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Townsman, 1991-02, Page 31Travelling and helping at the same time BY LINDA STRAUS STRATFORD I have just returned from the experience of a lifetime! I saw two countries and their people in a way no tourist would see them. It was a privilege to be one of five volunteers who travelled to San Pedro Sula, Honduras and Bogota, Colombia to distribute bedkits to needy children. We were volunteers with a regis- tered non-profit charitable organi- zation called Sleeping Children Around the World (also known as SCAW) based in Islington, Ontario. The other volunteers were Dick and Joan Hryniu from Lakeside, and Don and Mary Lee from Brantford. We are all dedicated to the work of SCAW and met for the first time in early May. It was an honour to be a part of this wonderful organization which provides necessities we take for granted. Sleeping Children Around the World was founded in 1970 by Murray and Margaret Dryden, par- ents of the N.H.L. goalies. Mr. Dryden, a keen photographer enjoy- ed photographing children, espe- cially "sleeping" children. He took trips overseas to photograph sleep- ing children of other cultures. On a trip to Asia, he stumbled over something on a dirty street and was horrified to discover that it was a child sleeping on the pavement. From this, and having known many nights without a clean, warm bed as a travelling salesman during the Depression, the idea of providing bedkits for children in poor, deve- loping countries evolved. August, 1970 the first bedkits were distributed by Mr. Dryden in Pune, India. In keeping with the propject's original purpose, he photographed the children who received the kits. Word spread and soon individuals, clubs, service groups, school children, were mak- ing donations. To date, children in 28 countries have been furnished with kits. SCAW still operates out of the Dryden home where many volunteers converge to work. SCAW has a unique concept. 100 per cent donor dollar reaches the Third World child. The bedkits are made up in the country where they will be distributed, thus saving on transportation costs, material costs. Employment is provided for needy local families and some skills are being taught. It also ensures that the kits include the kind of items most useful for that climate. The countries where distributions are made have an earnings per capita of $300 per year or less. There are many volunteers in both Canada and the Third World Countries. Contact people in the Third World country arrange for the contents of the bedkits and the packaging of it for the families to carry it home, decide who is to receive a bedkit and make arrangements for a distribution point. All of this is done before the travelling volunteers arrive. Bedkits presently cost $28 Canadian. Every cent is used and gets to the child. No administration costs are taken from the donation. Travelling volunteers, as I was, pay all their own expenses. Each donor receives a photo showing the reci- pient child with his or her bedkit and a card identifying the donor. As travelling volunteers our main jobs were to give the bedkits to the selected children, and to photo- graph the child with the bedkit. Honduras and Colombia are beautiful countries, as are the people. In San Pedro Sula, Hondur- as, a city of 400,000 we distributed layettes to 2,069 children up to age two. Many of the mothers were very young and had walked many miles in temperatures over 40°C. to stand in long lines to receive their bundles. We met mothers who were not simply seeking another free hand-out but rather the opportunity to give their children a better chance at survival and an opportun- ity to better their meagre existence. One couldn't help but compare this scene with the pampered life of our North American children. Many times we were torn between emo- tions of sympathy and feelings of outrage and anger. In Bogota, Colombia a city of six million people, the distribution took place in several poor barrios and invasion areas where homes were made from any materials that could be found such as cardboard, scrap wood, metal, plastic bags. There was no water or heat. Temperatures dropped to freezing at night. Bogota's elevation is 8600 ft. above sea level. The children receiving the bedkits in Colombia ranged from 4 to 14 years. Upon viewing the under -nourished, underclothed bodies of these desperate children there is no doubt in my mind of the genuine need. It was common to see orphaned teens dressed in all they owned living in hollowed out caves in the side of the mountain, going through the garbage, trying to seek out whatever they could to sell. In both countries, faces of desper- ation, sadness and hopelessness changed when the bedkits were handed out. In their own way, sincere gratitude was shown. Child- ren gave hugs and kisses; parents' eyes welled up with tears of joy, as did mine. I won't quickly forget these faces. Children everywhere are precious treasures. Many times the experience was emotional and tugged at one's heart strings. One has to see the terrible conditions these people endure each day to believe the horror. It was heart-warming, in both countries to see some of the wealthy sincerely interested in and helping the poor. We arrived home knowing that over 4,000 very needy children or families as the bedkit would be shared would sleep in their "first" bed and were given a ray of "hope" for the future. All of this was possible because of the generosity of many donors (from Australia and Spain, too), volunteers and dedicat- ed workers in both countries. Would I do this again? Yes, - tomorrow if I could, and highly recommend getting involved if you love children, travel and want to really see a country! TOWNSMAN/FEBRUARY-MARCH 1991 29