sao paulo and rio de jinero have been heavenly stricken with poverty and have a big population of street children.
Wednesday, May 9, 2012
chicos o chicas?
it is estimated that 20%-30% of the street children are girls leaving the rest to be boys meaning that girls often get sexually assaulted or exploited.
le dice
I was reading some articles earlier and i came across this thing that a street child had said...........its really sad.
“We sniff glue because we need to. We steal- watches, necklaces. We don’t have anywhere to eat, we don’t have anywhere to sleep, we don’t have anywhere to stay- that’s why we steal. I steal, I walk around, I sniff glue, and then I can’t do anything. I haven’t got a Dad- he died seven years ago. I have eight brothers and sisters and I can’t really stay at home, so I live on the street. That’s how I lead my life”
if you want to read the read the rest of the article here it is.
-------->http://www.studentpulse.com/articles/506/living-on-the-streets-the-street-children-of-brazil
“We sniff glue because we need to. We steal- watches, necklaces. We don’t have anywhere to eat, we don’t have anywhere to sleep, we don’t have anywhere to stay- that’s why we steal. I steal, I walk around, I sniff glue, and then I can’t do anything. I haven’t got a Dad- he died seven years ago. I have eight brothers and sisters and I can’t really stay at home, so I live on the street. That’s how I lead my life”
if you want to read the read the rest of the article here it is.
-------->http://www.studentpulse.com/articles/506/living-on-the-streets-the-street-children-of-brazil
Tuesday, May 8, 2012
expect to die!
sadly most street children expect to die before they are 18 years old. the vigilante groups are getting more and more violent in there goals to get the street kids off the streets to ensure public safety. child care agencies are estimating that 5 to 6 children are getting assassinated every day in the streets and at least 2 are killed.
Sunday, May 6, 2012
Wednesday, May 2, 2012
adventuras?
as i was reading The Economist today i came across an article that focused on an "open school" (open schools are schools run by the the government for street children to give them a chance to earn an education that they might not have otherwise.) Anyway they were talking to a street kid by the name of Ismael, who is 13. He was telling of a time where him and his friends had been sleeping behind a supermarket and were beaten by the police for sniffing glue. He talked about it as if it was a fond adventure.
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