Wednesday 2 October 2013

Ramadan Iftar Box Program

By Shireen Gul
‘Misery exists even when it is invisible to us.’ In order to negate this dilemma, the team of Project Muskurahat has worked tirelessly to mitigate the plight of the deprived ones, no matter how easy and smooth everyone thinks there lives go.
We, the team of Project Muskurahat, carried the same mission during the month of Ramadan when we declared our prime task for the Holy Month on 1st Ramadan : to prepare nutritious Iftaris for the as many impecunious people as we could. As soon as our agenda spread through Facebook and other forms of media, we started to receive an overwhelming response in the form of huge amounts of donations. The field work was distributed into four batches, and each of these lots contained different eatables, so that the destitute people also have a chance to taste the eatables that we, the privileged ones find pleasure in consuming.
We distributed our first batch among the poor people on 26th July. Each box contained a date, a packet of juice, a samosa, a pastry and a mini pizza. This day, we made sure that 30 of the most necessitous people did not go to bed hungry that day.
The second batch was sent out on 2nd August, and was distributed among 40 needy families. Each of the packets consisted of a date, pakoras, two samosas, ½ litres mango/orange juice and a ½ kg bag of sugar, which were given out because Eid was approaching.
As part of the third batch, which was sent out on 4th August, packets of Biryani were to 30 indigent people, which brought smiles upon their faces.
The Ramadan Iftar Box project came to an end when ‘Eid packages’ were dispensed to 130 poor people to make their Eid celebrations special. Each package contained a pack of Vermicelli, Tang and 1 Kg sugar.



Throughout this project, certain businesses stood up as a support for us: they sponsored the gifts which were given out to the winners of the lucky draw which was conducted as an incentive for the donors. These businesses include GURUTEE, Bakers Cottage, AJURUK, Iris Design, Stylista! , Movies for Buddies, Fatima Accessorize, FIONAS PHOTOGRAPHY and Tarz.
The list of the winners of the lucky draw and their gifts is as follows:
  • ·          Rabia Khawar(2 shirts- GURUTEE, Ralli( a bed pull over)- Ajuruk, ring- Stylista !)
  •          Momina Amir (2 shirts- GURUTEE)
  •          Wajiha Naveed ( 2 shirts- GURUTEE),
  •           Rameesha Khan ( 2 shirts- GURUTEE),
  •           Fatima Asghar (1 shirt- GURUTEE, 2DVDs- MOVIES FOR BUDDIES)
  •           Kulsoom Malik (1 shirt- GURUTEE)
  •           Maryam Adeeb (2boxes of 6 cupcakes- Bakers Cottage)
  •                   Mrs. Gohar (2boxes of 6 cupcakes- Bakers Cottage, gold plated earrings- Iris Design)


We are highly thankful to our donors and sponsors who made it possible for us to accomplish this noble mission of helping out more than 130 poverty-stricken families.

International Peace Day

                                  The World Needs Peace Not War
                                                        BY GULRUKH RAEES
                                     
                                         "Peace begins with a smile."
                                                                                     Mother Teresa
World Peace Day is observed annually on 21st September. It is dedicated to world peace, and specifically to the absence of war and violence. The day was first celebrated in 1982, and since then it has been kept by many nations, political groups, military groups, and peoples. 
The United Nations Peace bell is rung in UN headquarters in New York City to inaugurate the day. The bell is cast with coins and these coins are donated from all the continents except Africa. This is considered as a gift from United Nations Associations of Japan. It is taken as a reminder of the human cost of war. There is an inscription on it that reads “Long Live Absolute World Peace.”
 In 2013, for the first time, the Day was dedicated by the Secretary-General of the United Nations to peace education. A global campaign by the name of Armed with the Arts was announced in May 2013 to increase public awareness and promote the culture of peace. The purpose of this campaign is to inculcate in young minds through peace education the importance of world peace and the negative impact war and violence can have on the world at large. Peace Crane Project is the name given to it and Gorey Community School in Co. Wexford, Ireland, has been chosen to be School of Peace for 2013.
 International Peace Day was also celebrated in Pakistan as in other parts of the world. The Global System of Integrated Studies (GSIS), in collaboration with Basic Human Rights, an international NGO, organized a function on International Peace Day. The ceremony took place simultaneously in Bradford (UK) at the Bradford Grammar School and GSIS, Islamabad. Two minutes silence was observed at GSIS and Bradford School simultaneously for the prevalence of peace in the world.



International Charity Day

Fight Poverty, Give Charity!
BY GULRUKH RAEES
Poverty exists everywhere. It’s the harsh reality of every country of the world regardless of their economic, social and cultural situation but the condition is alarming in developing countries. To alleviate poverty and humanitarian crisis in its true sense giving charity is the only possible solution.
In recognition of the role of charity in promoting equity and relieving the masses of the world from the shackles of extreme poverty and human suffering, the General Assembly of United Nations in its resolution designated the 5th of September, the ‎anniversary of the death of Mother Teresa, as the International Day of Charity.‎ To commemorate the day in an  appropriate  manner, on this International Day of Charity United Nations invites all the member states , regional and international organizations, non-governmental organizations, civil society, philanthropists and individuals. Many such activities were organized to promote charity through public awareness and finding ways to make Universal education possible in order to fight poverty.

A Pakistani organization Muslim Aid has organized an event to promote charity and expressed its commitment to encourage and motivate for charitable work for the benefit of all those who are suffering due to this menace.

Children -- The greatest asset of a country

By Warda Malik
We are to build NOT perish a child’s future.
We all have fears. It takes paramount courage to overcome those fears and make it to school with the desire to be educated. This desire, this will, this commitment and this perseverance is what we owe to our parents and, most importantly, to our country. Surprisingly, there is an alarming number of children who drop out after primary level and absolutely refuse to take another step towards any place called ‘school’. After all, what are the factors which are able to hamper their way to this milestone on the way to their dreams?
Indeed, the very first factor is violence and the brutal ways of teaching naïve children. In the city of Lahore, Pakistan a young child Bilal Javed, 10 years of age, refused to even peek through the gates after five years of schooling. The reason being the barbarous ways with which his science teacher punished him although he was quite intellectual in Mathematics and other subjects. Now the boy spends his precious time by helping his father out with cleaning. More than 35,000 children in Pakistan dropout of school only due to corporal punishment.
Another reason for the dropout rate after primary level is that somewhere we have supportive parents, on the other hand, there are parents who condemn their children to continue with schooling after primary level. Probably due to extreme poverty and illiteracy; they consider it more beneficial for everyone that the children ought to be part of the labor force and earn reasonable wages from this age.  As a result, a child’s future is wickedly destroyed and thrown away with not much hope left for his prosperity and that little string of hope also continues to fade away.
Last but not the least, gender inequality refuses to perish. The female gender suffers terrible injustice at the hands of education. In the rural areas they are not looked upon as innovative beings with the capability to strive for the betterment. In most stereotyped rural areas they are a ‘burden’ from the day they are born and the better it is to ease the burden by getting them married off. The parents who face the challenge of sending their daughters to schools in these areas are not looked upon as conservative and their reputation suffers as a result. In this scenario, what does it take for a girl to be educated? She deserves this right as much any other son does. The inevitable consequence is for most girls to give up the battle at the hands of their prosecutors.

These factors call upon for a revolutionary change in the education system and for increasing awareness in rural areas in particular.  If these dropout rates cannot be completely erased then they can surely be decreased. It is for the privileged to take up a bold stand for our fellow beings who are being denied of their right. It is a great pity when we look at a child selling balloons from our car window and wonder maybe he could have been the next Stephen Hawking. 

Saturday 3 August 2013

Another day, another war!

Challenges faced by children in Pakistan.
By Warda Malik

“Education is the most powerful weapon which you can use to change the world.”
Nelson Mandela

Indeed, a wise man, Nelson Mandela, spoke of education as a powerful weapon – A weapon which would determine our sense of security in the world out there. This is rightly the weapon which would help any child fight his war of life. Should a child be denied this righteous key to freedom and security? A child’s right makes it a state’s duty which needs to be accomplished.
Pakistan, the state of forgotten hopes and dreams, is also a home to children for whom every day of school is like diving in the sea without knowing how to swim. Pakistan has the second largest out of school population with an alarming number of 5.1 million children and a devastatingly high illiteracy rate.
Those children who have the privilege of taking this bold step are denied access to proper academic training and inadequate facilities, for example, no proper play grounds, lack of hygienic facilities in rural areas, low teacher attendance, biased administrative staff, lack of awareness on children psychology etc.
Without doubt, these naïve children suffer unfairly at the hands child-sex abuse. This problem has largely been left unchecked being regarded as a sensitive subject matter.  They are not even aware of what exactly is happening to them whereas it is the school’s ultimate responsibility to teach them on how to protect their body parts at the hands of such molesters. Shockingly, many teachers are found to be the very soul part of sexual abuse and many blackmail them to keep their mouths shut.

Truly, child is meant to learn, NOT to earn. The educational system of Pakistan is rapidly deteriorating and needs to undergo a considerable amount of development in order to polish the inner personality of a child rather than to destroy it and to make education accessible to all the children. Every one of us deserves to be given a chance. A chance for a better tomorrow. A chance that would make us believe that this world is not such a merciless place, after all. 

Child Labour- the lethal weapon breaking the backbone of our economy By Shireen Gul

While reading newspaper or listening to news bulletins, we usually come across the term ‘child labour’. This compound of words refers to the employment of young children (i.e. of or younger than 12 – 13 years of age) in work that hinders their education, deprives them of their childhood, dignity and potential, and is hazardous to their health. Statistics show that an estimate of 246 million children have been plunged into this curse, with 70%of them working in highly perilous conditions, for e.g. in the mining industry and the chemical industry. Though its presence in developed countries cannot be denied (in which, around 30% of the world’s child labour cases have been found), this scourge is typical of developing countries.
Being one of developing countries, the curse of child labour is endemic in Pakistan. Though statistics for child labour in the country cannot be estimated with precision due to lack of reliable data,the survey of Federal Bureau of Statistics shows that out of a total population of 40 million children, 3.8 million suffer from this affliction. However, these figures omit the children who are not registered with the government: results from another agency (SPARC, 2009) show that approximately 23 million children are victims of this plague.
There are countless factors which contribute to the prevalence of child labour in the society. Poverty is at the top of the list. Children are thought of as vital sources which could possibly supplement their parents’ income, which can be expected to be the case in a country where 33% of the people live below the poverty line. The issue of over-population, adds to this, as addition of family members put greater financial pressure on the family, which, in turn, is released to some extent by sending young children to work in factories, workshops, or at houses as servants. Moreover, ignorance instigates people to apprehend education and under-rate its benefits, which results in their preference to send their children to work over sending them to school. The lack of proper follow up on legislation regarding child labour on part of the government has also contributed to the persistence of the issue.
The economic effects of child labour in Pakistan are various and far-reaching. Whereas on one hand it provides sufficient work force for less technical industries , allows poor households to fulfil their petty needs and benefits the employers financially as they pay lower wages to unskilled child labourers than to grown up labourers, it has devastating effects on an economy as a whole in the long term. To begin with, the country has been deprived of potential growth which could have resulted from the availability of an educated and trained workforce.  Thus, local and foreign investors look towards foreign professionals for skilled jobs, which, on one hand, has resulted  in lower profits for the investors as foreign professionals have to be paid more than local ones to entice them to work in Pakistani industries , and on the other hand, waned the chances of foreign investment.
Furthermore, child labour has diminished living standards of Pakistan. In economics, Human Development Index is considered to be a significant tool to measure living standards of a country. This strategy holds that adult literacy rate, i.e. the rate of individuals attending colleges and universities is a significant bench mark for determining the living standards of a country. Obviously, when one cannot attain primary education, the question that one will enroll in a secondary or professional institute is quite meaningless. The lower the living standard of a country, the weaker is its international economic position. Thus, child labour is one of the factors responsible for the lean economic position of Pakistan.
Moreover, the international reputation of a country can be marred by child labour, which can cause the international community to sanction trade embargoes with the countries where the terrible crime is practiced. Pakistan has suffered from this in the case of sports industry, many countries banned the imports of her footballs, which led to huge losses, as the banned goods contributed immensely towards earning revenue for the country in the form of exports.
Other than that, the economic effects of child labour on the individual himself of herself are quite debilitating. Because of not attending schools and participating in academic activities, the victims of child labour often suffer from reduced mental ability, which makes it difficult for them to adjust to technological changes in the industry once the skill they possess becomes obsolete, thus, leaving them unemployed and vulnerable to becoming poorer.

Though child labour has some immediate positive consequences, its destructive effects on the long-run are innumerable. In order to mitigate the plight of those engulfed by the menace, the government should try to implement the laws passed on child labour more effectively, and together with the NGOs, should continue to educate the people on its harmful effects.

Friday 26 July 2013

Dawn of Hope: An Empowered Pakistani Woman

Dawn of Hope:  An Empowered Pakistani Woman

By GULRUKH RAEES


  There are two powers in the world; one is the sword and the other is the Pen. There is a great competition and rivalry between the two. There is a third power stronger than both, that of the women.          
                                                                                                                         M.A.JINNAH
The story of Malala Yousafzai is one that is not only inspiring the women of Pakistan but it also sums up the plight that a Pakistani woman has to suffer throughout her life. Starting from the love for education, faced by hardships and hostility, showing up with immense courage and perseverance and ending up with victory and massive movement of reforms within the nation of Pakistan—something Pakistan has never seen before.
Women comprise 50% of Pakistan’s total population. Despite this, on average, Pakistani woman has been the subject of gender subordination, discrimination and gender bias since independence. Women have always been facing deprivation sometimes in the name of culture, society , exploiting her on the basis of her role as home maker and last but not the least quite often in the name of religion.
In 2012, the World Economic Forum ranked Chad, Pakistan and Yemen as the worst in their global gender gap report. The situation is worse in rural areas where several women have suffered due to atrocities, like rape, acid throwing, honour killing, forced marriages, cultures of karo kari, Vani, Swara domestic violence and forced prostitution. Hence, the remedy of all these problems lies in the women empowerment.
In 1988, Benazir Bhutto became the first female prime minister of Pakistan. In her election campaign she voiced her keen interest in women related social issues. She also announced to devise such plans that can ensure to eliminate gender inequalities from our society. However, during her two incomplete terms in office (1988-1990, 1996-1999) she couldn’t contribute towards any considerable positive change in women’s status in the country.
It is only in the last few years that landmark developments in women rights legislation and empowerment in Pakistan took place. These efforts were commended by human rights commission not only in Pakistan but also at international level. In January 2010, the president of Pakistan singed the protection against harassment of women at workplace bill 2009. In December 2012 two additional bills ‘’criminalising the primitive practices of Vani, Watta Satta, Swara and marriage to Holy Quran,’’ in addition to ‘’life imprisonment for acid throwing,’’ were signed by the president. It’s true that legislation is the first step towards the eradication of a social evil from the society, yet practical improvement in its true sense can only be seen and felt in the implementation of these laws. The flawed police and judiciary systems are the main reasons why we lag behind developed countries as far as women empowerment is concerned.
Against this backdrop of religious exploitation, conventional social biases, policy neglect, lack of interest on the part of our leaders, lack of necessary exposure and capacity and advocacy skills, women representation and empowerment needed a boost. The need of the hour is to truly emancipate our women not only in legislative corridors but also at every level starting from the top to the bottom.  In a country where the women population is more than half of the total population, government seriously needs to devise such strategies so as to make this huge bulk of population as productive contributors in the economic uplift of the country. If we allow half of our population to be illiterate, confined within the four walls of their homes and not participating in the progress of our country, then we simply can’t expect to earn a respectable status in the comity of nations.
The role of women is pivotal in the struggle of Pakistan towards a prosperous, sovereign and economically independent country. The government of Pakistan in particular and society in general need to focus on issues such as: poverty of women; issues regarding child birth; health, education; violence against women and the economic, social and political empowerment of the women.
In order to improve the status of women of Pakistan some suggested measure are;
  • ·         Developing gender sensitive economic growth indicators.
  • ·         Adopting macro and micro economic policies.
  • ·         Ensuring women equal participation in all sectors
  • ·         Identify gender biased rules and regulations and suggest modifications.
  • ·         Mainstreaming women in the productive sector on equality basis.
  • ·         Reviewing the impact of all existing policies regarding women workers.
  • ·         Creating legal and constitutional rights of women.
  • ·         Training women in financial and economic matters.
  • ·         Ensuring equal employment opportunities for women.
  • ·         Increasing women access to quality education.
  • ·         Eliminating the gender gap in access to education by spreading awareness and breaking social taboos attached to women education.
  • ·         Ensure protection to female workers.

The process of women empowerment has a ripple effect. Empowering women does not only mean to benefit the underprivileged and downtrodden women who has always been abused, victimized and suppressed but it also means to benefit the society in large. These benefits are not restrained to the self of women but it produces positive outcomes for a particular society, country or a nation.
The practice of women oppression must be brought to an end. Discrimination against women must end now. This is the high time to recognize the role of women in determining the direction of social change. They must be respected and given an honourable place in the society. Schemes should be adopted to ensure equal economic opportunities and effective steps must be taken for their participation at multifarious levels. An approach to gender sensitization needs to be cultivated in our society so as to assure an inclusive part of women for nation building.
As Diane Marie child has rightly said, 
A woman is the full circle. Within her is the power to create, nurture and transform.