Children At Risk Foundation - Carf Brazil

June 11, 2006 by Cris Zimermann | 3 Comments
In Brazil in English, Entrepreneurial Lifestyle

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CARF Brazil was established by Gregory J. Smith in São Paulo, in 1993. Gregory had already established The Children At Risk Foundation – CARF Norway in 1992, determined to benefit the street children of Brazil by defending their rights and offering them a dignified and definitive solution so that they could live and grow within a family-oriented context and healthy social environment.

In the initial years, Gregory gained valuable practical experience by living with the children on the streets and motivating them to leave such a negative and self-destructive environment, offering them an alternative home and lifestyle on a smallholding in the urban periphery of Diadema/SP.

During the last decade, the experience gained guided the organisation to create its Street Migration Prevention Programme to prevent vulnerable children and young people at risk from running away from their homes to live on the streets, developing this together with at-risk community children and abandoned street children in the process of leaving the streets. The essence of the work lies in the interest taken in and the knowledge of the personal situation of each child or young person, from the very first moment he or she becomes involved with our organisation.

Due to the success of this programme, CARF was forced to seek new solutions to cope with growing demands and in 2001 the Hummingbird Activity Centre became a reality. This allowed the organisation to expand its capacity from 80 children and young people to more than 600 attended in 2004.

CARF’s Street Migration Prevention Program is aimed at helping former street children and other at-risk community children in São Paulo, creating pathways of opportunity and a more dignified life. Most of their target population come from one of the most deprived and violent areas in the entire state of São Paulo, in situations of extreme poverty and social vulnerability. Many have special needs and require closer attention due to their unstructured family situation, which in some cases causes total neglect.

In addition, the centre supports the demands of our rehabilitation programme, serving the needs of already rescued street children or those coming off the streets. The programmes of the Hummingbird Activity Centre are primarily preventive in nature and promote the confidence, character, competence, and ‘connectedness’ of that population to their family, peers, and community. They provide a range of support and services in such areas as vocational training, health education, recreation, cultural understanding - tolerance and expansion, racial reconciliation, artistic expression, environmental awareness, and the development of youth leadership involving conflict resolution and decision-making skills.

The main Programmes carried out at present at the Hummingbird Activity Centre can be divided into 3 main groups:
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Sporting Activities - These promote corporal skills, spacial and bodily awareness, integration, team work, concentration, discipline and help cultivate a competitive spirit, all concepts that are essential for social interaction, living together and personal health care.

Artistic and Cultural Development - These cater for the cultural, artistic and aesthetic qualities of life with an emphasis on development of the creative potential, awakening skills and talents that, when used with free expression, can become useful instruments of self-development, communication and training.

Vocational Training - These allow training through constructive and interactive work, awakening vocations and talents through guidance and access to specialist spheres, dynamics and techniques as well as encouraging the use of professional equipment and material.

The stated aim of the Hummingbird Street Migration Prevention Programme, to work for social inclusion without discrimination and its recognised competence in carrying out projects, is the distinguishing feature of their work on social intervention. Through the serious commitment and dedication with which they carry out our work, and the good results they have had in cooperative projects with other agencies, the partnerships and dialogues with CARF as an external agent for cooperative ventures has grown and strengthened, however limited funding creates certain restraints for their further expansion.

The waiting list for vacancies in programmes during 2004, numbered more than 1,000 children and young people registered. Unfortunately they don’t have the capacity to help all those who come to them. All they can do is to take on as much as possible in order to transform in a positive way the lives of these children and young people.

VISION: to become a referential solution, not only for street children, but also for any other child at risk in Brazil or elsewhere in the world, but to do that they also depend on your help. Visit ChildrenAtRisk-STREETKIDS for more details and updates on their work in Brazil.

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Comments

  • Blog da Santa on June 11th, 2006 at 8:21 am

    Cris,

    Muito bom o post! Eu já conhecia o trabalho da Carf Brazil, e atuação do programa aqui no Brasil com crianças de rua e em risco. O que diferencia de outros programas é que eles atuam, quando necessário, com atendimento integral e individual. E melhor ainda, dão assistencia continua para crianças já atendidas. O problema é que num país continental, com 14 milhões de miseráveis, com o nível de violência urbana e redes de narcotráfico sedimentadas nas grandes capitais, além da omissão dos governos, já que favorece a eles uma massa ignorante e vulnerável, fica muito difícil que as crianças do Brasil, ainda por muito tempo permaneçam nas ruas.

    PS: desculpa não responder em inglês (não é dos melhores…rsss)

    Bjs

  • Blog da Santa on June 11th, 2006 at 8:22 am

    corrigindo:

    … fica muito difícil que as crianças do Brasil, ainda por muito tempo “não” permaneçam nas ruas.

  • DO on June 11th, 2006 at 8:40 am

    Oi,CRIS,passando pra te desejar um otimo domingo.
    Beijos!

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