Aide internationale pour lenfance

Social and economic reintegration of children freed from indentured slavery

Local partner:

Resource Educational Society

The Resource Educational Society (RES) is a CCI partner that ensures the continuity of the Rainbow Center project dedicated to the education and reintegration of working children into society.

RES is a non-profit organization created in 1993. Its work is based on a strong conviction that education is key to the sustainable development of society. In the beginning, RES simply offered evening classes but gradually it widened the scope of its operations.

Project location

Vizianagaram, Andhra Pradesh, in Inda

Context

 

According to the International Labor Organization (ILO), there are 12.9 million child workers in India between the ages of 7 and 17 years, making it the country with the largest population of child workers in the world. Many of these children are forced to work because they have no access to education and/or live in dire poverty, whether they live alone or with their families.

The most common form of exploitation through labor in this region is indentured slavery (debt bondage). This consists of working or making someone work to pay off a debt other than with money or material goods. The debtor often has to put his (or her) family to work, including children, and the debt can thus be passed on from generation to generation, perpetuating the cycle of exploitation.

It was in 2003 that CCI opened the Rainbow Center in India. The center aimed to take in children freed from debt bondage while providing education, vocational training and health care. The objective of the project was and still remains today the reintegration of children exploited by work, and providing them with the support and listening ear that are essential for children of that age.

Particular attention is paid to girls and young women in order to reinforce their skills and decision-making power. This relates as much to being able to say “no” to an early marriage as to continuing her studies with the aim of one day occupying a position that promotes social and economic autonomy.

Goals

Objectives :

  • Allow for the reintegration of children who are victims of exploitation.
  • Break the cycle of poverty by providing education to children from primary school to university, according to each child’s individual aspirations.
  • Offer support and a listening ear to children, and guide them in their professional choices.
  • Give girls the same chances as boys, so that they may feel free to contemplate their future.
  • Tackle early marriages by educating families and their communities.
  • Train young people on gender equality and women’s rights.
  • Raise the standard of living over the long term by means of educating children.

In some parts of India, fighting against early marriage is essential to ensure the continued education of children, especially young girls. This is why our local partner, the Resource for Educational Society (RES) employs a social worker who regularly visits families in various villages to raise awareness regarding the consequences of early marriages..

During the first years of the project, CCI had to negotiate fiercely with parents to prevent them from marrying off their little girls. After four years, CCI had helped to
eradicate forced marriages in ten villages
in that region. Today, this awareness-raising work is still continuing because the fight against early marriage is a long-term job.

Photo Kiran Ambwani_AIPE_1819

Meet some of the children helped by this project

Asha

Asha was taken in by CCI’s Rainbow Center in 2012 when she entered primary school. Despite the fact that her family’s financial situation is still precarious at this time, Asha has reached an academic level equal to a North-American second year of community college, at Narayana College in Vizianagaram. Her grades are excellent, she has great self-discipline and is a hard-worker. Asha is completing her intermediate studies this year at the end of which she will begin a four-year Computer Science Program at university, sponsored by CCI.

Anil

Anil, an orphan, became a beneficiary of CCI’s education project in 2003. At that time, he carried out risky jobs with his uncle, such as extracting sand and clearing rocks. Years later, following his stay at the Rainbow Center, he distinguished himself by his assiduity
at school and his academic results. Anil completed his scientific studies at S. K. Degree College in Vizianagaram, and was recently hired by the Indian Navy in the State of Odisha. In India, government posts are in great demand, and so are military posts. Such jobs are stable, permanent, very well paid and quite prestigious.

Padma

Padma is a very bright student who likes studying. In India, most marriages are arranged by parents. However, during negotiations for her own marriage, Padma asked her parents to find an educated man who would support her studies. The continuation of Padma’s education thus became an important condition in her marriage negotiations. When she and her husband had a child in July 2018, she decided to continue her studies, which represents a huge traditional upheaval to people living in her fishing village and around her region. She is currently in the second year of her university program at LENDI College in Bhogapuram, Andhra Pradesh.

Yerramma

Yerramma completed her B.A. in Nursing in April 2017. She presently works in a private paediatric hospital called ‘Care & Cure’ as head nurse because she is the most qualified in the entire hospital. She is the one who receives babies and children arriving at the hospital’s emergency room, and is the paediatrician’s right hand. Yerramma is very dynamic and positive about her future. Yerrama rents a room within walking distance of the hospital, and currently earns 10,000 Indian rupees a month. As soon as she has gained a little more experience, she plans to apply to work in a government hospital.