More than half die in the month after birth and 400,000 in their first 24 hours.

A devastating report by Save the Children, due out on Monday, reveals that the poor are disproportionately affected and the charity accuses the country of failing to provide adequate healthcare for the impoverished majority of its one billion people. While the World Bank predicts that India's economy will be the fastest-growing by next year and the country is an influential force within the G20, World Health Organisation figures show it ranks 171st out of 175 countries for public health spending.

Malnutrition, neonatal diseases, diarrhoea and pneumonia are the major causes of death. Poor rural states are particularly affected by a dearth of health resources. But even in the capital, Delhi, where an estimated 20% of people live in slums, the infant mortality rate is reported to have doubled in a year, though city authorities dispute this.

In the Bhagwanpura slum on the north-west fringes of the capital, numerous mothers have lost one or more infants in their first years of life through want of basic medical attention.

Akila Anees's son, Mohammed Armann, who was almost three, died in her arms three weeks ago. A torrential downpour had flooded the slum, rainwater mixing with the raw sewage which fills the ink-black drains bisecting the narrow lanes. It rose to a depth of 2ft. Within days, Armann had fallen ill and died soon afterwards.

Save the Children says millions of mothers and their babies are simply not getting the skilled medical care they need, and the poor, in particular, have been left behind. "For many poor parents and their children, seeking medical help is a luxury and health services are often too far away," said Shireen Miller, its head of policy and advocacy in India.

"The difference between rich and poor is huge. In a city like Delhi it is more stark because we have got state-of-the-art hospitals and women giving birth under flyovers. The health service has failed to deliver. They are supposed to reach the poorest, but they have not."

India's state healthcare system is supposed to be open to all, offering access to government-run hospitals. The reality is that, while government hospitals often offer high standards of care, they can be overcrowded, and if they are short of the required medicines patients are asked to pay for them themselves. In the meantime, private health care has surged and now accounts for the majority of India's medical provision, giving access to world-class facilities for those who can pay or who can afford private insurance premiums.

According to the UK India Business Council, about 50 million middle-class Indians can afford private healthcare – a growing number but still a tiny fraction of the overall population – while the country still lags behind other developed countries, with only 0.7 hospital beds per 1,000 people compared with a global average of 4.

Many slum-dwellers are too far from hospitals to make use of their facilities, because they cannot afford to use private auto-rickshaws to reach them and there is no public transport. Instead they turn to quack doctors – a slightly cheaper option, but because they are unregulated and notoriously unreliable, one fraught with dangers.

According to the report, the national mortality rate for under-fives in the poorest fifth of the population is 92 in 1,000 compared with 33 for the highest fifth. The national average is 72.

A couple of hundred yards from Anees's shack in Bhagwanpura, Gudiya, 22, sat holding her surviving daughter, Priya, two, amid scenes of abject squalor. Almost every square inch of the slum is covered in a layer of rubbish and human and animal waste. She has lost three children in four years.

Her most recent child, a boy, died two days after she gave birth at home, she said. "He cried, but it was feeble and he gradually turned cold. We wrapped him in blankets and took him to the hospital but I could feel he was getting weaker, and then I could see he was not breathing and there was no heartbeat and then the doctor said he was dead." Three years ago her three-month-old son, Ahmit, died from pneumonia. A year earlier her five-month-old daughter, Kumkum, died after developing a fever.

Delhi's health minister, Kiran Walia, has blamed migration into the city for its problems, but many poorer families simply feel that they are shut out by the system. Selma Shakil's son, Muzzamil, died in July after she was turned away from a government hospital. He was a year old. She sat on the hard wooden bed in the tiny room in Bhagwanpura that is home to her two surviving children and her crippled husband and dabbed at her eyes with her headscarf.

"It was shattering for us. We were so happy when he was born, he was so happy and playful. I would give everything to get him back, but we can't," said Shakil, 27.

Muzzamil had been ill for months. Shakil had taken him to a government hospital three times; the first time they gave him medicine and sent her home, the second time he was admitted for a few days and then discharged, and the third time they turned her away. "They said they would not take him; they said, 'You can't keep coming here, the child will be fine'."

The day he died the doctors told her he was sleepy because of the medicines he was taking. She went home, but then he started groaning. "His breath was shallow, and that was when I realised it was too late. I took him in my arms. He opened his eyes once and said 'Ammi' [mummy] and that was it. He died in my arms." They buried him the same evening.

The Save the Children report says nearly nine million children die worldwide every year before the age of five. India has the highest number of deaths, with China fifth. Afghanistan has the dubious distinction of featuring in the top 10 of total child deaths and of child deaths per head of population, a list topped by Sierra Leone.

The charity accuses the world's leaders of a scandalous failure to meet the Millennium Development Goals, agreed in 2000, to cut child mortality by two- thirds between 1990 and 2015 and calls for a sharp increase in health spending.

Monday, February 1, 2010

Valentine's Day Gift: Invisible Children rescued!

Valentine's Day is only 13 days away!

So, what do you want from your sweetheart?

Can I tell you what I want?

About 4 years ago I first watched the Invisible Children video and found myself challenged and changed. Since then, the thousands of children abducted by Joseph Kony and his Rebel army, terrorizing northern Uganda, have haunted me. I find it hard to process that young boys the age of my oldest son (4) are being kidnapped and forced to shoot other children with AK47s, bite them to death, maim them, burn families, etc. so that the Rebel army can maintain power over the Ugandan government.

Within the past few months I found an update video at http://nightof.therescue.invisiblechildren.com/ and began following the Invisible Children blog at www.invisiblechildren.com.

So, for Valentine's Day this year I want sticky glitter cards from my kids, a ring from my hubby, and 3,000+ Ugandan children set free from the Rebel Army.
(Ok, and maybe another Ugandan necklace made by Ugandan women http://store.lightgivesheat.org/suubi/2009-collection.html, or a handbag made by Ugandan mothers http://store.invisiblechildren.com/mendbags.)

How can we free the Child Soldiers?
Read below:


Dr. No, please say yes

The LRA Disarmament and Northern Uganda Recovery Act, if passed, requires that President Obama form a plan for apprehending Joseph Kony and neutralizing the Lord’s Resistance Army. It also assigns funds to help rebuild the northern region of Uganda where Joseph Kony has been taking lives, abducting children, and forcing thousands of people out of their villages into displacement camps for over 20 years.

This bill has made history by being the most widely-supported bill in 35 years that is concerned with sub-Saharan Africa. The bill currently has 56 co-sponsors in the Senate, with supporters from both parties proving that this is truly a bi-partisan priority.

One man stands in the way of this bill’s passage: Senator Coburn (R-OK), or as he is known around these parts, “Dr. No.”

Senator Coburn opposes the bill because of the $40 million that it allocates to rebuilding Northern Uganda where the LRA has left a trail of displaced people and broken infrastructure. He argues that America is already enough in debt without sending aid to Northern Uganda. We are all about principles, but we must protest that this bill is asking for relatively little money and we have confidence that the money will prevent higher costs in the future.

In truth, $40 million is a drop in the ocean of U.S. foreign aid. To put $40 million in perspective, Senator Coburn recently voted to increase the HIV/AIDS spending by $35 billion. That is nearly 1,000 times the budget that we are asking for.

This past year, Joseph Kony killed about 2,000 people and abducted 3,000. Hundreds of those were children. By apprehending Kony we will be ending the war and our rebuilding efforts will be long lasting. It will remove the cause of the instability in Northern Uganda as well southern Sudan, the Democratic Republic of Congo, and the Central African Republic. The money will immediately start saving lives but will also save money in the long run by decreasing the need for future American humanitarian aid in Uganda.

We express our gratitude to the 800 Oklahomans that spent the night outside of Senator Coburns office last April during the Rescue. We thank the 16 Oklahomans who flew to Washington, D.C., to hand-deliver letters from participants of the Rescue to Senator Coburn. And, finally, we appreciate the 20 Oklahomans who marched in Oklahoma City last November before meeting with Senator Coburn’s office and asking for his support yet again.

With the help of many of you, we have put the pressure on Senator Coburn to support this bill. Yet his mind remains unchanged.

We say it’s time to turn up the heat and wear down his defenses. And we have a plan. Go to www.coburnsayyes.com and read about how you can take action. You’ll see that some ways include writing letters, signing a petition, calling Senator Coburn’s office, and showing up at the Oklahoma State Capitol Building at the end of February. We’ve got to change this man’s mind, and we need your help.


The Invisible Children Organization has already made such a difference, and now we can be a part of that! Surely if this was happening in America, the terrorist would not have gone unpunished for 20+ years. So, why is it allowed in Uganda??

Let's show our strong government how important the children of the world are to Americans!