The photo below shows Mohammed holding the 2009 Humanitarian Award which Aschiana won, beating out more than 4,000 entries from 35 different countries.
These photos were taken in the room containing all the handicrafts and art products that are made by the students at Aschiana and sold, providing part of the income used to run Aschiana. And all the art was absolutely beautiful.
This painting was my personal favorite.
This was the first classroom we visited, where an art class was taking place.
These was the special ed classroom. These women were wonderful with the students--very kind and gentle and supportive.
Afghanistan is also one of the most heavily mined countries in the world--landmines are everywhere. The HALO Trust is a mine-clearing NGO that locates and destroys landmines and other "debris of war," as their website puts it.
It was very entertaining--for us at least. We weren't the ones getting slammed into the mat:)
We kept huddling under David's umbrella while we were waiting for Abdul, the driver, to bring the bus over when it was time to leave.
Aschiana was developed to support street children, who are the most vulnerable in Afghanistan. It is registered/funded by the Ministry of Education. The center we visited is not the only center they operate; there are others in Kabul as well as in different provinces. They work with more than 9,000 children and also work with children from IDP camps, which stands for Internally Displaced People--or in other words, refugees from other areas of Afghanistan. Aschiana works with1,300 families from four IDP camps, which is about 2,500 kids total.
Their main goal is to integrate children from the streets to schools, and also provide vocational training for both boys and girls. School activities include art, literature, sports, health education, work with special ed/handicapped children, etc and vocational programs include carpentry, plumbing, electrical work, and so on.
It costs $20 a month for each child to go to school, and since most families can't afford that Aschiana has a school sponsorship program that finds private donors to sponsor a student and pay that student's school expenses.
Aschiana also has a foundation in the US, based in Washington, D.C. which helps fund Aschiana's programs and also helps locat and provide sponsors to pay the childrens' school fees. If you're interested in learning more about Aschiana or donating to their exceedingly worthy cause, you can find their website here.
2 comments:
I think it's better to have captions with the pictures. Not necessarily with every single picture, but one with each group of photos or a caption to introduce the people we'll be seeing in subsequent ones.
Okay, that's basically what I had been thinking--some of those photos need captions because they mostly lack impact without context. I'll have to dig out my notes and get to work!
Thanks!
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