Podcast Contact
I would like to introduce everyone to, podcast participant, Meridas Eka Yora. Although I have not had direct contact with Mr. Yora his podcast was very informative. Mr. Yora is the founder of the Institution Fajar Hiayah for Islamic Education and the Director of the Yayasan Fajar Hidayah Foundation. Mr. Yora has developed three boarding schools for children orphaned as a result of the tsunami that hit Aceh, Indonesia in 2004. Aceh was the closet land to the epicenter of the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami in which more than 225 thousand Indonesians were killed and 500 thousand left homeless.
Mr. Yora discusses the impact that the tsunami had on the children in Aceh and the skills that the teachers who now teach the children must have and they are skills that are not taught within the college classroom but are of a personal level. Mr. Yora stated that within the three boarding schools that he directs children have found it hard to except the fact that their families have died in the tsunami but that the school gives them the comfort of a family. Mr. Yora stated that teacher preparation to teach the orphan children starts with the teacher being a father and a mother to the children before they can even begin attempting to be the children teacher. Mr. Yora stated the school older children care for the younger children and those children who are having an extremely hard time adjusting are taken home with teachers and directors so that the child will have a normal life.
Website Information
In looking at the childhood poverty website some of the interesting facts that I learned in a CHIP Briefing article by Jenni Marshall called, Children in poverty: some questions answered (2003) are that poverty in childhood can be defined in three different ways; child poverty, childhood poverty, and children in poverty. The definitions are as follows
1.) Child poverty: children's experiences of poverty is unique and different from adult's experiences.
2.) Childhood poverty: stresses the importance of childhood in life and the cycle of poverty being transferred from generation to generation
(poor child growing into poor adult…poor adult as parent and/or carer
passing poverty, that poor child growing into poor adult…..).
3.) Children in poverty: poverty experienced in childhood and youth.
Marshall also shared some of the fundamental causes of childhood poverty which she stated are due to economic trends, policies, conflict, epidemics, endemic diseases, poor governance, and environmental stresses. The childhood poverty website gives some interesting facts about poverty like if 0.5% of world military spending were diverted to immunization, all the children could be vaccinated against preventable diseases for the next ten years, I find this worth mentioning since 1 in 10 million children under the age of still die every year from preventable diseases- the majority in developing countries.
Marshall, J. (2003) Children and poverty: some questions answered. CHIP Briefing I. Retrieved form http://childhoodpoverty.org/index.php/action=documentfeed/doctype=pdf/id=46/
Children in poverty website: www.childhoodpoverty.org
World Forum podcast with Mr. Yora. Retrieved from http://www.worldforumfoundation.org
I was amazed by your statement about military spending and immunizations. I had no idea that only 0.5% of military spending could make such a difference in the live of children. Thank you for sharing this!
ReplyDeleteHi Tiffany,
ReplyDeleteI enjoyed reading your blog. The information you provided from the podcast and website is very interesting. Caring about the children orphaned by the tsunami enough to develop boarding schools was a special and wonderful thing Meridas Eka Yora did. With their loss and all that they had been through, they needed to be around patient and loving adults who genuinely cared about their well-being.
Wouldn't it be great if o.5% of military spending would go towards protecting the health of our children. Thanks for sharing that information. It was definitely worth mentioning!
It was very insightful to hear how the educators have had to alter their supports for children because they have experienced such a huge natural disaster.
ReplyDeleteVery interesting Tiffany. The information that was provided was very informative. The fact that the individual at the boarding school care for the children as if they were family. They needed that support from others to get through such a tragedy.
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