Saturday, 25 January 2014

Report on visit to Pattaya, December 2013 - January 2014






Pattaya visit: December 2013 – January 2014

I have recently returned from a six week visit to Pattaya, originally it was intended to be for five weeks but thanks to the protests in Bangkok it had to be extended for a further week.

We attempted to visit as many children as possible that are sponsored through our scholarship scheme but found many of them not to be at school, the unusually cold weather of a night in Pattaya, on some nights the temperature dropped as low as 17c, meant that many children were off sick with coughs and colds and with the schools spread over all parts of the city it was not possible to arrange a return visit as both  school exams and activities and the horrendous high season traffic congestion in Pattaya meant that time did not permit. For all of the children we did catch up with we have photos for their sponsors and these have either been sent out of are in the process of being dispatched.

We organised the party for the kids at the Hauy Phong Children’s home on December 23rd and as usual this was a great success, the kids decided on the food that they wanted, this year they chose sushi (of sorts), pork, noodles, rice, fish, and Thai sausage. There was entertainment from a boy band made up of boys from the home and traditional Thai dancing by a group of girls. After the kids had eaten their meal each received a gift selected by ticket number taken from a Christmas tree. This was then followed by a very noisy disco to finish off the evening. The link to the photos of the evening can be found at the end of this report and on our website.

The student’s party at school number seven also had a few children missing through illness and many of the kids at the party were wearing coats and jumpers. Those that were there enjoyed some games and music before their meal of chicken, rice, pork, and Thai style spaghetti. Following this all the kids received gifts, which included a warm blanket and a food parcel to take home. Over the next couple of week we visited the students at other school and took them their gifts and food parcels and found that like schools in the central part of the city there were many off sick. 

We carried out lunch and shopping trips at the request of sponsors and on almost every trip the kids asked for a warm coat or a blanket, in two cases the boys we were with chose to spend some of their money a thick bed cover. Most of the kids also chose to spend some of their money on food to take home to the family, the cost of food has continued to rise as has clothing; this puts a considerable strain on families already living in poverty. Our monthly food packs go some way to alleviating the problems of feeding the kids and are intended as a supplement to the families own resources.

 I had the pleasure of visiting some of the families supported by ‘Kates Project Trust’ (KPT), a small charity working with families from the poorest of slums. My thanks to Khun Noi for giving up her time on two consecutive Sundays to enable me to visit the families. In all the years I have been visiting Pattaya the slums that ‘KPT’ are helping in are some of the worst that I have seen.

During the visits to the slums with Khun Noi we offered to buy extra clothing and shoes for the kids that are sponsored through PSK and to increase our monthly food support for the work that ‘KPT’ do in the slums. All of the kids and their families I met were delightful and happy despite living in abject poverty. In all bar one of the families the children were being cared for by their grandmother, the mothers being nowhere in the picture of the child’s life.

The party for the slum kids was hosted by the kids at the Baan Khong Por Home (BKP), the BKP kids joined in the games with the kids from the slums, but when it was time for food it was the BKP kids who did the serving up and dishing out of the ice-cream. All of the kids from the slum received a gift and a take home food parcel. It is planned that the kids from BKP will extend their contact with the kids from the slums and arrange other activities with them. For the BKP kids’ party a visit to the Sheep Farm and Zoo and a meal will be arranged, owing to staff shortages at the home over Christmas and New Year this was not possible to do during my visit.

During my visit I was able to visit many of the kids who we have helped during the year. As usual top of the list during 2013 was food and clothing and bedding, we have also paid for the snacks at school for many of the children who otherwise would not have anything to eat from 7am until 5pm. Many of the families we are helping to feed and clothe their kids have been hit very hard over the past twelve months as jobs in the area which rely on the tourism service industry have been lost. The continuing political upheaval in Thailand has resulted in thousands of tourists cancelling their visit to Thailand in favour of more politically stable countries.

We have been able to welcome sponsors who have visited Pattaya and met their children and we encourage this if a sponsor is in the city. All we ask is a week or more notice so we can arrange with the school that the child is free during a school day. Likewise with sponsors that ask us to arrange in their absence a birthday or Christmas treat of lunch and shopping for the child, we are happy to do so although it may not always be possible to arrange it for the actual birthday and with the cost of eating out in even the fast-food outlets increasing rapidly we suggest that instead of a meal an ice-cream treat and shopping is the best use of their monetary gift.

At Baan Khong Por Children’s Home  during 2013 we have been able to supply new bedding, clothing, shoes, two computers, meet the monthly food bill for the kids, plus other ancillary items that in a home with thirty two young kids living there are always going to need replacing. I spent Christmas Day at the Home with the kids and as always it was great fun watching the kids opening their gifts although clearing up the wrapping paper afterwards did not appear to be met with as much enthusiasm! I visited the home on other occasions during my visit and thank all of the staff there for their friendliness and facilitating my visits. With often just three staff for 32 kids things do get a bit hectic and the staff there work very hard to keep the kids safe and well.
 
Also our thanks to the Scholarship Team of Liz, Suky and Boonying in Pattaya, Liz and Suky work under a lot of pressure and although Suky is designated as the Scholarship Team Leader she often has translation work for other part of the MERCY office to carry out putting her under tremendous pressure when she also has to liaise with the schools in trying to keep track of 200+ children as well as buy the food for the monthly food drops, pack it and deliver it. Certainly nobody does it for the money, as Suky said to me one day “If I wanted to earn good money I would not work in Thailand”.

Unfortunately again this year some schools were less than helpful on many occasions, appointments were made to visit the school to either meet the kids or to take them out on behalf of a sponsor only to find when we arrived that the message had not been passed to the relevant teacher and the child could not be located amongst the 1500-1800 children in school. On one occasion we visited a school to take two girls shopping and although the appointment had been confirmed a couple of hours earlier we arrived at the school to find the children ‘missing’. It took Suky forty-five minutes to locate the children, multiply this many times during the year and you can see how much time is wasted through the lack of cooperation from some schools.

I was able to make a visit to a training session of the Crocodile Kids Football Club who we were able to help buy football strip and equipment last May. The voluntary project is run for kids from the slums in the Jomtien area of Pattaya of all ages, and all abilities and it was good to see how the club is thriving with new members.

I also visited a Youth Prison where one of our 14 year old students is serving a two and a half year sentence for possession of drugs. It appears that he was given the drugs to conceal by an uncle when they were stopped at a police check point. The boy looked scared and probably rightly so as he is quite small and in a facility with 300+ other boys age 11-17 years. We were shown the very basic clothing and toiletries that prisoners are issued with and here again the boy complained of being very cold. We are trying to get some more clothing to the prison for the boy but have been told that only basic items the same as that the prisons supply are permitted.

We wish to thank everyone who has supported the charity throughout 2013 and in doing so have enabled us to help so many kids. We are never going to be able to solve the problem of poverty in Pattaya but we can give many kids the opportunity of an education which is the key to breaking the cycle of living in the slums and an opportunity to a better life.

Don Ford.
Treasurer / Trustee.
 
Hauy Phong Home New Year Party gallery: http://streetkids.smugmug.com/Hauy-Phong-Home-New-Year-Party

Christmas Day with the kids at Baan Khong Por: http://streetkids.smugmug.com/Baan-Kong-Por-Home/Baan-Khong-Por-Christmas-2013/n-Bb9fG

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