The post A twisted industry of altruism: why I will never volunteer at an orphanage again appeared first on Hope and Homes for Children.
]]>Something didn’t feel right after a few days of arriving to volunteer at an orphanage in Malawi. But even whilst I was there, aged 19, I didn’t realise that my seemingly good intentions were feeding an industry that was and is harming vulnerable children.
Volunteering in orphanages is such a common experience that it’s sold through gap year and tourism companies. I paid the company to go and “help” but how did I actually help?
I wasn’t qualified in any way to work with vulnerable children, nor did I understand the culture or context in which they lived.
I don’t think a background check was done on me at any point. This is common in this type of voluntary work. So when people with sinister intentions want to target vulnerable children, they can and they do, by paying as consumers for the experience to go and “help”.
At the time, I thought the orphanage Director was corrupt as the children were malnourished. I never got to the bottom of it, but I do now know that children are trafficked into orphanages, sometimes for child labour, sometimes for commercial sexual exploitation and sometimes for tourists who want to do good. Orphanages can be a money-making venture.
My friend and I played games with the children and tried to repaint one of the rooms. These children, who have been separated from their families, grow up to have significant issues with developing healthy relationships- and volunteers who come and go, only make the problem worse.
This isn’t about criticising voluntary work or the work of charities. Charities play a vital role. This form of voluntary work though, is causing more harm than good.
We don’t think large-scale orphanages are an acceptable way of caring for children in the UK, so why do we think it’s acceptable to support them in other countries? Orphanages are a remnant of colonialism, as was the idea that I as a white British teenager, would be helpful to children in need of special care and protection in an African country I knew nothing about.
Listen to Sophie in conversation with Becs Dhillon, from podcast Conversations on Faith and Equality
Children in Care and Orphanages – Conversations on Faith and Equality
The post A twisted industry of altruism: why I will never volunteer at an orphanage again appeared first on Hope and Homes for Children.
]]>The post Operation Bacoli – stopping demand for orphanage visits appeared first on Hope and Homes for Children.
]]>Here, Sarah McManus, Operational Lead at Border Force’s National Safeguarding and Modern Slavery Team, writes a guest blog reflecting on the success of our operation to raise awareness amongst travellers at three UK airports.
Although I’m used to 4am starts from my years with Border Force, much of that shift work, it never gets much better.
Sometimes though, when it’s for a cause that’s close to your heart, that can put a spring back in your step. That’s why, when we launched ‘Operation Bacoli’ In October 2022, to mark Anti-Slavery Week and EU Anti-Trafficking Day, I was leading from the front.
Operation Bacoli was a 4 day, multi-site initiative to raise awareness of the harms of orphanage tourism amongst the travelling public. It ran from Friday 14 until Tuesday 18 October 2022, at our three busiest UK airports Manchester, Gatwick and Heathrow. A hugely successful operation, it saw my colleagues and I engage hundreds of the travelling public in conversations about the harm orphanages wreak on society, in places where orphanage tourism is rife.
We targeted terminals and times when travellers were flying to orphanage tourism hotspots like South East Asia – Thailand, Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia – or the connecting flights that would take them there.
We handed out leaflets, had banners in prominent spots with a footfall of thousands, and welcomed colleagues from the orphanage tourism taskforce, ABTA and Hope and Homes for Children to Heathrow for the day to help out. Our aim was to engage as many travellers as possible with our simple message, “Orphanages harm children, don’t visit or donate to them on holiday”.
Border force officers Kate Goldstone (L) and Sarah McManus (R), smiling after a successful operation at London Heathrow.
You never know how people will react to campaigns like this, but the overwhelming majority of travellers I spoke to were really positive about the campaign, and interested to learn more about it.
“I had no idea anything like this went on! It’s really shocking isn’t it.”
Traveller to Dubai, Terminal 3, London Heathrow Airport
Most people don’t realise that orphanages like these are businesses, which exploit children. They separate them from their families and traffick them into abuse and neglect, just to extract money from tourists. Just like I didn’t, when I visited girls performing traditional Thai dances in just such a place, many years ago on holiday with my husband. Like most tourists, I only wanted to enjoy some local culture on holiday and give a little money to support the children I’d met.
If I had known where my money was going, I would never have paid for that trip.
Imagine unvetted strangers paying to walk into your local primary school, to watch your children’s school play. Then you start to get a feeling of why we should all be uneasy about these practices.
So that’s why I’m determined travellers have all the information they need to make informed decisions while they’re away. Border Force has such a vital role in safeguarding children, I’m delighted we could support this campaign.
Share your support and pledge to #EndOrphanageTourism on social media
The post Operation Bacoli – stopping demand for orphanage visits appeared first on Hope and Homes for Children.
]]>