sexta-feira, 3 de outubro de 2008
quarta-feira, 1 de outubro de 2008
Andando pelas ruas
Eu vejo algo mais do que arranha-céus
É a fome e a miséria
Dos verdadeiros filhos de Deus
Vejo almas presas chorando em meio a dor
Dor de espírito clamando por amor
Anjos das ruas
Anjos que não podem voar
Pra fugir do abandono
E um futuro poder encontrar
Anjos das ruas
Anjos que não podem sonhar
Pois a calçada é um berço
Onde não sabem se vão acordar
Às vezes se esquece que são seres humanos
Com um coração sedento pra amar
Vendendo seus corpos por poucos trocados
Sem medo da morte o relento é seu lar
Choros, rangidos, almas pra salvar
terça-feira, 30 de setembro de 2008
Street kids Poetry
Anne lives at the moment in Pendekezo Letu Center in Nairobi, Kenya. Her family lives in Mathare, the biggest slum in Kenya. Anne's mother and father have six children, and they all live in one room. Their father works as a watchman and their mother sells food that she prepares herself. The family arrived in the city from the countryside. Anne s father is an alcoholic.Anne herself has worked since her early childhood days. She is very intelligent and has a talent for poems.
Just because I'm a street girl
I have something to say,But I'm a street girl and nobody cares.
I have a point to make,But nobody listens.
If a child lives with hostility,
She learns to fight.
If a child lives with encouragement,
She learns confidence.
If a child lives with praise and friendship,
She learns to find love in the world.
But I look around and ask myself
''Where is my helper?"
Just because I'm a street girl nobody cares.
I beseech you be merciful to street children
And come to their aid.
They need food, clothing and education,But most of all they need love.
How can we help?
Today's youth will become the largest generation to enter adulthood. By 2025, six out of ten urban dwellers are expected to be under 18 years of age. Ignoring the rights of street children threatens human development around the world.Street children deserve respect. They are valuable members of society. Some street children run thriving businesses, supporting themselves, their families, and other children. We must hear their voices, listen to their stories, and learn from them. We need to recognize that children and youth are full of imagination, desires, and hopes and that they must be involved in decisions that affect their lives.They need access to counselling, information, knowledge, skills, and a supportive community to protect themselves from harm, help them move off the street, and take back control of their future. They also need better access to health and safety services, medical care, legal aid, food and business training so they can develop safe and more profitable ways of earning money.
These children are not just victims, they are survivors. They often show incredible resilience in overcoming or living in the midst of adversity. They have developed coping mechanisms for caring for themselves, and for friends or family members. These children are active participants in their families, workplaces, and communities. But, without improved protection and promotion of their rights together with increased opportunities, many of these children are likely to remain marginalized throughout their childhood and into adulthood.
Two Reasons to children is living on the street

Social and Emotional Reasons
Children and juveniles who suffer from violence in the family and a lack of attention and don't want to stay with their families any longer prefer to live in the streets.
Children and juveniles who suffer from violence in the family and a lack of attention and don't want to stay with their families any longer prefer to live in the streets.
Economic Reasons 
Poverty in the family is a central reason why children start living in the streets. In many countries the high debts of the state, unjust economic policies, corruption and low prices on the world market for export goods contribute to the impoverishment of the masses. Children are the weakest members of society and are hit the hardest.

Poverty in the family is a central reason why children start living in the streets. In many countries the high debts of the state, unjust economic policies, corruption and low prices on the world market for export goods contribute to the impoverishment of the masses. Children are the weakest members of society and are hit the hardest.
domingo, 28 de setembro de 2008
Death squads
Most of Brazil's street children expect to be killed before they are eighteen. Between four and five adolescents are murdered daily and that every 12 minutes a child is beaten. Conservative figures put the number at two killings every day.
There are reports that some children have been executed or mutilated. In July 1993, eight children and adolescents were killed in a shooting near the Candelária Church in Rio. This event was widely published around the world, and the routine killing of street children in Brazil was harshly criticised. As a result, the death squads moved underground. However, corrupt officials are still reputed to be involved - In São Paulo, 20% of homicides committed by the police were against minors in the first months of 1999.

Street children in Brazil
Brazil is the fifth largest country in the world with a population of approximately 190 million people. The disparity between the rich and the poor in Brazilian society is one of the largest. The richest 1% of Brazil's population control 50% of its income. The poorest 50% of society live on just 10% of the country's wealth.
Street children are an urban problem which has roots in rural poverty, neglect and the enforced, even violent displacement of large numbers of people from the land.
This problem is accentuated by the fact that the urban population is becoming younger. In Latin America alone, projections for the year 2020 point to 300 million urban minors, 30% of whom will be extremely poor [Ref: Independent Commission on International Issues]. 78% of the Brazilian population live in cities and towns.
The persistent poverty, rapid industrialisation and the burgeoning of urban shanty towns, generate massive social and economic upheaval. Profound poverty means family disintegration, violence and break-up become more prevalent
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