Report from Melanie Price
Bangladesh
Visit March April.
Thank you to British Airways whose incredible
support allows us to dedicate so much of our time and finances to
assisting our projects worldwide.
I had wanted to go to Bangladesh for many
years, so having the opportunity to go this year was a dream come
true. The many orphans that are there left every year after the annual
floods, just keep growing in number.
Bangladesh may be one of the poorest countries
in the world, but it is rich in history, and culture. The Bangladeshi
people are a very kind and hospitable people. I was received by The
Sacrifice Trust Dhaka, very warmly. I went to assess the situation with
the street children, and the orphans of the cyclone.
On the second day I was there, I had
opportunity to take 3 classes in a village school in the village of
Riapora. The head teacher, let me take English classes, and the children
were so receptive, as I sung, head shoulders, knees, and toes, over again,
until, they all knew it off by heart. The teachers, and the children, had
never seen a European before. Life is very basic out in the villages, and
I was able once again to give out educational supplies, to the school.
I rode on a motorbike, to reach these villagers, and all the women and
children came out to meet me. They were all happy to give me rice, and
mango. There were many children, who were undernourished, and they looked
very thin, so did the women. The sun beats down very hard, as the women go
gleaning in the fields, for a handful of corn.
The number of street children , in Dhaka, was
quite over whelming, but I was so happy to see the young men and women of
Dhaka, eagerly ready to help them. There were so many poor and disabled
children begging on the streets, it was heart wrenching. I didn t know
where to start, but Philip Sakar and his team, showed me around Dhaka
,with every care and consideration for my welfare. Dhaka is a city with so
many people, and like so many other Asian Cities it is bursting at the
seams, as villagers flock to the city to look for ways to earn money.
There is a shortage of rice, and people were queuing all day, just for a
small kilo of rice.
In the two weeks I was there I
covered a lot of the country. I was able to travel by local bus, and auto
rickshaw, the 7 hours, up to the NE of Bangladesh, to the borders of
Assam. Here it is India, and very famous for the tea plantations. The
region was very rural, and paddy fields, dominated the horizon. I was
able to see the flooded areas, and see the land still covered
with blankets of water. This spoils the rice fields, and some times the
rice shoots have to be uprooted, and replanted, a very backbreaking job,
and time consuming. Roads were being resurfaced, with women carrying heavy
loads of broken bricks on their heads, I cried for them. I saw children
working in the fields, and in the factories.
There is 70% illiteracy in the whole country,
as people can not afford education. The average life expectancy is 57, and
people age very quickly, because of the harsh conditions.
We left money for food, and some medical
supplies. The education packs were given out to two schools .
We are buying a little house for a lady, who is
hosting 5 children. It’s in the village near Narsingdi, and will cost
3000 pounds. This is the start of our project, where we will set up a
women’s care surgery, and house 5 orphans, and we intend to work
along with the local elders, to improve the sanitation, and get the clinic
going. It’s a start, and where there’s a start, there has to be a
middle and a finish, but we will continue to do very effort, to make a
difference in the lives of these beautiful people.
We respect their cultures, and customs, as most
of them are Muslims, but we want to cross these boundaries by showing our
love, and compassion.
Thanks again to British Airways.
Melanie Price.