India's Street Children
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India's Street Children
http://cnnphotos.blogs.cnn.com/2014/10/05/life-of-india-street-kids/
The life of India's street kids
“Why doesn’t that child have any shoes?”
“Why is he so dirty?”
“Why is she asking for money?”
These are questions that gnawed at photojournalist Lana Slezic in her first two years of living in India. When her two children became old enough to start wondering the same, she knew she had to find answers.
“They were everywhere,” she said. “The street kids, they would come up to the car and knock on the windows and beg. You could hardly drive two blocks without seeing them.”
India faces an overpopulation problem and, with it, widespread poverty. The country has the second-largest population in the world at 1.35 billion people. A third live on less than $1.25 (U.S.) a day, according to the World Bank.
Often, families too poor to raise their children send them away to fend for themselves, something Slezic discovered while visiting a large slum of abandoned children.
Conflicted as ever, and heightened by maternal instinct, Slezic spent the entire year of 2012 following a community of street kids, camera in hand. She wanted to get to know them, document their daily lives and listen to their harrowing tales.
“When I listened to them, it pushed me to walk out my door and go to this place that is one of the most disturbing places I’ve ever been,” she said.
“The smell that accompanied these kids, I don’t even know how to describe that scent: decay of life, complete hopelessness. It was like ‘The Walking Dead.’ And I wanted to tell their story.”
And telling that story is the hardest project she has ever taken on.
Slezic said there is no future, no life, no opportunity for these children. It’s not like they didn’t play or laugh, but the knowledge of what they had to endure day in and day out was difficult for her.
But she did say the time she spent with them was lovely and rewarding and “an education in humanity.”
The children were extremely open and excited to showcase their sparse living quarters to Slezic and her translator.
For once, someone was paying attention to them — and they loved it. Slezic described it as an “injection of excitement” every time she arrived.
Slezic not only took documentary-style photos, but she also set up a makeshift studio to take formal portraits of the children and showcase who they are as individuals away from the streets.
As if the subject matter alone wasn’t difficult enough, just getting their stories out of them was a tough task.
Besides the language barrier, the children were completely uneducated, mostly illiterate, and they had developed their own street dialect that even the interpreter could not understand.
Slezic recalled that sometimes she didn’t even get the full interview, because the child disappeared and never came back.
Looking back, Slezic said she feels hopeless when it comes to these children. There are organizations that help kids one at a time, but she said the problem is “impossibly, overwhelmingly large.”
“How will a country progress beyond its current state if it doesn’t take care of its children?” she said.
– Michelle Cohan, CNN
Hellsangel- Posts : 14721
Join date : 2011-04-28
Re: India's Street Children
Someone please edumacate that lady that the latest push for Make in India and Swachh Bharat will take care of this & malnutrition issue.
confuzzled dude- Posts : 10205
Join date : 2011-05-08
Re: India's Street Children
You really should start a TV show called One Degree of Separation, Comrade, and show how everything ties back to Modi and his administration.confuzzled dude wrote:Someone please edumacate that lady that the latest push for Make in India and Swachh Bharat will take care of this & malnutrition issue.
Hellsangel- Posts : 14721
Join date : 2011-04-28
Re: India's Street Children
Hellsangel wrote:You really should start a TV show called One Degree of Separation, Comrade, and show how everything ties back to Modi and his administration.confuzzled dude wrote:Someone please edumacate that lady that the latest push for Make in India and Swachh Bharat will take care of this & malnutrition issue.
Yeah, I wouldn't be surprised if CD has a dart board in his basement with Modi's face on it.
goodcitizn- Posts : 3263
Join date : 2011-05-03
Re: India's Street Children
goodcitizn wrote:Hellsangel wrote:You really should start a TV show called One Degree of Separation, Comrade, and show how everything ties back to Modi and his administration.confuzzled dude wrote:Someone please edumacate that lady that the latest push for Make in India and Swachh Bharat will take care of this & malnutrition issue.
Yeah, I wouldn't be surprised if CD has a dart board in his basement with Modi's face on it.
you mean in his cave..
Propagandhi711- Posts : 6941
Join date : 2011-04-29
Re: India's Street Children
CD,confuzzled dude wrote:Someone please edumacate that lady that the latest push for Make in India and Swachh Bharat will take care of this & malnutrition issue.
You may not be smart enough to know this that this will have an effect... but you are right.
Both 'Swachh Bharat' and 'Make in India' WILL have direct and/or indirect impact on malnutrition of many (not ALL) poor kids in India. Their poor parents may get a job through Make in India reducing malnutrition of their children. Swachh Bharat also has potential to open new jobs for poor families.
I was at a Dandia event over the weekend where US VHP body displaying 'Support a child' in your state in India. You can invest in a child's yearly education. 95% of your donation goes to his/her education.
You can talk to the child, see his/her picture, report card and meet him/her when you visit India. You can also do the math and cross check how much of your money is helping the child.
CD, you too can do your bit. Believe me it WILL greatly help reduce malnutrition of a child.
I'm sure once you do your bit you'll be a much happier person.
southindian- Posts : 4643
Join date : 2012-10-08
Re: India's Street Children
Yes Yes all those nutrients from the pollution generated by those factories will help those undernourished children immensely. You're right I will never know, as I would never contribute through stupid organizations like VHP.southindian wrote:CD,confuzzled dude wrote:Someone please edumacate that lady that the latest push for Make in India and Swachh Bharat will take care of this & malnutrition issue.
You may not be smart enough to know this that this will have an effect... but you are right.
Both 'Swachh Bharat' and 'Make in India' WILL have direct and/or indirect impact on malnutrition of many (not ALL) poor kids in India. Their poor parents may get a job through Make in India reducing malnutrition of their children. Swachh Bharat also has potential to open new jobs for poor families.
I was at a Dandia event over the weekend where US VHP body displaying 'Support a child' in your state in India. You can invest in a child's yearly education. 95% of your donation goes to his/her education.
You can talk to the child, see his/her picture, report card and meet him/her when you visit India. You can also do the math and cross check how much of your money is helping the child.
CD, you too can do your bit. Believe me it WILL greatly help reduce malnutrition of a child.
I'm sure once you do your bit you'll be a much happier person.
confuzzled dude- Posts : 10205
Join date : 2011-05-08
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