The Missing Link
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I OFTEN GRUMBLE about the low water pressure in my apartment and the numerous filters needed to make the water clean enough for use. It is easy to take running water for granted, as we do electricity and other urban amenities. When you live in the city, it seems inconceivable that there might be places with no running water or proper toilets, much less broadband connection and public transportation.
It took a book by American volunteer Conor Grennan, Little Princes: One Man’s Promise to Bring Home the Lost Children of Nepal, for me to learn about that country’s problems and not to take for granted the privilege of having basic everyday necessities.
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Grennan hopes his book will make the world more aware of Nepal’s problems.
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Grennan is very aware that these are not your typical Western kids and is careful with how he and his organisation works with them. “Kids are so impressionable, so if we come in with our own ideas about what their culture should be like, or what their needs should be, we risk having a less than positive impact on these young lives. We have to remember we are not just helping, we are taking the place—at least temporarily—of parents,” he says.
Little Princes describes Grennan’s many close shaves, but he thinks Nepal is safer now. “The traffickers themselves do not threaten us as they used to. I definitely got lucky a few times when I was in the mountains searching for families.”
He hopes the book will make the world more aware of Nepal and its problems. “It is not a part of the world we know much about. We don’t hear much about this type of child trafficking. I want to raise awareness of the work we are doing with NGN.”
Now a father himself—he met his wife Liz while volunteering at Little Princes—Grennan finds even more meaning in his work. “For the first time I really understand there is a large group of people out there, children, who need help. I think of these kids as I think of my son—if he was in danger, how desperate would I be to have somebody with resources step in and help? Now, I am that person who can help. That changes everything.”
For those who are thinking about volunteering, he has this advice: “Just try to get to know the children, what really drives them, what their dreams are, how they see life. You can change their lives for the better, and they will change you too.”
Reproduced from The Sunday Star of April 24, 2011
1 Comments:
Wonderful piece, Janet!
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