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GOOD PEOPLE GOOD WORKS
Seeding Hope: Andeisha Farid and the Afghan Child Education and Care Organization - P2/2 (In Dari)
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Today’s
Good People, Good Works
will be presented
in Dari and English,
with subtitles in Arabic,
Aulacese (Vietnamese),
Chinese, English,
French, German,
Indonesian, Italian,
Japanese, Korean,
Malay, Mongolian,
Persian, Portuguese,
Russian, Spanish
and Thai.
Auntie Andeisha is
a very good woman who
accepts all the kids
in the orphanage,
as her own and
never differentiates
between her own kids
and those of here.
And whatever demand
or request that
we might have had, she
has provided it for us…
Halo, benevolent viewers,
and welcome to
Good People,
Good Works
on Supreme Master
Television.
This week’s show
is the conclusion of
a two-part series
highlighting the Afghan
Child Education and Care
Organization (AFCECO),
a non-profit entity based
in Kabul, Afghanistan
that seeks to nurture
and shelter vulnerable
Afghan children
by providing
a safe environment with
all basic necessities,
including
proper education,
health care and love.
AFCECO strives to
develop the young ones
into the country’s
next generation of leaders.
Well, I aspire to build
an orphanage such as
this and this way,
the children who are
disadvantaged,
(I would be able to)
provide them with
education and lessons…
We have 11 orphanages,
so this is one of the
orphanages for the girls;
only girls live here.
We have five orphanages
in Kabul, and
two in Herat,
two in Jalalabad, and we
still have two orphanages
for Afghan children
in Pakistan.
So there are 67 girls
living in this orphanage.
The organization
was founded in 2001
by Ms. Andeisha Farid,
an Afghan
social entrepreneur
who has spent almost
her whole childhood
and adolescence
living in refugee camps.
This 27-year-old woman
has gained international
recognition for her work
and was invited
to the April 2010
“Presidential Summit
on Entrepreneurship”
in America, an event
hosted by US President
Barack Obama to deepen
ties between business
leaders, foundations,
and entrepreneurs
in the United States
and Muslim communities
around the world.
During the Summit,
President Obama praised
Ms. Farid’s work
in a speech saying that
"… Andeisha Farid, [is]
an extraordinary woman
from Afghanistan
who's taken great risks to
educate the next generation,
one girl at a time.
Together, they point
the way to a future where
progress is shared and
prosperity is sustainable.”
Some of the teachers in
the AFCECO orphanages
are volunteers.
Their backgrounds
are diverse, with
several being students
from Kabul University,
Afghanistan while others
are from abroad, like
North America or Europe.
So, this is Ian Pounds,
our volunteer from
the United States,
who has been with us
since last year.
So it's almost
one year and a half
he is with us teaching
the kids English,
computer, art, and
recently he managed
our leadership training
and the leadership
academy which was
the first experience for us
and it was really amazing
for all the girls.
Half of all people
in Afghanistan are
under the age of 18.
So when people want to
talk about the future
of Afghanistan, it’s
right here, it's very close.
These children
will be adults
in a very short time.
If they’re given freedom
of their minds,
given an education,
given love, given security,
given health,
it can’t help but change
the future of Afghanistan.
It's very simple math
in my view.
It's not a leap of faith,
it's not a guess,
it's not a hope,
it’s a simple fact.
And so that's why
I’m here.
Mr. Pounds is
tremendously impressed
by the children’s love
of learning and
has a touching story that
clearly demonstrates
their thirst for knowledge.
I was very tired,
I had been teaching
all day long, and
I looked at my watch
and it was five minutes
to 6 o'clock at night,
and I said: “Okay, girls,
you may go.”
And they looked at me
with the most astonishing
look. “What, Gee.”
and I said,
“It's time, you may go.”
And they said,
“What time is it?”
I said,
“It's five minutes to six”.
They said, “We want
our five minutes.”
I have never experienced
students who asked for
their five minutes when
they were being let out of
the class early.
So it’s a little tiny
example of what kind of
students I encounter here,
you know.
They're like kids
everywhere, they're like
students everywhere,
but in this respect
they are not like students
everywhere.
Each orphanage has
one to two managers who
live there with
the children and act as
surrogate parents.
We first were refugees in
Pakistan, then returned.
We didn’t have work
or job, then I was
informed that there is
an orphanage here.
I was pleased and
wanted to come here and
work and do nursing of
children and help them
in their lessons.
The orphanage is a safe
haven for the children,
with an atmosphere of
peace, love, tolerance,
and harmony.
This is one of
the bedrooms that
the girls live in.
So each child
has a bed here.
So we have 22 girls living
in this room, because we
have 11 bunk beds here
and every child takes
one bed.
It’s their bedroom,
they sleep here, and they
study in their library.
They use this open space
to study and lay down
and do their homework.
So they are all studying
together, two of them
for instance, and
helping each other,
but this is basically
their bedroom where
they sleep at night.
And during the day
they take a nap after
coming from school.
Mehan I is one of
the largest orphanages in
the AFCECO network.
The children, whose ages
range from 3 to 12,
are taught to respect
each other regardless of
gender, language,
religion, race, or color.
We have so many
good friends and also
they talk to us kindly and
We are very
close friends….
We don’t fight with
each other…
Helay is my best friend.
She… with the lessons…
she helps me
(with them) and when she
is in trouble I help her…
if I am at school, we go
and eat the meal together.
In the orphanage
we are friends…
All the girls are
our friends and we treat
all of them nicely …
those who are
my best friends are
Helay (who) helps me,
Manila also helps me
in the lessons because
her level is one year
higher than mine, they
help me, with the lessons.
When they have
a problem at school,
I ask them about it.
AFCECO orphanages
also train the children
to be responsible and
the residents are expected
to become productive
members of society
in the future.
And other thing
we would like them
to learn something,
not be very dependent
on others, this is
very important for us.
We want them
to help the cook,
to help the house cleaner,
to help the woman who
does the laundry for them,
so that they learn some
skills in the orphanage,
not be dependent
on someone else to do
their laundry, because
everybody has to
take a part to keep
themselves clean and
keep their facility clean.
The basic daily routine in
all AFCECO orphanages
is very similar.
Now you have exams.
You have to wake up
at 4 o’clock,
apart from that, when
you don’t have exams,
how are the rest
of the days?
Now we have exams.
Once the exams are
finished, the wake up
time is 6 o’clock for us.
We get up, get prepared,
and have breakfast.
Once breakfast is ready,
the person who is on duty
prepares the breakfast.
We go to school
from 7:30 AM up
until 11:30 AM.
After returning home,
from 11:30 AM to 12:30
PM we eat our lunch.
After lunch,
if we have classes,
we go until 4:00 PM.
At 4:00 PM
when we return, we rest
and then evening arrives.
Then we eat dinner.
From 6:00 PM to
7:30 PM, we watch TV.
When the meal is
prepared we eat the meal
and then
return to studying.
Football, yes!
We have classes daily,
and twice a week
we play football.
Andeisha Farid wants
each child to be healthy
and full of energy
and thus the menu
at the orphanages feature
a variety of seasonal
fruits and vegetables.
We cook them rice
with beans or rice
with vegetables.
And during the night,
they usually take
the seasonal vegetables
for instance, cauliflowers,
eggplant, lady’s finger
(okra) and other
available vegetables
in the market.
In the meantime they also
have fruits like apples,
bananas, pomegranate,
watermelon, and melons,
and the other fruits
available in the market
according to the season.
Besides providing them
with nutritious food,
the health of
the orphanage residents
is also protected by
furnishing the children
with readily accessible
medical care.
This is the clinic
for the orphanage.
We have four more
orphanages that share
the same clinic or
health care facility here
in Mehan Orphanage.
We have a physician that
comes three times a week
and do a check-up
for all the kids
in the orphanages.
And we have a first aid
class for some of
the oldest girls and boys
in the orphanages
that help others
when they need them.
We have two students
who act as
the pharmacists.
And they are actually
working here and
they give the medicine
for the prescription
written by the physician,
and then the physician
approves once
they give the medicine.
We have learned
many things here.
Like here we (learned)
first aid for injuries.
We go to (the other)
orphanages and
give them medication
for ordinary diseases.
AFCECO’s Mehan II
orphanage in Kabul
shelters around 40 girls
ranging in age
from 16 to 18.
They have a study room
and now we will go and
see their computer lab.
They have a computer
facility here to learn
some computer skills
as well.
This is
the computer facility for
Mehan Orphanage
for all the girls.
So they do their
homework over here
and in the meantime
they learn some
computer skills.
And now, some of them,
they have exams, and they
are getting prepared by
working on the computers.
The problems we have,
we can solve them all
with this computer and
things like… homework
from the school,
we come and solve them
all with the computer.
In conclusion,
as we have seen in this
two-part series that
Andeisha Farid and
the AFCECO staff have
accomplished much
on behalf of Afghan
children in need in a very
short amount of time.
With love and admiration,
Supreme Master Ching Hai
is honoring
Andeisha Farid
with the Shining World
Compassion Award,
along with US$20,000
to further her noble work.
For more details
on the Afghan Child
Education and Care
Organization,
please visit
www.AFCECO.org
Thank you
for your company
on today’s program.
Coming up next is
The World Around Us
after Noteworthy News.
May we always
care for one another
as brothers and sisters.
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