Monday, 10 December 2012

to sum up...
pics for now, I will develop later :-)
https://picasaweb.google.com/105502181518684720389/JHCWorkshops

Madurai

Just some photos from this beautiful temple
https://picasaweb.google.com/105502181518684720389/Madurai

We've got toys!!!





These children don’t have toys, neither at school nor in their communities. They are brainwashed with the method of teaching that I call rather indoctrination than education.
But they are children! And children’s job is to play! They love to colour and draw but have no possibilities because crayons are locked in teachers’ locker and taken out on special occasions. That’s criminal! I wrote a proposal. 
 The very next day, it happen that a General Secretary came to have a mid time chat with me. He already heard about my observations and remarks concerning the school from other staff members (in India a word spreads fast). Apparently they much valued my opinion. It wasn’t hard then to convince GS about my proposal to establish some play stations. We were granted a nice sum of money and encouraged to go immediately to buy all the toys. I needed to “convince” (train rather) the teachers to use it… I have one week only.

It was great fun to go with the whole committee shopping for toys and games in Madurai. Even the teachers were excited! I tired them out but we got everything I needed. I created 4 stations: blocks, imaginative play (dolls, all kinds of cars, doctor set, kitchen set, etc), games and puzzles and drawing and books. For the lunchbreak we’ve got for them balls, skipping ropes, freesbeys and hoola-hops.

I introduced a system of setting /tiding it up by 4 responsible children.
You can imagine overjoy when the children saw all these toys!!! These big sparkling eyes and a boy showing me a car that he hold in his hand maybe for the first time in his life... In complete disbelieve of his happiness he said “sister, car!”.

I must say that for the first 3 days they were like 2year olds – each playing individually with not much of interaction. They have very little notion of waiting, taking turns, sharing, imagining things, that a box can be a garage.
They kept asking me every day if they could play again with cars.
By the end of the week they were calmer and knew that tomorrow they can play again. The toys stay here. They were better in sharing and choosing the play, asking for things (colouring page). Play became more interactive and they were able to play a board game in a nice agreement, building blocks and puzzles together.
It was such a joy for me :-) 

Little Rajkumar


After about 2 weeks, I’ve decided to sponsor a child myself. 

Sponsoring is the system of financing single child by a person or institution. It ensures continuity of the education of this child. It makes it more personal and precious when you take care of one little being, rather than giving the money to an institution. Besides it makes it more feasible – 30 euro per month is something that I can afford. I will not go to a resto or a party once and in return I know that here in Thirumangalam little Rajkumar can have shoes, clothes, food and conditions to learn and can go to school.

I have notices Rajkumar at school because he is very very weak. He was sitting and doing nothing. The teacher complained that he never speaks and refuses to write. Instead of asking him to write apple, I dotted a picture of one and he needed only to trace it. We did a couple of those and every time he came back with a bigger smile and sparkles in his eyes asking for more!!!




It turned out that he is not sponsored yet so I happily took the task on :-) 

 He comes from a little village nearby. His parents are from “the poor community” and are genitors (untouchable). He has 3 brothers (one with him in RSV). His house still deosn’t have electricity and water need to be fetched at the end of the village.
He is very very little and has incredibly big and alert eyes and a cute smile. 



Because of my attention to him, he became a mascot of the school and ch's village. He is carried, dressed and powdered by his brother, kids take his hand and run with him, call him and pull into the game. The children know that being in a surrounding of Rajkumar means my attention. It doesn’t matter ‘cause it boosted Rajkumar’s esteem and confidence!!! The foster mothers told me that he has transformed. He used to sit in the room completely passively. But now he is active and runs with other children. I even saw him dancing with the boys!!! He goes to a teacher to tell her that so and so pinched him!!!
It happened not because it was me – any adult would have this influence. It just shows how crucial is an attitude of an adult in influencing child’s life, positively or negatively.
Rajkumar has important learning difficulties and I hope the teacher will now keep it in mind.


I made a doll for him – I think every child should have something to cuddle with. 




 

Children are adorable!!!


I’m having so much fun with the kids!!!
I’m not a teacher but I can teach them some basic English in some funny way, making up stories and letting them draw – the most fundamental activity for children. If only I didn’t have to improvise on the spot filling in for an absent teacher. Instead of having the teachers observing prepared and planned lesson conducted in more “western” way, I need their help to put the children in line ‘cause I can’t handle these little buggers J  Now I know that I couldn’t be a teacher.
 
These “new methods” are too new for the teachers. I underestimated how shockingly different is must have been for them and how hard it is for them to think out of the box.







I enjoy very much spending an hour or 2 with the kidos. Boys are just next to me. They come back from school after 5pm and often time they would go play volleyball, football, cricket or some of their games like Cabbody (no clue how to spell it). I’d join them or sit with the others who don’t play and “talk”. I don’t know how we manage to communicate but yet again, we are having good time and laugh together. One time when I was there, their care taker (also an “old boy”, a chap of 28)  sang, played drams and the boys dances like med :-)  We had a great laugh, they showed me their plantation.

When I go to the children's village I have so much fun playing with the little ones. They have playground so we were running and getting wild there. I must admit I got a soft spot for two little sisters: Sathia (8) and Uverani (6). You will probably see them a lot in the pictures, especially that they are dynamic and jumpy and know how to get some attention J
The kidos feel that I adore them. And they take it with a great joy which makes me happy in return :-)


 

 One Sunday I was doing yoga on the rooftop of my guesthouse when some boys came to spot birds and draw them. They were curious what I was doing and asked me to show them some yoga. I did and right away they tried themselves. I helped them a bit and they were so thrilled! They were very interested and we did some more. Viknesh did even the pose that I’ve been working on for 2 years… 



 
I take on a project with girls in the Girls Town to make little pillows for the children’s dolls play. It turned out that they have a sawing machine there.
They kindly got it fixed for this purpose. It is beautiful old Singer machine J
The girls were so keen to learn! They were delighted to try and some of them managed right away to create these little pillows. The next time I came, the girls brought their clothes to be mended!!! Now I was delighted J Firstly because it shows how they care about their look and clothes (the holes in their uniforms were not little…). Secondly because they right away use the machine in very practical and concrete way. We spend loooong hours stitching their trousers and nighties.

That’s what I can conclude about those youngsters after a month of being among them: they are incredibly trustful, open and welcoming (or maybe simply tolerant). They were always very respectful and polite toward me, always “good morning, sister” J Quite confidently they would start speaking to me although we have no common language. They are curious and enthusiastic, ready to learn or at least to have a go whatever you present to them.
Compare to village children that I saw up in the mountains, I see that “our” youngsters have more confidence, curiosity and are more outgoing. They are more exposed to different values (basic hygiene, importance of education, etc) and activities of all kinds (sports, bird watching, contact with foreigners due to the sponsoring etc). Of course, it does not counterbalance growing up with their parents and siblings. But for those children who don’t have this option, they have great one in JHC/BTS. 

Meeting Joe Homan


He’s came down for Divali.
I thought I would see an English gentlemen who, doing whole a lot of good for the Indian society, would however present this attitude of a white executor on undeveloped land.
How wrong I was! Instead I met a gentle-men, soft in his manners and his words. A person whose goal was and still is to help the children get better future for themselves and their families.

Let me tell you a story about Joe Homan. 

As a young chap he was send (a missionary) to one of the poorest countries to work with children. I don’t remember if it was India or somewhere in Africa. The place turned out to be a sort of a boarding school for children of rather rich families and stressing very much Christian religion.
That was not what Joe wanted. He wanted to help poor children and in secular conditions.
He resigned and came to India. Some Indian friends offered him a land to use and do whatever project he wanted for as long as he wanted. Joe got into something he likes very much – farming. He was going to Madurai train station and talked to homeless boys who were hanging out there. He invited them to come to this village near Thiramangalam. They can stay there, learn farming, help with the work and leave whenever they are ready. The boys were reluctant at first. But there was one who came, then another and the word has spread. Starting from a farm with 5 young adults, he had no clue about farming rice, bananas and coconuts or tea and coffee. Nor he had an idea about poultry and yet they run a farm with chicken. Learning from his neighbours within 3 years they have reached some capital.
The boys learnt farming but what is more important they learnt that they can do sth constructive with their lives.

 In 1964 Joe has started the first Boys Town. They build simple buildings on the land that could accommodate about 70 children. He was going to surrounding villages, talking to the olders of a village about the families in need and what he could offer. By then he was already doing fund rising in UK to sponsor the children.
It was a revolution! You must think of India back then. There were very few schools, for most villages not accessible. The obligation for schooling didn’t exist (came in only in 1990) and kids were supposed to work. Houses were made of clay, no floors, forget about electricity, running water or decent roads. Most of the families would have one vegetarian meal a day.


Joe impressed me with his sense of enterprising and taking any opportunity to enhance the living. Simple example: they dig a huge well (or rather exploded it ‘cause there was a bit bolder) for irrigation water. There was some fish in it. Joe hang the light above the middle part of the well in the way that insects would fly around the light, fell into the water and feed the fish. This way every week there would be fresh fish for dinner in the Boys Town.

Every time I spoke with Joe (he is a great story teller) he would tell me about yet another way of making business and earning the money for the Boys Town. They would grow chicken, pigs, cows, having plantation of this or that, whatever paid better at the period. He started a factory of coconut powder and exported it even to Holland. He had a project of making banners for Rotary Clubs all over the world. Etc, etc, etc. He would start a project, train people and move on to sth else.

The charity grew and grew. They had 6 Boys Towns, 2 Girls Towns and 2 Children Villages. Joe was coming to UK and Belgium at least twice a year and was doing a thorough fund rising that would keep them going. I’m saying Joe but of course I mean a lot of people who were supporting his ideas and actions.



 Alongside the Boys/Girls Town, the JHC/BTS carries out other schemes of social projects. For example back in 70ties and 80ties they developed a scheme "Children in labour". They had chosen to aim only girls (in about 50 villages) in order to get them into the education system. They would go to the olders of a village and ask “how much a girl earns per day?”. Usually it would be 5-7 rps.
The next question followed:” would they be ready to send the girl to school if they get this money?” They were suspicious but finally one village agreed and then came the others. Of course, JHC monitored it closely and checked the attendance of the girls at school. For a presence close to 100% the family would get a bonus - a cow!!! That was a big motivator! Soon in the villages, one by one the cows started to appear.
Back then there was a government scheme: if in a certain perimeter there would be gathered 100 cows, they would send a truck to pick up the milk every day. At the end of a month a family would get the money they earned on milk. The goal was easy to reach: in a village of 50 families, if they send 2children to school or had good attendance over a few years, they quickly get to the required number in a horde.
“Children in labour” would be limited to 5 years. By then the villagers saw and learnt all the benefits they could possibly withdraw from this situation (like the fact that cows eat weed, so no weeding was necessary; they produce good manure so the crop grew better, etc, etc... ). The scheme would move on to other 50 villages in another region. Over 20 years JHC covered the vast region. At some point no talking was needed – the older were coming to Joe and ask to take them into the scheme.

I find it such a brilliant project!
Just getting the kids to school created a chain of economical changes that raise the standard of living not only for those girls but for the whole families. The girls started to be valuable and not only a burden for a family.
The cost of sponsoring a girl off the labour was incomparably cheaper than doing so for the boys living out of their families in Boys Town, covering costs of food, logging, person to supervise, etc.

There was and there is numerous similar projects in JHC. Many of, so called “old boys” (the boys who finished their education and are into professional adult life), find the employment in this various projects.




 


 Joe is now 82 years old. He comes across as a calm, serene, peaceful man, with a strong will but not imposing. He is very tolerant and open-minded. He must have been very dynamic. The “old boys”, who I’ve met, told me that he was hard working and always busy man. The boys needed to be able to follow him.
Joe himself speaks about these young men, who he raised, with a lot of respect and recognition for their will to learn and try. He said the best way to teach them anything was to just do it by himself. Then one after another the boys would come and asked him if they could have a go and try.

Such a power of action!!! Great intelligence, great relational skills cause he has done all this thanks to people next to him. And after all that, he is a humble man in a dirty polo shirt, telling the stories and sharing his new fascinations: butterflies.

 He has always lived with the boys. In 2008 they closed one of them, up in the mountains. Joe stayed there ‘cause the cool air serves him better than the heat of the plains. They turned this Boys Town into an Environmental Centre :-)
 






There are facilities to loge school groups over a weekend and do nature activities with them. They go bird watching and having eco classes to bring awareness concerning global warming and other environmental issues.
2 or 3 of the boys rooms are made into guest cottages with tiled floors and a bathroom, big bed, nice ambiance. The area is transformed in a very friendly, green web of alleys and flowerbeds. Around tall tall trees, birds and frogs. In the echo of the forest you can hear cheerful kids who came for a weekend or those from the village, who came to have a swim. Charming, charming place...

Joe, of course, hasn’t given up on farming. They grow coffee and pepper there. Recently they’ve started a pig stale. The farm brings a good couple of laks a year…that goes to support the children…always the children…

That is my story of Joe Homan, an English gentle man.

More photos:

The school


 
Wow! Their teaching methods are pure example of anti-pedagogy! The children are sitting and repeating what is written on a blackboard… Reciting by heart a list of words that, besides belonging to one category, e.g. fruits or colours, have no meaningful connection, no context to it.



But the kids do repeat it and… seem to be very motivated! They want to learn and show you that they can say/spell this or that word!
Those kids are adorable! They are so little in their too big uniforms and shoesies. They are very eager to communicate, get in touch with me, all being very open, curious, daring and excited. What a bunch of happy kids I have in front of me!!! From every direction I hear “sister, sister, sister!!” and I need to look there or answer their questions, the only one they can ask: “your name? your father name? your mother/brother/sister name? England?”.

The school is meant to be English means, as they call it here. But the teachers are not very strong on English themselves. They translate a lot into Tamil so the children are not really challenged with the English. 





I’ve jumped very quickly into showing the teachers what other way they could teach the same but with much more fun and actually checking that each kid got it right or at least practiced. It is not a rocket science. Needless to say that the kids were delighted J  Of course I was very positive and full of prises. With my non-existing Tamil and their very little English, I needed to use my face, hands and any kind of means of communication. It resulted in the kids running around with two thumbs up and screaming “very good!”.

The boys, girls and children come from difficult situations - not having one or both parents, being brought up by a grandma or aunt or older brother... Even worse if a farther or a mother has a lover, leaves the family - the shame is more a burden than a hardship of making a daily life sustainable. Or like my little Rajkumar, whose parents are...from "this community"- meaning lowest cast of untouchable but we don't use this word anymore...
These children are so happy! So willing! They have such a sparkle! Having only the basics they appreciate anything else. They fill up their time without TV and this western "I'm bored"...

Lunchtime – the only time when the children are quiet :-) 

Madurai JHC project


That’s my new home for another month. It’s countryside (45 min from Madurai, Tamilnadu) with Boys Town and a project school 5 min away from me.

I arrived in Thiramangalam for my voluntary project at Joe Homan Charity JHC.
The charity was established some time after Joe Homan started Boys Town in 1964! Imagine the poverty he was facing back then with those youngsters and their families.
The aim of the JHC/Boys Town Society (association necessary for the administrative reasons) is to offer to children from disadvantaged background an opportunity to go through the cycle of education until the end – getting a profession, that would assure a decent job and steady incomes. Many of the children from poor families need to work at early age. They might go up to 3rd or 4th standard (grade) but then providing for the family would become a priority. Especially when one of the parents passed away, left the family, is imprisoned or physically/mentally incapable of supporting the family. 

 
 So a children from such family, with the agreement of a care taker (sometimes it would be a grandmother ‘cause the parents are no longer there), would be placed in one of the Childrens Village (little ones) or in the Boys / Girls Town (if above 9 years old). These are communities where children live, have their daily responsibilities (sweeping around, gardening, washing their clothes, etc), doing their homework and having other after school activities (sport, stamp club). They have meals 3 times a day, simple but nutritious which they would not get back home. Children go to local schools, spend here the months when the school is on and go home for any holidays.
JHC/BTS carries on many more projects alongside. One of them is Francois Mayer Nursery and Primary School (an outcome of a Belgian family’s donation in honour of their dead son). 

So what am I to do here?
I arrived to the office and was greeted by administrators, introduced to everybody (10 members of the staff) and presented with quite full schedule for the next 4 weeks (from 9am till 7pm… :-). Nothing special, you would say. Well, to my knowledge about some experiences of voluntary work in the underdeveloped countries, that welcoming was mega organised!
Usually volunteers feel lost, not knowing who to refer to, sometimes bored as the work is not very challenging or given enough importance and… frustrated ‘cause the effort they put is not reflected in actions of the staff and organisation. Indians are very proud to have a white person on board (and in the picture) but not necessarily would they put in practice given advice/experience. I think cultural differences have an enormous impact on this volunteer-organisation relationship.
Here the expectations were high and vast but quite accurate with my professional background. I didn’t feel like I have to fulfil it but rather tell them what is possible for me and in restricted time that I’m here.
So I was to look into:
-       the functioning of the school as it is at an experiment stage,
-       learning difficulties,
-       behavioural and emotional difficulties in children’s village and boys/girls town,
-       psychological difficulties of some of the children.

So I get to work :-)
 

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