Author: Salesian Missions

Publication Date: July 26, 2018

INDIA: Salesian Missions “Clean Water Initiative” provides funding for bathroom renovation and restoration at program for street children

This project funding was used for a major renovation of the bathroom facilities at the center, including minor repairs, 10 urinals reconstructed and pipes cleaned.

NEW ROCHELLE, NY (July 26, 2018) Boys attending the Don Bosco Rehabilitation Center for Street Children at Ramanthapur in Hyderabad, the capital city of southern India’s Telangana state, have improved bathroom facilities thanks to funding from Salesian Missions. The funding, provided through a Salesian Missions “Clean Water Initiative”, was used for a major renovation of the bathroom facilities at the center.

Don Bosco Navajeevan has four centers in the twin cities of Hyderabad and Secunderabad where more than 300 children, both boys and girls, are living and gaining an education. The Don Bosco Rehabilitation Center has 150 boys at the facility which provides accommodation, food, medical care and education free of cost. The boys, ages 6 to 16, are all at-risk youth who were street children, child laborers and orphans.

“With this project we are able to ensure the heath and hygiene of the children in our care,” says Sudhakar Bellamkonda, director of the Don Bosco Rehabilitation Center. “Proper sanitation has many benefits but one of the most important is its contribution to the healthy living of a community or society.”

With more than 1.3 billion people, India’s growing population is putting a severe strain on the country’s natural resources. According to Water.org, close to 77 million people do not have access to safe, clean water and 769 million have no sanitation services. Most water sources throughout the country are contaminated by sewage and agricultural runoff.

While India has made some progress in the supply of safe water, there remain gross disparities in safe water access across the country. The World Bank estimates that 21 percent of communicable diseases in India are related to unsafe water with diarrhea alone causing more than 1,600 deaths daily. Access to proper sanitation is extremely poor, particularly in rural areas where only 14 percent of the population has access to a latrine.

In addition, hand washing is not commonplace, which leads to an increase in the spread of disease. To address this, Salesian missionaries across India are dedicated to ensuring that access to safe water is a priority in Salesian-run programs and schools and in the communities in which they operate.

Many young men have benefited from the program at Don Bosco Navajeevan. Veerender, from Samalkot, a town in the East Godavari District of Andhra Pradesh, is the only son in his family. His father worked in a grocery store but drank alcohol regularly. In 2008, he left his family when Veerender was just 13 years old. His mother brought her family to Hyderabad searching for a way to survive.

After getting off the train, they met Father Balaswhory, then director of Don Bosco Navajeevan. He appointed Veerender’s mother as a cook and gave the family shelter in the Don Bosco Home Bhoiguda. Veerender continued his education at the nearby Salesian school and stayed with the other children in the Don Bosco home. He was successful in school and eager to learn. Due to the assistance provided through the Don Bosco program, he was able to complete a degree and now is employed in stable, long-term work.

India has the world’s fourth largest economy but more than 22 percent of the country lives in poverty. About 31 percent of the world’s multidimensionally poor children live in India, according to a new report by the Oxford Poverty and Human Development Initiative. A multidimensionally poor child is one who lacks at least one-third of 10 indicators, grouped into three dimensions of poverty: health, education and standard of living.

India’s youth face a lack of educational opportunities due to issues of caste, class and gender. Almost 44 percent of the workforce is illiterate and less than 10 percent of the working-age population has completed a secondary education. In addition, many secondary school graduates do not have the knowledge and skills to compete in today’s changing job market.

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