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GOOD PEOPLE,GOOD WORKS
Free the Children: Changing the World One Child at a Time - P1/2
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Imagine that
you woke up every day,
believing that you could
make a difference
in the world.
Now imagine
it wasn’t just you.
Imagine it was everyone!
Amiable viewers,
welcome to
Good People, Good Works.
Today we are delighted
to introduce
Free the Children,
a wonderful charity
founded in 1995 by
two Canadian brothers,
Craig and Marc Kielburger
that is dedicated
to uplifting
disadvantaged youth
in developing nations
through education.
It all started when Craig,
only 12 years old
at the time,
came across an article
in a Canadian newspaper.
The story was
about the sad passing
of Iqbal Masih,
also 12, who escaped
forced child labor
at age nine and went on
to become a leader
of a campaign to end
this abhorrent practice.
Craig was moved
to the depths of his heart
and truly felt that he had
to do something to help
the vulnerable children
of the world.
The next morning,
Craig went to school
and asked his classmates
if any of them
wished to join him in
carrying on Iqbal’s mission.
Eleven students
immediately
raised their hands and
Free the Children was born.
My friends and I have
started an organization
called Free the Children,
a youth group mainly
made up of young people,
between 10 and 16 years
of age.
And the purpose
of our group is not only
to free children from
exploitation and abuse,
but also to free children
from the idea
that they are powerless,
and that they have
no role to play
in today’s society.
To see
how he and the others
could best aid those who
Iqbal sought to protect,
Craig decided to go and
meet face-to-face with
child laborers in different
South Asian nations.
When Craig Kielburger
was only twelve, he decided
to take a seven week trip
to South Asia.
It was a journey
that would have
important consequences
for the rest of his life.
Over the past year
I’ve had the opportunity
to travel through
five countries
in South Asia and
I’ve met many children
who are suffering,
children who are living
on the streets of some of
the world’s largest cities.
I’ve met children sold as
bonded laborers working
12 to 16 hours a day
in the carpet industry.
These children have
no vote, no voice,
and no political clout.
Many of them
are subjected to some of
the most inhuman forms
of exploitation.
I certainly knew nothing
about the world, in which
millions of children my age
work long hours
in conditions
approaching slavery
each day.
And my question is,
“Are all children
created equal?
And if child labor is wrong
for a white middle class
child in North America,
then why is it
any different for a girl
in Thailand
or born in Brazil?”
While in South Asia,
Craig met with then
Canadian Prime Minister
Jean Chrétien,
who also happened to be
in the region at the time,
to discuss child labor.
After returning to Canada,
Craig, his brother Marc,
and the Free the Children
team started visiting
schools and churches
and contacting
prominent political
and business leaders
to raise awareness of
global child inequality.
Through the unwavering
dedication of its volunteers,
Free the Children
has become one of the
world’s largest networks
of children helping children.
It has evolved
from a small office
in Craig’s living room
into an international
development and
youth empowerment
organization
that has brought
constructive changes
to the lives
of tens of thousands of
underprivileged youngsters.
With the efforts of 3,500
Youth In Action groups
in the United States
and Canada,
Free the Children
has built
more than 500 schools
throughout Asia, Africa
and Latin America.
Now more than
55,000 children
are able to attend school
every day
thanks to the construction
of these facilities.
Another
wonderful initiative
of Free the Children
is the Adopt a Village
program which operates
in Kenya, China, India,
Sierra Leone, Ecuador
and Sri Lanka.
Adopt a Village
has several components
including teaching
disadvantaged women
job skills so they can
become economically
self-sufficient.
With the additional income,
the 30,000
women participants
are now better able to
care for their families
and their children
are more likely
to attend school
rather than work.
Building schools,
enhancing access
to clean drinking water
and health care services
are other important parts
of the program.
The organization
has won a number of
prestigious awards,
including the World’s
Children’s Prize for
the Rights of the Child
(also known as the
Children’s Nobel Prize)
and the Human Rights
Award from
the World Association
of Non-Governmental
Organizations.
Marc and Craig Kielburger
are recipients of
The Order of Canada
which is given by
the Canadian government
for outstanding
achievement and service
to Canada
or to humanity at large.
Now let’s meet some
of the beneficiaries of
a Free the Children project
in the Indian state
of Rajasthan.
Since the new school rooms
were built by
Free the Children,
the children are
more eager to learn,
and the children
have got better facilities.
We enjoy teaching here
very much.
And so definitely the school
will be beneficial
for the children
and the village.
The new school
looks very good.
In the new school
a nice breeze comes.
There is also light.
I even like the color
of the school.
I really like studying
in school.
I like my teacher a lot.
I made new friends
in my new school.
I have a lot of fun
at school.
After these brief messages,
we’ll find out more about
the compassionate work
of Free the Children.
Please stay tuned
to Supreme Master
Television.
I am changing
from “me” to “we.”
I can make a change
in this world.
Welcome back to
Good People, Good Works.
Today’s show features
Free the Children
a caring charity
founded in 1995 by
two Canadian brothers,
Craig and Marc Kielburger
to better the lives
of young people in need
across the globe.
Schools constructed
by the organization
in the Kono District
of Sierra Leone
are giving hope
to many youngsters
and the leaders
of the community.
I really feel good about
Free the Children
Primary (School) in Kono.
The parents,
they are thankful
to this school
because the situation is
now changing gradually.
The children are improving.
I like going to school
because
I learn many things about
my future, my country
and even the world.
It’s given me
more understanding,
more knowledge,
and more wisdom.
When I finish school,
I would like to do
computer science.
I would like to be
the president.
I would like to be
a bank manager.
I would like to be a doctor.
The teachers care for them,
they teach them
as their own children,
and the whole program
takes an interest in them.
It’s giving the children
the sense of what it means
to be good citizen,
to be a caring person,
to know
that they have rights, but
others have rights as well.
And to learn
to live in peace
in a community.
I have hope for them
because they are in school,
they are preparing
themselves now.
The United Nations
Children's Fund and the
World Health Organization
estimate that
nearly a billion people
lack access to safe water
and 2.5 billion lack
adequate sanitation.
Adequate sanitation
is defined as
having a sanitary facility
that ensures
hygienic separation
of human waste
from human contact.
Globally, one child
under the age of five
dies from
a waterborne disease
every 20 seconds,
with 43% of
all water-related deaths
due to diarrhea.
Globally
over one million people
now have better access
to clean drinking water
and sanitation facilities
thanks to
Free the Children.
In various regions in China,
the group has installed
direct water piping,
toilets, and
hand washing stations.
In Sri Lanka and Kenya,
they have drilled
water wells.
The excitement
is incredibly high
as the community
is gathered.
They are on the verge
of striking water
here at the aquifer.
They are drilling
200 meters deep
in order to bring a supply
of clean drinking water
to this community
in the South Mara region
of Kenya.
So many communities
like this one
have benefited from
Free the Children’s
water catchment programs
and well programs,
thanks to your support.
It ensures a source
of clean water
not only for the health
and wellbeing
of the families,
but also to ensure
that girls don’t have to
walk a far distance
in order to go to school.
As you can see, as they
strike the reservoir…
as you can see they have
struck the reservoir!
Free the Children
has also partnered with
internationally renowned
charitable groups such as
Oprah’s Angel Network
that is run by
Oprah Winfrey,
a highly popular
television talk show host
in the US.
I would like to commit
to building 100 schools
around the world.
One hundred schools.
To support
Free the Children’s
laudable philanthropic
mission, students from 45
Broward County schools
in Florida, USA,
recently raised
nearly US$93,500
to help the organization
construct 11 new schools
for deserving children
in Kenya.
Students
at Northeast High School
raised US$11,000 –
the highest amount of
all participating schools.
Hi, my name is
Jonathan Williams and
I am the proud principal
of Northeast High School.
The project for Northeast
was twofold.
We saw it as a challenge
for our children,
an opportunity for them
to go beyond themselves.
What was most inspiring
for us is that our children
took on the initiative
even in spite of
what challenges they may
have had themselves.
Thirteen year old
Santiago Vazquez of
Rickards Middle School
shares how every penny
counts when it comes
to helping the others.
It did basically start off
as “Well
I only have a dollar now,
so I’ll put it in,” and then
my friends would (say)
“Hey, well,
I have two dollars.”
We were doing it
for a good cause;
we were just trying
to help build the school
and having a little fun
with it too.
It doesn’t take much
for one person
to change the world;
Education is important.
It’s all basically
to help those kids who
haven’t had an education.
So basically
anyone can help anyone.
Next Sunday on
Good People, Good Works,
we’ll learn more about
the superb efforts of
the Florida, USA students
to help underprivileged
youngsters in Kenya
and of Supreme Master
Ching Hai’s contribution
to the cause.
Our warmest appreciation
goes to Craig
and Marc Kielburger
and all Free the Children
volunteers
for their altruistic spirit
and ongoing dedication
to making a real change
in our world.
For more details
on Free the Children,
please visit
www.FreeTheChildren.com
Thank you
for joining us today on
Good People, Good Works.
Up next is
The World Around Us,
after Noteworthy News.
May all children
across the world
know only laughter
and happiness.
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